Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 325, 30 October 1919 — Page 16
PAGE SIXTEEN THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND 8UN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, OCT. SO, 1919.
FARM IMPLEMENTS TO BE HANDLED BY D. E. DENNIS STORE
A complete line of tractors, motor trucks, farm Implements and repairs ot the International Harvester company will be handled by a company formed with Dempsey E. Dennis as head. The building at 15 South Seventh street has been leased to serve as the retail store for Wayne county. Branch stores will be established at Fountain City and Hagerstown. The International Harvester company maintains a district house here, but the retail service for the county will be conducted by Mr. Dennis on South Seventh street. The new company will open for business about Dec. 1. Besides the products and repairs of the International Harvester company, the store will handle automobiles, alios and a general line of farm implements. Mr. Dennis Is one of the younger business men of the city. He was associated with the Model Clothing company for a number of years and for the last two years has been with the McConaha company. Mr. Dennis and his associates In the new enterprise are thoroughly familiar with the farm Implement business and have adopted as a elogan for their business, "Quality, Price, Service."
issued at steel strike headquarters here today following Mr. Fitzpatrick's departure for Chicago last night. The statement follows: "If the coal strike comes, it will add strength to the steel strike and to the position of labor throughout the country. It will mean labor has accepted the challenge of the big group of employers who profiteered during the war, and who still are profiteering. "They have a grip on the throat of the public and the government. They have defied labor, the public and the government. They have refused to deal with labor in the steel industry because they have hopes there that they can defeat organized labor. But in the coal industry they are hopeless of defeating the older, better tried organization. So they get the government to try to force the coal miners to arbitrate."
GOVERNMENT MEETS (Continued from Page One) 90,000 IN ILLINOIS SPRINGFIELD, 111., Oct. 30. Mining of soft coal at the rate of approximately 85,000,000 tons a year will cease in Illinois, third largest bituminous coal producing state In the union and 90,000 miners will be Idle, when the miners strike order becomes effective at midnight tomorrow.
100,000 IN PENNSYLVANIA. PITTSBURG, Oct. 30. The dawn of Saturday will find more than 100,000 coal miners of Western and central Pennsylvania and West Virginia on strike, according to the officers of the United Mine Workers of America, in the two districts who have declared that the men will obey order of their leaders to walk out. Practically all high officials of the miners union la this area attended the Indianapolis conference. APPEALS TO CITIZENS CHARLESTON, W. Va., Oct. 30 Sheriffs and mayors of all cities and municipalities in West Virginia had under consideration today a recom mendation from Cov, John J. Cornwell, that they organize "committees of spirited citizens" to aid public officials during the coal strike, scheduled to open at midnight tomorrow. The governor called attention to "the dangers to which the state and organized society may be suddenly subject" and added that he had "information as to the accumulation of arms and ammunition, in this state, Df which the public does not know."
BRYAN ADDRESS EATON AUDIENCE
EATON, O., Oct. 30. Because in Ohio the Woman's Christian Temperance Union was formed and also the Anti-Saloon League was the reason Ohio should rally as it never has before at the polls in the November election In the cause of prohibition, declared William Jennings Bryan in a prohibition speech here Wednesday afternoon in the armory, which was attended by probably 500 people.
The temperance union, formed nearly 50 years ago, and the Anti-Saloon League, former some 6 years ago, are the righteous and mightiest foes cf the liquor traffic, he said, and since both organizations came into existence in Ohio it is the duty of the commonwealth to lead the nation in what he termed the greatest moral struggle within the nation's history. He declared the eyes of the liquor Interests of the nation are on Ohio. They are looking to the result of the vote in the state to determine their interests in the nation. If Ohio should recede from its present position on the liquor question the liquor interests would make capital of it in every dry state to influence the vote on the liqnor question. While some placed the dry majority in the state at 50,000 to 25,000, he said, he placed his figures at 500.000 majority at the polls next Tuesday, lie declared he might even raise his figures as he got deeper into the cam
paign. Anything less than an overwhelming majority would in a sense be a victory for the wets. In denouncing the claim of the wets that absence of the soldier vote was re6pnosible for the great dry victory last fall, he declared 28 states had gone dry before war was declared.
Revival to Begin Sunday at Third M. E. Church Revival services to last for 3 weeks will begin in the Third Methodist church, at Hunt and Charles stheets, next Sunday morning, according to an announcement Wednesday, by tho pastor, the Rev. E. L. Gates. The Rev. Sylvester Bilheimer, a preach both in the morning and evening, and Mrs. W. E. Kern, a singing evangelist of Ashton, 111., will conduct the music for the entire services. The Rev. Bates issues an appeal to all the people of Fairview to unite in this movement.
Ohio News Flashes
TIFFIN Lewis Selle, a wealthy bachelor, has given $25,000 for the erection of a nursery building in connection with the National O. U. A. M. home. GREXVTLLE Martin Laurimore, an aged civil war veteran, has returned from a Cincinnati hospital, with his sight in one eye, which has been gone for 20 years, completely restored. AKRON Five persons were injured and many lives were imperilled when two street cars crashed together.
HAMILTON The Hamilton district organization of the American Red Cross has concluded to canvass the district in one day. I AKRON Charles Morris Wilson, 6 years old, Akron's champion runaway,
has been found again, this time in Canton, Ohio. CLEVELAND Fire of unknown origin, brought a loss og $100,000 to the Astrup Awning company, destroying awnings valued at $60,000, a score or automobiles and a two story frame building.
Coyle Buttons To Be Sold, Labor Plans Furthering of plans for the suit, filed by Jack Coyle, against members of
the board of works, is expected to take up a greater part of the session of the regular meeting of the Central Labor Council, Thursday night. The buttons, which were ordered re
cently, to help provide for a relief fund for Jack Coyle and for similar case may also be expected to be distributed. There are 1,500 buttons, which the council plans to sell for $1 each. 667,000 RUBLES STOLEN STOCKHOLM, Oct. SO The theft of 667,000 rubles in notes which bad been printed in Stockholm and were awaiting shipment to anti-Bolshevist
representatives in Russia, is rpf,r"'t iu the newspapers. The notes weri to have been shipped to Gt-n-ral denitch and President Liamozoff at th Democratic government of norths ' western Russia.
WILL AID STEEL MEM PITTSBURGH. Oct. 30 A statement made by John Fitzpatrick, chairman of the national steel strike cnnmittee, as to the effect of the threatened bituminous coal strike upon the steel 6trike and labor in general, was
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