Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 172, 28 May 1920 — Page 1
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VOL. XLV., NO. 172 Palladium. Est. 1831. Consolidated: with Sun-Telegram 1907. RICHMOND, IND., FRIDAY EVENING, MAY 28, 1920. SINGLE COPY 3 CENTS
LTADOO BOOM LEADERS STAY OUT MJIGHT Source and Methods of Former Railroad Administra
tor's Presidential Campaign Unknown by Witnesses. LINK UPPALMER MEN (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, D. C. May 28. The senate campaign investigating committee made further efforts today to get light on what Chairman Kenyon described as "this invisible McAdoo boom." Angus M. McLean, of North Carolina, a director of the war finance corporation, was examined. He denied that he was "a sort of southern manager," for Mr. McAdoo's campaign and attempted to read a prepared statement. "Didn't Know of Any." Replying to a rapid fire of questions, Mr. McLean declared that he did not know there was a McAdoo headquarters In Washington or in the Pennsylvania Hotel, New York, and that he was not informer as to the source of, McAdoo literature sent to Democratic delegates. ' Because a number of witnesses who were expected to throw considerable light on activities of several candidates either have not been served with summonses or could not arrange to be here, the other sessions today were expected to develop little of importance. A number of newspaper reporters and correspondents were on hand to tell what they knew as to the assembling and distribution of funds. Palmer Treasurer Up. The principal witness at the hearing late yesterday was Judge J. Harry Covington, national treasurer of the Palmer campaign. He was questioned in an effort to show several of Palmer's supporters were connected with the office of the alien proprety custodian of which Mr. Palmer formerly was the head, and also to show that the witness himself is connected with the Revere Sugar company of Boston in the capacity of counsel in a case now pending before the department of Justice. Judge Covington declared only nine men on the list of contributors to the Calmer fund had any connection of any kind with the administration of the alien property custodian's office. He also denied his activities in behalf Of -Mr. Palmer were occasioned by his Ba8i-governmentaI legal associations. SENATE COMMITTEE FAVORS SUGAR BAR (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, D. C, May 28. By a vote of six to three the senate agriculture committee today ordered a favorable report on the McNary bill providing for an export embargo on sugar. File Petitions For Oiling Of Streets, Engineer Urges Petitions for oiling the city streets should be filed within the next few days, the city engineer announced Friday morning. Persons who contemplate oiling streets should circulate a petition in their block at once. When the petition is presented the city engineer will determine the cost of oiling. The costs will vary according to the width of the street. The petition, accompanied by the assessment, should be filed with the city clerk. The city engineer urges that the petitions be filed at once in order that he may determine how much oil the city will need and be able to complete the work early in the season. Bolsheviki Advancing Near Kiev; Poles Fighting Hard LONDON, May 28. The Bolsheviki are advancing in the Kiev region and are engaged in fighting on the second fortified line of the police northeast of that city, it is announced in Thursday's official statement by the soviet government received by wireless from Moscow today. - The statement says the fighting line runs 10 miles north of Brovarl village. The village lies about 10 miles directly east of Kiev. Hard fighting on other sectors of the front, to the north of the Kiev region, is indicated by the communique. Harry Green Dead; Was Wed for Sixty-Three Years Henry Green, S4 years old, died Friday morning at his home, 88 Easthaven avenue, after a lingering Illness. He nnd his wife Elizabeth had lived together for 63 years. Surviving the deceased is his wife, five children, Mrs. Frank Henning, Garrett. Kans.; Walter M. Green, Denver, Colo.; Mrs. Ella F. Crampton, Rorhester, U. Y.; Jesse Green and Mrs. Harry Dent, both of this city; seven grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Funeral services will be announced later. Friends may call Saturday afternoon and Sunday. Flowers are to to omitted.
WOULD CONSERVE OKEFINOKEE SWAMP AS U. S. PARK WASHINGTON. May 28. Preservation of Okefinokee swamp, which covers 700 square miles in south-eastern Georgia, is recommended in a biological survey of the Department of Agriculture, made public today. Commercial interests bent on removjllng timber from the swamp the last jf ct the three great swamps on the Atlantic seaboard will destroy its primeval conditions unless action is taken to perpetuate them, the survey stated.
Public Can't Judge, Say
Head of Rail Conductors (By Associated Press) CHICAGO. May 28 Representatives of the public on arbitration boards do not know enough about railroad labor problems to be fair, L. E. Sheppard, president of the Order of Railway Conductors, told the city club yesterday. He asserted that the Railroad brotherhoods are unalterably opposed to arbitration boards on which the public is represented. "The public should be left out of the issue in dealing with the railroad problems," Mr. Sheppard said. "The layman knows so little about the actual problems of the situation." LIGHT PLANT NEEDS TO BE $628,000, IN TWO YEARS, REPORT The Municipal Light and Power plant, between 1920 and'1924, will need imorovements totalling $628,000, ac cording to the final report filed with the board of works by John Rick, division engineer, of the Morris Knowles company. Inc., Pittsburgh. The report reviews the entire present equipment of the plant and recommends the installation of sufficient turbines and machinery to provide a capacity of 5,000 more kilowatts than at present. The improvements declared immediately necessary are: Buildings and foundations . ..$ 35,000 General equipment 190,000 Condensing equipment 90,000 Miscellaneous auxiliary equipment 18,000 Switchboards and equipment 4,000 Piping 30,000 Total $367,000 Engineering and contingencies 63,000 Total $420,000 Coal handling equipment 58,000 Total $478,000 Later Improvements Total $150,00. The Improvements required during the years 1921-1923, according to the engineer's report, are: Boiler plant equipment $ 60,000 Chimney 15.000 Spray pond and piping 45,000 Auxiliary equipment and in struments 10,000 Total $130,000 Engineering and contingencies 20,000 Total $150,000 THRAWLEY, TUCKER, ASK FOR PARDONS Petitions for clemency from the state board of pardons have been filed by two men convicted in Wayne county and one from Fayette county. They are: John Thrawley, Wayne , ..CJUl county, convicted on June 9, 1898, on charge of murder, and sentenced to Hfo iTTmriKnnmont in th sta.t nrisrm I .Tnhn TnrkPr.Wavne tnwnshlo. senJohn Tucker, Wayne township, sen tenced on July 5, 1917, to five to 14 C IV j years on charge of robbery. He is in the Indiana reformatory. Charles Jennings, Fayette county, convicted on charge of assault and battery with intent to commit felony i on Oct. 18, 1919, and sentenced to two to 14 years in the state prison. TROOPS ORDERED JUT !N STRIKE RIOTING (By Associated Press) BRISTOL, R. I., May 28. Three troops of military were ordered out by Governor Beckman today after a riot In which strike sympathizers attacked young women clerks and other working employes of the National India Rubber company. The governor's proclamation declares the town in a state of insurrection. The plant has been closed except for the office force and repair men since the strike began three weeks ago. English Friend to Talk Here Roslyn Earp, British Quaker, who has arrived in America to talk in various Quaker centers in behalf of the All World Conference of Friends in London in August, and on general international relations, will speak in Richmond on June 25. He will also be here on June 11 on his way from Bainville, O., to Chicago. Mr. Earp is now in Philadelphia. Council Postpones Meeting The next meeting of the city council will be held Monday, June 7. The (meeting has been postponed from next Monday night. May 31, on account of the observance of Memorial day. The council will consider the proposed improvements at the Municipal Light and Power plant at the June 7 meeting. 100 Is Prescription Limit (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, D. C, May 28. In an effort to defeat the "indiscriminate sale" of liquor on physicians' prescriptions, Commissioner Williams, of the bureau of internal revenue, issued a ruling today limiting the number of patients allowed each physicians to 100 for three months, except with "good cause." Presbyterians Would Ratify (By Associated Press) PHILADELPHIA, Pa., May 28. Resolutions urging that the United States ratify the peace treaty and the league of nations were passed by the general assembly of the Presbyterian church in the United States of America in its closing session today. 20,000 ON STRIKE IN INDIA LONDON, May 28. New disorders in connection with the strike of employes of the great Peninsula railway in India are reported in a Bombay dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph company, which says the number of strikers is more than 20.000.
Senate
The committee conducting the senate of Arkansas, William S. Kenyon of The high cost of running for the presidency is but another angle of the orgy of spending which warrants congressional interrogation. A senate SOLDIER RELIEF MEN BLOCK HOUSE ACTION (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, D. C, May 28. The proponents of soldier relief legislation launched their filibuster in the house today immediately after the speaker's gavel fell, and it was 25 minutes before the chaplain, the Rev. Henry M. Couden, offered the customary opening prayer. The filibuster was renewed immediately afterwards and efforts were made to prevent the reading of the journal of the day. Leaders still planned to ask for a suspension of rules for six days beginning Saturday, during which time they stated, the bill would be considered. Debate on the relief measure during the past few days has centered around the supposed Democratic opposition. Republicans charging repeatedly that such opposition exists and Democrats emphatically denying that they plan to vote against the measure when it comes up before the house. LLOYD-GEORGE WILL MEET REDC MINISTER LONDON, May 28 Premier Lloyd George will meet Gregory Krassin, Russian Bolshevik minister of trade and commerce, this week, says the Times, which also mentions a rumor "circulated through channels notoriously in touch with the premier's estourage," that both the subject of ne- . 1 ! J " , . f"""M"UB 1 rb0a engaged in ofwould be moJe w dely extended than at Present acknowledged". It is understood that Earl Kurzon of Kedd leston. secretary for foreign affairs, ... , Jj;.. . T 1 3 ""V t tV" loyu ueorse, yiuci vvitu xviiissiii. M. Krassin will propose amone other things, says the newspaper, to f"1. ,5 , Vui8 ?tamPed with the seal of the old Russian gov ernment on the English market and it is the main object of his visit to obtain a general license to send such gold to England and sell it here. 5,500 Autos, Prospect Here Richmond's automobile factories have orders which will more than double the year output over 1919. The Pilot plans to build about 3,000 cars. The Davis will make about 2,500 cars but has orders for hundredg more . Limited factory facilities and difficulty in obtaining motors are responsible for the reduced output. View Ireland With Concern (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, D. C. May 28. A resolution "viewing with grave concern" conditions in Ireland and "expressing sympathy with the aspirations of the Irish people for a government of their own choice" was reported out today by the house foreign affairs committee. The vote wa3 11 to seven. Alleges She Isn't Insane Lydia J. Hayes has filed habeas cor pus proceedings against Dr. S. E. Smith, general superintendent of Easthaven, claiming that she was sent to Easthaven without proper and lawful inquest, and that she is not, nor was not, insane. Thomas N. Perkins, oi incuanapoiis, Is her attorney. Richland Bank Is Looted (By Associated Press) EVANSVILLE, Ind., May 28. The Lake State bank at Richland, Ind., near here, was looted Thursday night. The door to the safety deposit vault was blown out and several thousand dollars in bonds besides $85 in cash were taken. Bulk of cash deposits in safe was not taken. The Evansville police were notified of the robbery. LEGION MEMBER WAS "GOB" WHEN JUST PAST FOURTEEN (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, May 28. Omar Miller, a member of the Wyoming, III., post of the American Legion, has a just claim to having been the youngest "Gob" in the American navy during the war. according to a forthcoming issue of The American Legion Weekly Miller enlisted, according to the Legion publication, on July 5, 1918, soon after his 14th birthday, deceiving a recruiting officer by putting on his first pair of long trousers the day he signed up. He served on board the New Jersey. WATER BILL THROUGH (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, D. C, May 28. The conference report on the long pending water power bill was approved today by the senate and the measure goes to the president. The vote was 45 to one.
Sub-committee Investigates High
hearings on campaign expenditures. Iowa (chairman), Atlee Pomerene of committee investigating the precon-1 presidential aspirants has discovered that huge sums have been raised and
President Pays Tribute to Doughboy;
Many Memorials Planned in France
(By Associated Press) PARIS, May 27. President Wilson has ordered a Memorial day wreath of flowers to be laid on the statue "The American Doughboy" in Suresnes cemetery, and Ambassador Hugh C. Wallace will deposit it there on Sunday. Instructions were received today from Mr. Wilson by his favorite flower vendor when he was in Paris to get up a floral tribute to American dead. The merchant called at the American embassy. The ceremony at Picpus cemetery, where lies the body of Lafayette, will appeal especially to the French people. Colonel Drake, of the memorial committee, will preside and will make a 6hort address, to which Marquis Chambrun, grandson of Lafayette, will reply . The following message from MajorGeneral James G. Harbord, who commanded the Second division in the battle of Belleau Wood, will be read on that field: "Your comrades, the American Legion, at home confide to you the duty of honoring our dead who sleep in the soil of France. Dead on the field of honor, they yet live in the hearts of those for whom they died and millions of their countrymen enshrine their memory on May 30." Seeger Poem to be Read A memorial ode to American volunteers, written by, Alan Seeger, a member of the French Foreign Legion, who was killed in September, 1916, will be read in all American cemeteries where American members of the American Legion participate. Lieutenant-Colonel Frank Parker, who is scheduled to make an address at the Poissy cemetery, was asked to-1 day for an outline of his speech. "Speech?" he replied, "I am not going to make a speech on Memorial day. I am going to talk to those boys BOLSHEVIKI CEASE FIGHTING WITH JAPS (By Associated Press) LONDON, May 28. Hostilities between the Russians and Japanese, in Siberia ceased on May 25, according to a Reuter despatch from Vladivostok aated Wednesday. The dispatch also reports the arrival of the Russo Japanese armistice commission at Kharbarovsk. Italy Expects Reconstruction From New Cabinet Nitti (By Associated Press) ROME, May 28. Italy expects from her new cabinet a program of true reconstruction, according to former Premier Gioliti in an interview published today in the Tribune. He declared there are two dangers threatening the country, the discredit of parliament and disastrous financial conditions. "The prestipe of parliament has been shaken," Signor Giolitti asserted. "There is an absolute lack of legislative activity and the work of parliament is being replaced by royal decrees, which are unconstitutional. Gompers and Allen Debate On Kansas Anti-Strike LaW (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, May 2S. Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor and Governor Henry J. Allen, of Kansas, will debate here tonight on the merits of the recently enacted Kansas industrial court law. No official decision will be made as to the winner. Judge Alton B. Parker, of this city will preside. The demand for seats has far exceeded the capacity of the hall. Mr. Gompers won the toss for opening the debate. Each speaker will be allowed 90 minutes to present his arguments. Harold Meyers Dead At Home in Detroit Harold Meyers, 27 years old. son of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Meyers, died at his home in Detroit, Mich., Wednesday morning. He was a resident of this city until five years ago, graduated from high school here, and has many friends here among the young people. He was a member of the Beta Phi Sigma fraternity. His father was a member of the Meyers and Parks Carriage Company. Funeral services will be held in Gratis Ohio Saturday afternoon. TO LINK UP PARKS WASHINGTON, May 28. A. L. Westgard, representing the American r.utomobile association, will leave here June 1 on a path finding motor trip to link in a single great highway a majority of the national parks in the west.
Cost of Running for Presidential Office
From left to right: Senators James A. Ohio and Walter E. Edge of New Jersey. spent. Governor Lowden, it develops, his candidacy, while one contributor to the Wood fund, William Cooper of mine who are lying up there just as I talked to them when they were living." Major-General John F. O'Ryan, who is now in London, will speak at Bony, where many of the soldiers of the 27th division fell. Rear-Admiral Harry McL. P. Huse will be the principal speaker at Belleau Wood. PARIS, May 28. Sisterly affection and deepest sympathy for the women of America whose husbands, sons, brothers or sweethearts fell during the war is expressed in a message received by the Paris memorial day committee from the Society of French Homes, the members of which are French women who know the horrors of war and the heartaches that attend it. UNION COUNTY WILL HONOR 200 VETS WHO LIE IN CEMETERIES Memorial day services will be held at Liberty, Ind., Monday, May 31. The order of exercises is as follows: Forenoon Program: Music, Liberty orchestra; song, "America," audience; invocaA 1 .1 T Tt T, H . . T
6to'rtt??- leader of Turkish nationalists
Jeffreys, of College Corner M. E. church; music, orchestra; address, the Rev. E. I. Larue; music, orchestra; song, "Star-Spangled Banner," audience. Committees: Speakers, Albert Bertsch, Charles Johnson, A. Smith, B. M. Grove; finance. W. P. Kennedy. Glen Calkins; flowers. Woman's Re lief Corps; program, Walter Clark, H. Adams, Mrs. Cad Tappen, Mrs. Hollis Beard; music, F. B. Husted, G. B. Howren H. Smith. Order of March Joshua Davis, marshal Eldorado band; school children of the county;
i-uiuiei o oi toe vvunu war; r. a. rt. ; pasha Post and all other soldiers; Woman's! ' . Relief Corps, No. 60; Home Guards; Tliiy nnilTmnilTinilO Sons of Veterans; all old soldiers un-jT!NY I. UN I HI KM I II INN able to march will be nrovided with I Hi I UUI1 I I1IUU I IUI1U
vehicles. Exercises at cemetery, G. A. R.. W. R. C. The programs include an honor roll consisting of .the names of more than 200 veterans burled in the cemeteries of Union county. Turks Lost Almost All, Venizelos Reveals; Kicked Nearly Out Of Europe (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, May 28. Terms of peace imposed upon the Turks, more rigorous than any previous summaries have indicated, were revealed to the Creek chamber of deputies last week In Athens by Premier Venizelos, a summary of whose address was received today by the State Department. "The Turkish treaty" according to Venizelos, "accords to Turkey only local autonomy, which may in due time, and should the people so determine, be converted into independence." In the small southeastern area of Europe in which Turkev is left a last foothold, Venizelos declared, her formen. Constantinople is retained by the i sultan, the Greek premier explained, with the reservation that "he will not violate the conditions of the peace treaty. Should such stipulations be violated the powers have the right to modify their decision regarding Con stantinople." The Turkish army is limited to a militia of 35,000 men. ATHENS POLICE NAIL-PLANK ON AUTOMOBILE SPEEDERS (By Associated Press) ATHENS. May 28 Policemen of this city have an effective and rather unique method of curbing speeding putoists. Officers posted along the principal streets carry planks studded with long sharp nails, and when they see a car approaching at a rate they believe is excessive they drop the plank in front of the machine. If the car is speeding it cannot be stopped in time, and as a result irs tires are punctured but if the machine is proceeding at a reasonable pace it can be stopped before the plank is reached. NO SECOND FIDDLE FOR NICHOLAS, HE ANNOUNCES (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, May 28. Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, candidate for the Republican nomination for president, will not accept the nomination for the vice-presidency if it is offered him, judge John R. Davies, his campaign manager announced.
Reed of Missouri, Selden P. Spencer
Proctor of Cincinnati, has admitted advancing $500,000 to secure Wood's nomination. The accompanying pic ture shows the senate investigators at work. ANTHRACITE MEN TO MEET AGAIN TUESDAY WASHINGTON. D. C, May 28. Anthracite coal operators have expressed a willingness to accept President Wilton's proposal that a commission be named to settle wage disputes in the anthracite field, Secretary Wilson said today in announcing that the Joint anthracite wage 6cale committee j would meet with him here again next Tuesday. WILKESBARRE, Pa., May 28. Anthracite mine workers will abide by any decision of the presidential coal commission to settle their wage dispute and all danger of a stoppage of work in the hard coal region has passed Thomas Kennedy, president of District No. 7, declared here today. He said that the miners in refusing yesterday to consider a strike at this time and in accepting a commission had adopted "the only logical and honorable course." Moslems Mistreated, They Say in Protests Filed (By Associated Press) ANGORA. Asia Minor, May 18. Protests against alleged mistreatment by M. Tardieu, French governor of the province of Adana, and Armenians associated with the French In that district since French occupation forces moved in last March have been receiv ed from Moslems there by Mustapha 11 here A long list of atrocities the Turks pre said to have suffered, especially at Kozan, accompanied the protests. It is charged that at Kozan French and Armenians are engaged in wholesale murders and thefts. PARIS, May 28. French governmental authorities have been in constant touch with Adana. and declared tills morning in discussing a report of Moslem protests from that district that no disorders had been reported inH nntViinc -urns Vnnsn of n nnsRihle hodc rny the oiwntinn made in the r,essage sent to Mustapha Kemal CHECK Y CAMPAIGN At noon Friday, about $12,000 had been pledged on the Y. M. C. A. campaign for $15,000. Every available man who could give time for helping in the canvassing of the city was at work. The cause of the lack of funds was attributed by the Rev. Stoakes. pastor of the First Methodist church, at a speech at the noon luncheon Thursday, to the smallness of contributions from men who could afford much. In part the Rev. Stoakps said: "One business firm that I and my partner visited, consulted its books and found that it had given two dollars to the institution last year, and that is the amount he trotted out for this drive for over twice the amount that was sought for in 1919. If that is the way you men have been doing business, I do not Bee how you have got along up to this time." The final reports will be made at a dinner in the "Y" at 6:30 p. m. It is the opinion of the campaign man agement that unless the citizens of the city contribute
liberally before thefTurk,s.n congress in Adrianople, the
final report that Richmond will go down on record as failing to support its Y. M. C. A. Indiana Bolshevik's Citizenship Cancelled INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. May 28. Judge A. B. Anderson, in U. S. District Court, today cancelled the citizenship certificate of Paul G. Glaser. a Gary lawyer. Glaser was charged with obtaining the certificate through a fraud. It was granted April 30. 1913. by Judge W. W. McMahan of Lake county circuit court. Glaser was chief counsel for the steel workers during the strike of 1919. On testimony he said yesterday he was a "Bolshevik." WILLIAM MAKES BETTER TAILOR THAN EMPEROR (By Associated Press) LONDON. May 28. William of Hohtnzollern, former Emperor of Germany is trying his hand as a tailor, according to a Central News dispatch from Amsterdam. He is cutting out patterns for many new suits with which he is going to stock his wardrobe, and the dispatch quotes a trade paper as declaring he is excelling at the job. "How unfortunate it is" says this paper, "that William missed his vocation. After all the notoriety he achieved as an emperor, one can imagine what would have been his fame as a tailor."
RESOLUTION VETO FAILS OF PASSAGE House Falls 29 Votes Short of Passing Peace Measure Over President's Negative Matter of Record. S E N A T E HOPELESS"
(By Associated Press) WASHINGTON. D. C, May 28. An effort to override President Wilson's veto of the Republican peace resolution failed today in the house. The vote was 219 in favor of overriding the veto to 152 against, or 29 less than the required two-thirds. The president yesterday sent the resolution back to congress unsigned with the statement that he could not agree to such a program because he considered it would place "an ineffaceable stain" on the nation's honor. Leaders predicted attempt in the senate to override the veto would be hopeless. Plan to Put Him on Defense. A record vote, however, had been planned, "in order that the matter might be disposed of promptly and in order that the records might show Mr. Wilson and not congress was to blame because the nation continues technically to be in a state of war with the central powers." Both senate and house leaders for the most part refrained from discussing the situation further than to reiterate that the issues of the treaty must be fought out In the coming political campaign unless th nri. dent soon again submits the treaty to the senate, contemplation of which he did not indicate In his veto message yesterday. REORGANIZATION IS NAVY'S NEED SIMS (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON. D. C, May 28. Legislation reorganizing the navy department and creating a responsible military adviser to the civilian secretary was urged before the senate naval investigating committee today, by Read Admiral Sims, who continued his testimony in rebuttal to Secretary Daniels and other witnesses. The Admiral ascribes the war time failure charged by him against the navy to the present organization. He declared that Mr. Daniels in his testimony has not attempted to reply to specific criticism but had endeavored to "gloss over" the departments failure. $2,500 ACCEPTABLE WAGE, SAYS SEWELL (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, 111., May 28. Unless the railway labor board grants the demands of the shopmen for a national minimum wage which would "pay a minimum of $2,500 a year with an 8-hour day for common labor," the employes representatives cannot guar antee that the board's decision will be acceptable to the men, B. M: Jewell, acting president of the railroad employees department, testified before the board today. Mr. Jewell also declared that the board should act on the national agreement entered into between Federal railroad administration and tbe employees, a question which the roads had declared did not properly come under the board's jurlsdtction. Mr. Jewell's testimony brought a sharp question from Judge R. M. Barton, chairman of the board, as to whether he was "issuing an ultimatum to this board or trying to dictate to it as to the decision it should make." FIGHTING IN THRACE EXPECTED BY LEADERS (By Associated Press) CONSTANTINOPLE. May 28 Most of the leaders in the vialayet of Adrianople in European Turkey are sending their families to this city in anticipation of fighting when the Greeks attempt to occupy Thrace. Chrstians, however,' are not permitted to leave their homes in that region. Just before the conclusion of the recent presiding oiiicer aeciarea an agreement to defend Thrace had been reached between the Turks and Bulgarians. Weather Forecast For Indiana, by the United States Weather Bureau Partly cloudy tonight; slightly cooler extreme south portion; Saturday, fair and warmer. Temperatures Yesterday. Maximum 82 Minimum 51 Today. Noon 71 For Wayne County, by W. E. Moore Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday. Fair at intervals. Warmer Saturday. General Conditions The cool wave moved southeastward last night, resulting In the general fall In temperature over the north and central states. An area of low barometric pressure over British Columbia has caused a marked rise in temperature to take place over the northwest. In the states of Montana and North and South Dakota, the temperature rose 30 degrees in the last 24 hours. The crest of the cool wave will pass here tonight and warm weather will arrive by Saturday. Heavy local rain in portions of Kansas and Missouri. Spring weather prevails over the Yukon valley and the Klondike regions. Sixty degrees above at Eagle, where It was 60 below four months ago. . . - .
