Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 317, 21 October 1919 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. TUESDAY, OCT. 21, 1919.

TWELVE CASES ARE NOLLED BY THE PREBLE COUNTY PROSECUTOR

Indiana News Brevities

SOUTH BEND Secretary of War Baker and Secretary of the Navy Daniels have been invited to take part In the ceremonies of placing markers at the graves of 87 nuns at St. Mary's college.

KOKOMO Shortly after telling another brakeirum "This is 'No-Accident' week and we want a clean record," Harry A. KJrkman, employed in the local yards, was knocked down by his cars and was so badly injured that he died a few hours later. INDIANAPOLIS Mayer Jewett has sent telegrams to 18 mayors in the state that have wood working industries, urging a large attendance at the Trl-State Forestry conference to be held here Oct. 22.23.

INDIANAPOLIS The State War Mothers' association opened a threeday convention here, with the opening meeting turned over to the American Legion. NOBLES VILLE3 Mrs. Gertrude Hare, 40 years old, of this city, was burned to death in the barn of her father, Hamilton Chessman, of this

city. She was mentally unbalanced

and relatives believe she comm

suicide by setting the barn on fire.

EATON, O.. Oct. 21. Clifford Suman, 17, of Gratis, wa3 removed Monday from the county Jail to the state boys Industrial school at Lancaster to serve a term for forgery. He was taken to the Institution by Probation Officer L. T. Stephen. The case was first lodged In the criminal division of common pleas court but was later transferred to Juvenile court, where Suman entered a plea of guilty, in which he claimed a poolroom operator and a barber shop owner in Gratis permitted minors to play slot machines in their places. The men were brought Into Juvenile court but decision in their cases was reserved until the exact age of Suman was established. Family records presented Monday in court showed he was 17 years of age. Prosecutor P. A. Saylor ordered records in his case stricken from common pleas court and entered in juvenile court. Cases Go By. Because in some Instances cases had been disposed of and apparently not finally recorded, and because in other instances the persons involved could not be found. Prosecutor Phil Saylor ordered, Monday, indictments nollied in 12 cases. Three of the cases were against Jesse and Robert Kelly, Indicted jointly in January, 1919, for grand larceny. The former also was indicted fee petit larceny and the latter on another charge of grand larceny. Three other cases were those of Patrick O'Brien, Francis Riley and Joseph Flint, indicted for vagrancy. One case was against Warren D. Brawley for assault. The other cases and dates of indictment were: Albert McCabe, abandoning legitimate children, January, 1917; Vernon M. Bookwaiter, failure to provide. May, 1916; Raymond Marker, failure to provide. May, 1915; H. B. Lewis, non-support of infant child, 1914; Lemuel Smith, abandoning children. May. 1912; Robert Bass, arson. October, 1911. Pig Sale Announced. First semiannual public sale of pure-bred hogs by the Preble County Pure Stock Breeders' association will be held Thursday at the fairgrounds, with Bart Foley, of Seven Mile, as auctioneer. About 40 head of boars and gilts of the various breeds will bo offered for sale. Compson Trial Oct. 31. Edward Compson, under indictment for ehooting to kill, will go on trial

Oct. 31. In common pleas court. Judge; scats of justice of the county. There A. C. Risinger having fixed the trial were the criminal courts, of which

date Monday. Compson allegedly shot I Nimrod Hoge Johnson was judge, the

COLORED SERVICE MEN ARE WELCOMED

The main event of the evening wad an address delivered by George Con rad, of the law department of tho Pennsylvania Railroad, who, though having headquarters in JCenia, makes his home in Richmond. He eloquent-

With colored persons from all the ,. n ttl)a nnrr nr ita hiov..

nearby towns present, the home-com- ment , lh Dusmesa world. in the

ing and dance for colored service men t. ,n ih. lrw1,1Rtries nnd nt th

held in the Coliseum Monday evening. great part lt piayed in the recent was regarded as the most brilliant : war

affair held by local colored society In

a number of years.

The proceeds from the affair were

"We are true patriots. We have been tested and not found wanted," said Conrad. "We entered the war

in St. George's Episcopal church. In New York City; to Stanley Braithwaite, the well known literary critic, and others of the race who have achieved distinction as examples of what the race could accomplish in a democracy. A buffet supper was served throughout the evening and dance music for the young people present was furnished by the Jordan Embry Orchestra.

HILDREN

Shouki not be "dosed" for colds apply the "outside" treatment-

ICR'S VAPOIHJ

YOUR BQPYGUA&D"-30f.60MI.20

THEY GET ACTIOX AT OSCB Foley Kidney Pills invigorate, strengthen tad heal Inactive, weak and 11n!ed kldnevs and bladder. Mrs. C. . J. Ellis. 565 8th Av.. Sioux Falls. S. D., writes: "I suffered with kidney trouble, used to have severe pains across my bacl and felt miserable and all tired out. but after taking Foley Kidney Pills I am well. I have not been bothered with kidney trouble since." They relieve headache. rheumatic pains, swollen or stiff joints, pufflness under the eyes, floating specks. For sale by A. O. Iukn & Co. Adv.

to be donated to the Mary E. Thomas with 400 ooo drafted men. 4 recimpnt-.

Rescue Home, and as over 1,000 per- of regulars, and 12 regiments of the!

sons were present, the home was bene

fited by over $100. Fifty-four service men from this city, headed by Dr. W. G. Huffman, were the guests of honor. Dr. Huff-

National Guard. We have fought in j every war in this country, for there i

is no race and color among patriots. I

All are united for a common cause and ;

all fight side by side as brothers, and

man presided. In this he was assisted f0r this we have gained international

by Percy Griffin, who acted as master of ceremonies. A splendid musical program was given. Burton Howard played- several violin selections; Esther Johnson, Mrs. Hazel Garnet, Miss Gaines and Mrs. Howard Bass, all gave vocal numbers. Mrs. Ines Brown Benson gave a dramatic reading that received long con tinued applause. A dance by Miss Pauline Mannin?er was one of the features of the evening Miss Manninger is one of the most

itted graceful and gifted young dancers of

the city

WAYNE BAR SHONE WITH GREAT BRILLIANCE FIFTY YEARS AGO

Lawyers and judges who assembled at the Wayne county bar 50 years ago, gave to it a reputation second to none in Indiana. CenterviUe, then the county seat of Wayne, was settled by a class of progressive, intelligent citizens. The county seat was ordered moved to Richmond in 1869, but was not actually removed until 1S71. In 1869. less than sixty years after the organization of the Wayne county bar, its membership was 185. Men whose brilliance and ability as jurists and lawyers had not only reached the state legislature, but had already come to the front in congressional circles were practicing law in Wayne county. Oliver P. Morton, admitted to the bar in 1S45, was senator from Indiana, the Sixth district was represented by George W. Julian, admitted to the bar in 1S40, and William Peele as representative in the state legislature. At that time 3 courts composed the

at James Beasley with a shotgun one right several weeks ago as Beasley was about, to enter the door of his home, near Lewisburg. The shot was fired through a screen door and a portion of one of the shoulders of Beasley's coat was torn away. Compson worked for Beasley and they occupied the house following the death of Beasley's wife. Compson has been confined in the county jail here since the alleged attempted shooting. Hunt is Auditor.

court of common pleas presided over by Judge John F. Kibbey and Wayne circuit court of which Silas Colgrove

was judge. Henry Clay Fox, now retired, judge of the circuit court, was serving a term as district attorney and John Yaryan prosecuting attorney. The greatness of Oliver P. Morton, Civil war governor of Indiana U recognized by everyone. Hi3 marvelous

intellect and fluency of speech brought to him a reputation as a foremost law-

Spencer C. Hunt became auditor of jyer and jurist. He was one time law Treble county Monday, succeeding Al- j partner of Judge Johnson, and was the bert. Campbell, who retired after serv-1 preceptor of the Honorable John F. ng one term of two years. Leslie j Kibbey with whom he had a very close Sawyer, of New Paris, is deputy to j friendship. Auditor Hunt. Retiring with Auditor! Nimrod Hoge Johnson was the first tr.mpbell were W. J. Ashworth and ! judge of the common pleas court and

Sus'.r Sharer KIrkhcff, deputies, at the timo of his death in 1830, was j

judge of the criminal court. He was especially able as a jurist and advocate, and was in his early professional life elected prosecutor. William A. Peelle served as judge of the common pleas court, was elected secretary of state on the Republican ticket, and was later sent to the state legislature. George W. Julian, brother of Jacob Julian, was one of the most distinguished lawyers, statesmen and orators Wayne county ever produced. He won a brilliant reputation as a stump speaker. He was elected to the state legislature, and sprang into national prominence in the Buffalo convention in 1848. His power and eloquence of speech were astonishing. Elected to several terms in congress he became a leaedr in the house, and is the author of several bills. The Homestead law was the most important that he framed. Julian was a member cf the committee which drew up the resolutions to impeach President Johnson. Another man who added fame to the bar was William A. Bickle. appointed judge of the Wayne county superior court at the time of its organization. He was a close friend of Morton. Other prominent members in this illustrious period were Jacob B. Julian, father of Grace Julian Clarke, prominent Indiana club woman. Jesse P. Sidall, John Yaryan, Henry C. Fox, Thomas J. Study, Abel L. Study. Daniel A. Comstock, Caleb B. Smith, General W. P. Benton, James B. Ray, Tsaac B. Morris, General Thomas W. Bennett, Colonel W. W. Wudley, John L. Rupe, Charles H. Burchenal, Lewis D. Stubbs and John C. Whitridge.

fame.

The speaker referred to Paul Lawrence Dunbar, the great American poet, whom he knew intimately and who once was in Richmond. He also mentioned Harry Burleigh, who sings

DISTRICT DOCTORS 10 MEET IN CITY

I

She Married An Average Man

BY ZOE BECKLEY

I have been thinking for days about! crackled Athenaa Hast. "He's not in-

whp.t Mrs. Hast snid cf marriage. What an extraordinary idea always having her own quarters and her husband having his They often don"t meet for months. And they once spent a whole summer in a Scotch village,

terested in anything but the shops and his blueprints. You've a right to have something to occupy your time haven't you?" "I I imagine my husband would not like me to "

each occupying a separate house. She! "Then teach him to like it!" she

t aid the townspeople nearly gossiped snapped. "Get over those antiquated

themselves to death, but that it was

"better to be thought crazy than to go crazy, getting on each other's nerves and interferring with each other's work!" Work! I wish I had some sort of work. I have really nothing to do that interests me from 10 in the morning till nearly 5, except reading, and I can't read all the time. I suppose I could do the Lady Bountiful to the families of the workmen in the shops where Jim is engineer. But he always discourages anything of that sort, saying I have enough to do to attend to my house and keep myself pretty. Ugh what an aim! Mrs. Hast spoke of my prettiness, too. Only she said it was a pity I didn't use it to better advantage. "You should have work and friends and ambition, my .?ar," she asseited in her positive, explosive way. "Wait till you come to New York. I'll Introduce you to a lot of nice people, women and men who arc interested in things worth while, not just office and kitchen and nursery. I know an artist who will simply fall off his perch in his eagerness to paint you. And a couple of chaps who write books and play the violin. You're musical you will have a splendid time with them. I'll invite you to luncheon to meet them as soon as you set foot in New Vork." "But but .Tim couldn't very well oree to a luncheon." I ventured. "Who said anything about Jim!"

ideas of yours, Ann Salsbery. You're

a woman of brains, if you'll only give them a chance to work!" "I don't think Jim could be made to see things quite your way," I submitted, with my friendliest smile for I'm getting to like her more and more every time I see her. "A woman as young and pretty as you are can make a man see anything," she answered quickly. "I'm not asking you to be unfaithful to your marriage vows, or neglectful of your home, or quarrelsome with your husband. I'm trying to show you that a woman has as much right to use her brains and order her life as a man has. How long have you been married three months? Well, don't begin wrong. Be as loving and tender and sweet a3 you like to your Jim. The sweeter the better; woman's greatest power is her sympathy. But do not allow him to do your thinking for you. You love him, don't you? And he loves you? Very well, then, you are perfectly able to look at other men .and he at other women now and then without breaking anybody's heart or disrupting anybod's home. A couple that love each other are better off not to see each other all the time. It's the couples who don't love each other that must acquire love by habit and propinquity." I don't believe her theory would really work out in her case But I w-o-n-d-e-r if it mightn't? (To be continued)

Dr. Charles Bond, acting secretary

of the Union District Medical association, has announced the following program for the semi-annual meeting on Thursday, Oct. 23, in the Commercial club, beginning at 11 o'clock. President's address Will A. Thompson, Liberty, Ind.

Causes and Locations of Abdominal

Pain and Their Clinical Significance,

Frank L. Ratterman, Cincinnati, O.

Discussion Mark Millikin, A. C.

Kimberlin.

12:30 Dinner at Reid Memorial Church Psychasthenia A Medical Problem,

Charles P. Emerson, Indianapolis,

Ind.

Discussion H. A. Hoppe, Cincin

nati, O.; S. E. Smith, Easthaven, Rich

mond, Ind.

Surgical Disorders of Digestion W. H. Haines, Cincinnati, O. Discussion L. G. Bowers, Dayton, O.; Edmund D. Clark, Indianapolis, Ind. Influenza J. N. Study, Cambridge City, Ind. Discussion T. A. Dickey, Middle-

town, O.; Frank Ross, Richmond.

Makes a hit the first time s&ys (3o&6g

Com flakes that make you wonder if there coud be anythinq better.

at

In

Boston, Ind, Ray Davis is visiting relatives Clay City, ind. Mrs. Thomas Staton shopped

Kicnmond, Saturday. Mrs. Howard Johnson and children spent Sunday in Losantsville. Mrs. Ruth Overholser of Liberty, visited relatives here over Sunday. Mrs. George Johnson, of Losanlsville, visited relatives here Saturday. Mrs. Worthie Williams and children visited with relatives in Cincinnati. Miss Viola Simons visited Miss Gladys Woods near Abington, Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Kilgus and little son visited relatives at Winchester, Ind., last week. Mrs. William Looney and Mrs. A. H. Piper called on Mrs. Vangie Miller, Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Ulm, of Delphos, O.. returned home Monday after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ulm. Mrs. 'Ora Short and Mrs. Arthur Piper spent Wednesday in Richmond ihe guests of Mrs. J. M. Kimball. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Spears and fors, of Richmond, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. William Simons. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Holts and son Ralph, of Richmond, spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Davis and family. William Jenkinson, of Bloomington, Ind., spent Sunday with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Beard and Miss Mary Beard went to College Corner, Sunday.

GERMAN STOWAWAY FOUND. BOSTON, Mass., Occt. 21. The first vessel to come to this port from Germany since the war was the shipping board refrigerator steamer Yaquina, which arrived here from Hamburg yesterday in ballast. The Yaquina carried a cargo of frozen beef from New York to Hamburg. A German stowaway was discovered on the vessel's arrival. He gave his name as Christian Nissen, 22 years old. He was fturned over to the immigration authorities.

'The (allani Act h wan his pUc. By br deeds nobly den. Bui when coSee't might, the kind lout's bought. U the "Ace" of them all Golden Sua.

Ihcve is notlv

liner rained in

fiie long run "by buying airy tiling of mail order houses; certainly not groceries. Goldbn Sun, for instance, can only be bougniy throuhlacsl grocers. They buy CSltf as needed and so yeu get it fresh roasted The Wool s on Spice Co, Toledo. Ohio

3 REED'S ESS

I REED'SPsr

I -.7 -M, .J;? , lLV I & - ' 8 ' ' ' 'n'r '" 'rfr :" -A"-. '- :' '' - firhRr

SERVICE To and for Our Patrons and All the Public A service that means a real pleasure to come here either to buy or look around a service that will please you that vdll make you glad you came. THIS STORE OFFERS YOU "a stock which does not put a price limit on good taste; "a stock where the lower.price furniture has been selected with the same good taste as the higher price ; "a stock where showiness and shoddiness are not used to gloss over imperfections of material and workmanship; '"a stock as remarkable for its rejections as for its selections." Isn't that the kind of a store you want to deal with?

"The men who make good furniture, the men who sell it and the men and women who buy it all are public benefactors. And there are a lot of them. Business profit, fortunately, is not all recokned in dollars and cents. There are manufacturers who will not make unworthy furniture, and merchants who will not sell it, as well as people who will not buy it. Fortunately, also "beauty and good taste are not measured in money. The simple, inexpensive home may be as beautiful, as inspiring, as restful and regenerating as the elaborate one oftimes more so.

"The really important factor in your environment is yourself your own determination to be done with ugliness and sham your own inflexible resolve to surround yourself with the beauttiful and the genuine. Buy one good piece of furniture at a time if you cannot buy more, but get it somehow, live with it. cherish it and add too it other such friends as you go along. Surround yourself with beauty and presently the miracle of beauty will have had its way with you.

TENTH AND MAIN FTl RICFMONPf IND.

ASIA

Look t Here is the globe spread out flat before your eyes. See those stars? Every star show where a U.S. Navy ship waa on Sept. 2nd, 1919. , The Navy travels the Scvea Seat.

(Tit yon want t-

ROMANCE is calling to youl Strange and smiling foreign lands are beckoning to you. Shove off and see the world! Learn to " parley - voo " in gay Paree. See the bull-fights in Panama. See surf - riding on the beach of Waikiki. Learn the lure that comes with the swish and swirl of the good salt sea. Eat well free; dress well free; sleep clean free; and look 'em all straight in the eye British, French, Chinese, Japanese, Spaniards, Egyptians, Algerians and all manner of people. Come! Be a real rnkn of the world. See the world. See it with the red-

m a or -a f-vi

o see me world f

blooded, hard-working, hard-playing men of the U. S. Navy. Pay begins the day you join. On board ship a man is always learning. Trade schools develop skill, industry and business ability. Thirty days carefree holiday each year with full pay. The food is good. First uniform outfit is furnished free. Promotion is unlimited for men cf brains. You can enlist for two years and come out broader, stronger and abler. Shove off! Join the U. S. Navy. If you're between 17 and 35 go to the nearest recruiting station for all the details. If you don't know where it is ask your postmaster.

illwire off f

OWL

theU

tern I

asraiWa&W f south ? jXDjj&c

WL

1

fe