Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 67, 29 January 1920 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGKAM. THURSDAY, JAN. 29, 1920.
HAYES ISSUES flAII 1
FOR PLATFORM; NAMES ADVICE COMMITTEE
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.. Jan. 29. "Will H. Haye, chairman of the Repub- - lican national committee, last night, made public his appointments to the f advisory committee on policies and platform, consisting of 171 members, 19 of whom are women. This committee includes 12 members of the Republican national committee, whose appointment had been announced previously by Mr. Hays. "The purpose of this committee," Mr. Hays said, "is to invite the advice and co-operation of the ablest men
, and women from all groups, sections, Industries, businesses, professions and
Interests in the nation, together per
tinent facts and data, to study intens- , Ively the larger problems confronting
us, and to offer the result of their ef forts as suggestions to the resolu tions committee.
This committee will itself be a working body, he added, "and will suggest the line of thought and lnves-
. tigation for a great many others. Many
of the committee will give their en
tire time to the effort. Those giving
a substantial amount of time will con
stitute an executive committee, of which Ogden L. Mills, Jr., of New York city will be chairman and John Callan O'Laughlin of Washington, D. C, sec
retary. The organization for the com
mlttee's activities will be enlarged and additional members designated as
the scopo of the work broadens. Meets New Condition
"Party programs . muBt always be
subject to amendment and change by
the responsible living thought expres
sed within the party by men and women alike. The Republican party's half-century of achievement is the
best guarantee to the country of fu
. ture fulfillment that its usefulness
will depend. The party must continue
to be hte instrument to apply to new and changing conditions the wisdom . of experience and the efficacy of honest, zealous service. It is the party of the future or there is no use for . the party. "To men and women alike is offered the right of political self-determination. The duty of the party membership is to say what the party's purpose ehall be, what its policies shall become. The fundamentally essential right within a political party is the . opportunity of the membership to ex- "' press Itself.
WOUNDING OF ERZBERGER MAKES SITUATION IN GERMANY MORE CRITICAL: ARMORED CARS PATROL BERLIN STREETS
Opposes Diplomatic Relations Between' France and Vatican
(By Associated Press) PARIS, Jan. 29 Resumption of diplomatic relations between France and the Vatican is opposed by Anatole France, who asserts in an article printed in the Ljanterne the dissolution of bonds some years ago came "as a logical crowning of the long struggle waged against the papacy." "Italy despoiled the Vatican of its temporal powers," he continues, "and the sending of an ambassador to the Holy See would bo to recognize officially the Pope'3 spiritual power. In this case there is no reason why
France should not recognize the other great spiritual powers of earth and among other missions sent one to the "court of humanity" which the followers of Comte erected In Rio Janeiro." Former Premier Clemenceau's pposition to resuming relations with the Vatican is said to have cost him many votes when he was candidate for the presidency of the republic.
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Photos show crowds surging through Unter den Linden and Mathias Erzberger. In photo at left an armored car can be seen handling the crowds in a. previous disturbance.
The shooting of Mathias Erzberger, minister of finance, before
the criminal courts building . i Berlin has brought the situation in Germany that much nearer a crisis. The Ebert Rovernment has faced a succession of uprisings ever since the signing of the armistice and has barely weathered
many of them. The wounding of the cabinet officer was followed by rioting and promiscuous shooting in the streets of the capital and resulted in the calling out of armed troops and armored cars to patrol the streets.
FOODS INCREASE o4 1 PERCENT SINCE '13
WASHINGTON, Jan. 29. According to the federal bureau of labor statistics the average family expenditure in Indianapolis for 22 food arti
cles combined Increased 84 per cent,
between October, 1918, and October, 1919. For the year 1913 the" average family expenditure in Indianapolis for these 22 articles of food was $307.10 and for 1919 it was $635.58. The percentage of Increase in cost was somewhat lower In Indianapolis than in most other cities of the same class. In Washington, for instance, the Increase was 100 per cetn. In Milwaukee it was 96 per cent; St. Louis, 94 per cent.; Pittsburg, 90 per cent.; Philadelphia, 91 per cent.; Omaha, 95 per cent.; Minneapolis, 92 pr cent.; Memphis, 92 per cent.; Louisville. 89 per cent.; Kansas City, 90 per cent.; Detroit, 97 per cent.; Denver, 83 per cent.; Cincinnati, 85 per cent; Chicago, 90 per cent; Boston, 86 per cent; and Baltimore, 98 per cent. There continues to be a discrepancy between the statistics put out by the bureau of labor statistics, which is a division of the department of labor, and the statements put out by the department of justice. .
Short News of City
13,204,746 WORTH OF WHEAT SENT TO U. S. FROM CANADA (By Associated Press) OTTAWA, Jan. 29. Wheat exported irom Canada to the United States in November and December of last year totaled 1.448.S77 bushels values at $3,204,746, it was announced today by customs officials.
20 WANTED FOR ARMY Sergeant R. F. Thompson, local recruiting officer, has received orders to enlist 20 men for service at Illinois University. According to the orders ex-cavalrymen are preferred. The pay of the privates, who will have charge of the horses of the university, will be $121 a month, together with their clothes. Four recruits were enlisted Wednesday, as follows: Clarence Maney, Fred Baston and Harry Williams of St. Louis, and Roy Roberts of Sioux City. CHURCHMEN TO MEET Plans for a meeting to be held later and formulating of plans for the
county council will be discussed at the meeting of the executive commit
tee of the Church Federation of
Wayne county Monday afternoon in the Y. M. C. A; Committees will be
named and the chairman of each com
mittee will be made a member of the executive committee by virtue of his
office. ROAD MEN INVITED Invitations have been sent to mem
bers of the Henry county road depart
ment to attend the annual county
road meeting, to be held in the court-
;use Feb. 4, County Road Superin
tenqent Jones said Thursday. It is planned to have a speaker well versed
in road questions to address the meet-j Van Etten Funeral services for ln&- I Earl D. Van Etten. three-year-old son
DANIEL BROWN BORN of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Van Etten, and Mr. and Mrs. Silas Brown, of Main who died Wednesday evening of pneustreet, are the parents of a son, Daniel i mcviia at the home of his parents, 325
late Tuesday evening. They were re
leased on $50 bond. TO ADDRESS DISTRICT I. O. O. F.
F. E. Taylor, district deputy grand
master of the Odd Fellows' lodge will address the annual district meeting of the I. O. O. F. of the thirty-third
district, composed of 15 lodges in
Henry county, at Newcastle, Tuesday evening. Will Ehrhardt, grand master, and Will II. Leedy, grand secretary, are also on the program.
TWO SUITS DISMISSED. The suit filed by John H. Ballinger
against Clarence R. Hanson, on promhissory note, demand $400, was dis
missed and costs paid in circuit court
Thursday. Dismissal was also made
at the cost of the petitioners in the adoption suit of Grosvenor M. Jeffers by Grosvenor P. and Marion Jeffers. WOMAN DISAPPEARS. Cincinnati police may "be asked to join in a search for a woman whose name is given variously as Mrs. Aloysius, Howe, or Hue, who, is said to have disappeared on her way Jiome from Richmond. Local authorities know nothing about the woman. LICENSED TO WED.
A marriage license was granted on Thursday to Roy Newman, 21, chauffeur, and Vina Burleson, 19, seamstress, both of Richmond.
Propose Commission to
Stady Working Conditions
PARIS, Jan. 29. Proposals that a commission of employers and employes be appointed to study working conditions in eastern European countries, particularly Russia, were made
at today's session of the International Labor conference, but there was no decision. Dangers from political aspects of the situation were pointed out and it was finally agreed to have the conference bureau consider a plan and
consult the league of nations officials regarding it
SAYS, PROHIBITION WILL MAKE TOBACCO INDUSTRY FLOURISH
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Sir Hugo Cunliffe-Owen. Sir Hugo Cunliffe-Owen, head of the British-American Tobacco Company, who has just arrived in this country from England, believes that but for the activities of the antitobacco fanatics the outlook for the tobacco industry never was brighter. Ho believes that prohibition will make American smoke all the harder
TRAVELS 6 MILES ON . TIES; JUMPS TO RAIL " LAFAYETTE, Ind Jan. 29. An unusual accident occurred on the Monon railroad between Logan and Harrodsburg yesterday, one that almost duplicated the performance of the locomotive of Cy Warman's famous story, which jumped the track while running at top 6peed only to land on another track adjoining and continue lt journey without interruption. . Soon after northbound freight train No. 74 left Losan the telegraph operators observed that all blocfc signals all showed red, showing a broken circuit. When the train reached Harrcdsburg it was found that a big refrigerator car in the train was derailed just outride of Logan and had run along on the ties for six miles without breaking the couplings or
ditching the train. Finally, just as the train was pulling into Harrodsburg the wheels of the derailed car jumped back to the track. The drawing or the wheels along the ties had damaged the Fijmal rods and wires and thi" caused the signal
lights to turn red. Monon officials, who investigated the accident, found unmistakable evidence of the freight car's long trip along the ties and are unable to account for the fact that the couplings did not break and cause a disastrous wreck. The crew of the train did not know anything had happened. Hornby to Die in Chair Without Aid of Clergy a (By Associated Press) OSSINING. N: Y., Jan. 29. Gordon Fawcett Hamby the 26-year-old con
ressed murderer, bank roDDer ano.nJ
Tax Assessors Will Meet Committee; Mathews Named
The state board of tax commission-! train bandit will go to the death chaii
ers Wednesday issued the program for i in Sing Sing prison tonight without
jthe annual conference of the state tne ajd 0f clergy, if his wishes are
ooaru oi tax commissioners wun coun- t d b Lewis F. Lawes, warden, fy and local tax assessors on Feb. 5 Tv 6 and 7. A request to this effect was transmit-
The conference this year is of un- t?d tonight to the warden for Hamby
Funeral Arrangements
William Worries About Future; Suffers With Leg
LONDON, Jan. 29. The Berlin correspondent of The Morning Post telegraphs quotations from a letter which
the ex-kaiser on Jan. 2 sent to his friend, Prince Furstenberg von Donauescningen, protesting against the publication of his letters to Czar Nicholas. The ex-kaiser says in this etter that he no longer wishes to return to Germany, as he feels that everybody deceived him and then abandoned him.. The evidence given "the famous investigation committee," he states, intensifies the feeling that he was duped even by such men as Bethmann
Hollweg and Ludendorff, not to speak of von Tirpitz. The ex-kaiser writes further that he is glad to be at Doorn, and continues: The old pains in the right leg and the right arm have returned, but I suffer more physically in view of the uncertain future. What is go
ing to happen? "I have nothing favorable to hope for since the tragic end of Nicholas unred the bullets of kaiser murderers. The feeling of monarchical solidarity has disappeared from the world, and the others believe, perhaps, that they may assure their throne by abandon
ing me. Henry s and V ictoria s ap
peals have died away without finding an echo."
MAIL ORDERS BOOM (By Associated Press)
CHICAGO. Jan. 29. The annual I
tatement of Sears, Roebuck and com- usual interest because the state hast0(iay by a member of the death watch.
I any issued today showed that the operated one year under the new tax The iron nervea prisoner whose caompany's business last year was law and because it is possible that de-j r 0t.Time took him from coast to -reater than at any time in its history, cisions of the supreme and appellate toast and ended in Tacoma. Wash.. tlross business exceeded a quarter of courts bearing on the tax law will bewitn bi3 arrest for the murder of two a billion dollars and net Drofits to-ilanded down before the conference, u'li.
tiled $18,S90,125 after meeting federal! AMlliam Mathews, assessor of,iory of the East Brooklyn Savings
taxes aim preierrea aiviaenas oi ,i" v "c tuu,iiJ 10 namu. a. uicmun "" lank in Dec. 1918, began his last uavs
ton $75,000,000 common stock
MARQUIS IS BANKRUPT. (By Associated Press) LONDON, Jan. 29 The Marquis of Queensberry appeared Wednesday in bankruptcy court, meeting creditors
preliminary to the appointment of
receiver. A statement filed by the Marquis showed liabilities of 1,630, and no assets except a one-third interest arising from a deal in port wine.
NON RESIDENTS GET BIG GAME (By Associated Press) HALIFAX, Jan. 29. Non-resident hunters killed 1,200 of the 1,400 Moose
s j shot in Nova Scotia during-1919, aca cording to government reports made
public today. Tney also baggod l,9o0 of the 2,380 deer killed. Hunting licenses were issued to 465 non-residents.
n ill
"Tl
3109
Pearl street, will be held from the
home at 2:30 p. m. Saturday. Burial will be in Earlham cemetery. The
Friends
Kath-
! 2 T- 1, 1 J O - A vxAvn-nr'n
church at 9 a. m. Thursday. The Rev. John Rager, son of the deceased, was celebrant of the requiem high mass. Father Huningford, of Napoleon, Ind., acted as deacon; Father Snyder, of Greensburg, Ind., as sub-deacon, and the Rev. Zept, of St. Andrew's parish, acted as master of ceremonies, assistpd by the Revs. Cronin, Ryan and Roell. Burial was in St. Andrew's.
' Pallbearers were Edward Ramler,
Edward Berhide, Edward Bloemke,
William H. Torbeck, Harm Pardieck and Henry Pardieck. Ribkee Funeral services for John Ribkee will be held from his home at 2 p. m. Friday. Burial in Earlham.
A UNIQUE MODEL IN STYLE"
E ON
Pattern" 3109 here illustrated is cut 'n 3 sizes: 16, 18, and 20 years. For : '.he 18-year size, 5 yards of 44-inch material will be required. Duvetyn, serge, taffeta, satin, poplin, crepe and crepe de chine would be attractive for this model. Blue duvetyn with pipings of bele, and collar and cuffs embroideied in colored
wnrctPrt is smart for this. The width
of the skirt at lower edge with plaits
extended is 1 yard. - A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10c in silver or stamps. ' Name t.... m Address ; City ... T Bize I !.'" t Address Pattern Department, Palladium. '
Brown.
WILLIAMS, WERKING, BACK. County Superintendent Williams and
M. E. Werking, architect, have return- j Rev. Wiggins will officiate,
eu irom ureenneia, u., wnere tney may can inursuay evening, spent Wednesday inspecting the high ' Rager The funeral of Mrs
school there to get ideas for the new consolidated Center township school to be located in Centerville. The Greenfield high school, which is said to be one of the most beautiful in the world, was built at the cost of $1,000,000. A prominent citizen donated the school. HAWORTH TO SPEAK. Samuel I Haworth, head of fhe spiritual resource department of Forward Movement of Friends, in America
will address the Allen Jay Memorial church at the prayer meeting time Thursday night, using as his subject "The Forward Movement from a Spiritual Standpoint." TWO, BLIND, TO WED One of the few Instances of ifs kind was the Issuing of a marriage license by the county clerk Thursday to Jesse L. Gardner, music dealer, of Chicago, to Genevieve Jamieson, of Pershing, who are both blind. THOMAS WITH NEW FIRM Earl E. Thomas, formerly of this city, has resigned . from the income and profits tax examining force of the
Internal revenue department and is as
sociated with Coffield and Herdrich
certified public accountants of Indian
apolis. Mr. Thomas is identified with the federal tax department of the
firm. At one time Mr. Thomas audit
ed corporation returns in the offices
of the internal revenue department at
Washington. HAIRCUTS UP 50 CENTS Richmond men may soon resemble Bolsheviks. Barbers have raised the price of haircuts from 40. to 50 cents, fchampoo from 25 to 35 cents, and massage from 35 to 40. No increase in the price of shaves was made. DAY IS QUIET V McKinley's -birthday and Carnation day were celebrated informally by local citizens Thursday. No public observance of the day was held. Lewis G. Reynolds, a local man, was the originator of Carnation dav. 12 FLU CASES REPORTED
Twelve additional cases of influenza all minor in nature, were reported to
the board of health for the past 24 hours on Thursday. VNothing alarm
ing as yet in the local situation, because pneumonia is .not resulting." said Dr. George B. Hunt, city health officer Thursday. LAST LECTURE NUMBER. "The Harvesters," the last number of the Jackson township lecture course, at Canipbellstown, wijl be given Monday evening. Feb. 2, This is a musical trio. Do not fail to hear them. TWO HELD FOR ASSAULT. Robert Hart and Mel Kamp, charged with assault and battery, will be arraigned in police court Saturday morning. Both men were arrest-:
New Sentenced to
10 Years or Life
PILES! PILES! PILES! WILLIAMS' PILE OINTMENT For Blind, Bleeding and Itching Pile. For talc by all drugiiti, mail 50c and $1.00
WILLIAMS MFG. CO, Prop Cfevalaad, OUi For sale by A. G. Luken & Co.
IL. It
r
tn each with apparent indifference to
his fate.
Biliousness lowers your spirits, dulls your brain, causes constipation, sick headache, and makes you feel miserable. Clean up your liver; take
Mad
Hood's Pills by C. I. lloo.i Co.. T.mro:. Mas.
mm
& Liquid
oAcetanxtide.
Or DOSE AND IN BGTTLE3 -JO. SOs& Q I
"Say it With Flowers" LEMON'S FLOWER SHOP 1015 Main Street Phone 1093
LOS ANGELES. Cal., Jan. 29 Harry S. New, convicted here of murder in the second degree for shooting Miss Freda Lesser, was denied a new trial today. He was immediately sentenced to serve not less than 10 years with a maximum of life imprisonment at San Quentin.
MOUNT VERNON LEAKING; RETURNS TO PORT SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., The transport Mount Vernon, which departed from here last Friday on a secret mission, is returning today in a leaking condition, but is in no danger, according to a radio message received today. The message said the Mount Vernon was 450 miles off San Francisco, and that she is returning without assistance. She is due here tomorrow morning.
y Freedom 1 from headaches, nervousness, indigestion and sleeplessness,which former tea and coffee drinkers experience after a change from tea or coffee toPOSTUM Soon proves "There's a Reason" forPostum Made by Postum Cereal Co.. .Battle Creek.Mich.
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CALUMET BISCUITS light, flaky mounds of goodness capped with a tender, done-toa-turn crust You'll admit that no other biscuits can compare with them the minute the first batch comes from your oven.
Ef AWARD PaWCTCAUMTTW roooy
Makes Most Palatable and Sweetest of Foods
because it is absolutelypure in the can and in the baking. because its leavening strength never varies, never weakens. It is always the same, and results are always the same always the finest
Absolute certainty more than the usual rising force, with the moderate price1 you pay for CALUMET make it decidedly the most economical of leaveners.
0T MADE ev THE
You save when you buy it. You save when you use it. You save materials it is used with. A perfect product of the world's largest, most up-to-date and sanitary Baking Powder Factory. Contains only such
ingredients as have been officially approved by U. S. Food Authorities.
PA IT VTMC'r Try it! Drive away i ?. B it J Fl P I bake-day failures. Reduce &, !34WXT.L4 I baking expense. Have liVs: nJ: most delicious and whole- & iTTf 501116 baking3- fc
sY mMm wm 4? rtoiTtfSP is mm
C V le.. Hill SS
?v-hxt
mm
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9 if
mm
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a?r; JBjV,.vTfEfSjT
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Remcmber when you buy Calumet, you Get a
full pound, if you want it. 16 not 12 ounces.
