Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 261, 11 September 1920 — Page 12

PAGE FOURTEEN

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM ND SUN-TELEGRAM. RICHMOND. INB, SATURDAY, SEPT. 11, 1920.

DAVID RUST'S BODY

GERMANY TO EATON - EATON, O.. Sept. 11. After a Journey of several thousand miles from Its burial place overseas, the body of Da vld Rust, Preble county soldier, -is expected to reach Eaton at 4:15 th:s afternoon, to be laid In its final resting place In Mound Hill cemetery. Advices received here Friday by the dead ; soldier's mother. Mrs. Susan Rust, stated that the body was. leaving New ' York late that afternoon for Eaton, coming by way of Richmond, lnd., where transfer to Eaton will be made. - The burial service it is expected will isia ntgpA nfnrulav afternoon, although

at this time the arrangements are not

definite. The aeaa nero win oe t-nrAaA ft miiitnrv hurlaL It has not

been determined if funeral services

will be conducted; nor has it Been aetermined if the body . will be taken to the mother's home upon its arrival here." This will be determined after the body is delivered here to Undertaker F. C. Girton. Rust died December 13, 191S, accord ing to official advices, in a hospital in Germany, while with the army of occupation. Pneumonia was the cause of death. He was a member of Battery A, 322nd artillery. Rust was inducted into the service in Eaton and was one of the first increment of eight men sent to a train, ing camp from Preble county. He was a brother of George and Thomas Rust, of Preble countw, .and Melvin Rust of Darke county O. He is survived by two young sons. Ho was 32 years, old at the time of his death. Stephen Speaks at Reception. Governor William D. Stephens, of California, a native son of Eaton, was accorded a public reception here Friday night in the lobby of the courthouse, after which he delivered an address in the public assembly room in the building. The governor is in - 'Eaton for a brief visit to relatives and ' friends, while enroute to his home from an eastern trip. Hundreds of local people greeted Governor Stephens and shook hands with him at the reception. Prominent local men were in the receiving line. The governor's address was nonpolitical, being chiefly in the nature of reminiscences. Mayor Harry Risinger presided at the speaking and introduced the governor. Governor Stephens addressed the local Hardlng-Coolidge Club in a meeting Thursday night in the club rooms. He did not discuss present political issues, but confined his talk largely to local doings in his boyhood days. He predicted his state of California would go Republican this fall and that the party would gain a United States senator and at least three congressmen. Clem Snyder Gets Divorce. Upon grounds of adultery, Clem Li. Snyder, was granted a divorce from Gertrude Snyder and awarded custody of their daughter, aged about 3 years. Snyder named Harvey Bell in his complaint. The wife did not contest the suit. The decree was granted Friday by Judge A. C. Risinger in common pleas court. The mother is privileged to see the child at reasonable times. The couple married in July, 1916, in Eaton. Kennel Will Speak. At a benefit afTair for T. J. Wilkinson, well-known former local livestock buyer, to be held Sunday evening in the opera house, Colonel Joseph Kennel, local auctioneer, will deliver an address and a program of music will be presented. Mr. Wilkinson has been in an almost helpless condition the last two years or longer. Preble County W C T U to Meet All branches of the Preble County Woman's Christian Temperance Union will meet in convention in Eaton, Sep. 22, in the Christian church. A session will bej held morning, afternoon and evening. Chief among the speakers at the convention will be Mrs. Viola D. Romans, vice president of the Ohio W. C. T, U., and a candidate for United States senator. She will speak at the afternoon and evening sessions. Farm Bureau Campaign Planned. County-wide campaign for member ship in the Preble County Farm bureau will be launched Sept. 27, by members of the organization. It. is expected each and every farmer In the county will be visited and solio ited for membership in the bureau. An extensive advertising program will be adopted. Several at R. C. Meeting H. H. Hawkins, Mrs. A. D. Davis. Mrs. Hary I. Price of Eaton, and Mrs. Otto Heeter, Lewisburg were in Cincinnati, Friday and Saturday, representing the Preble County Red Cross chapter, at a division conference, in which Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky are participating. Miss Parker to be Married Miss Edna Parker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Parker, and Edward MIffin, of Philadelphia, Pa., will be united in marriage here Saturday evening at the Parker home, West Main street. The guests list will be confined to relatives and a few friends. Rev. Irwin Coming The Rev. Charles F. Irwin, expects to arrive home from a two week's vacation at Camp Perry in time to occupy his pulpit in the Presbyterian church, Sunday morning and evening. To Keep Office Open For the convenience of sportsmen who desire to procure hunting licenses County Clerk V. O. Rookstool an- . nounces he will keep his office in the courthouse open Saturday evening of this week and Monday and Tuesday evenings of next week. Expected Home Sunday County Prosecutor Phil Saylor and Earle C. Campbell are expected to arrive home Sunday from a month's camp life in northern Minnesota. Tyrrell in Hospital Clayton Tyrrell is a patient In Miami Valley hospital, where he expects to submit to an operation on one of his legs, which was crushed some time ago in an accident near Washington C. H., when a motor truck he was driving was wrecked by a freight train. The injury was not mending properly and he entered the Dayton hospital expecting to undergo an operation to correct the trouble. DYNAMITE GOES OFF. (By Associated Press) 1 - A, Peru, Sept. 11. Thirty men were killed, scores wounded and damage amounting to $250,000 was done by the explosion of dynamite in Callao bay this morning.

FAMOUS OLD BATTLESHIP INDIANA WILL BE BOMBED

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Here is the Indiana aa aba looked in the days of her glory, when she did valiant work during the Spanish-American war.

The battleship Indiana. She is now to be used as a target, for a scientific experiment to ascertain how easily airplanes can sink a modern battleship.

She will thus go to her grave after twenty-five years of service. She will be stripped of valuable metals before being sunk.

FUEL TROUBLES FOR STATE INSTITUTIONS OVER, SMITH PREDICTS The fuel situation for state institutions this fall should not become critical at any time, according to Dr. S. E. Smith of Easthaven. chairman of the state committee . for the securing of coal for the 6tate. A contract has been entered into by the state and

coal operators' association whereby

coal will be furnished all benevolent

institutions and Indiana university at

a price regulated by the operative scale at the time of purchase plus cost of transportation. . The cost of such coal at the present time ranges from $2.95 to $3.60 at the mine, depending upon the class of screening. Last year the fuel situation at East-

haven became critical at several different times because of lack' of fuel,

but this year if cars for transportation

can be secured a sufficient supply will

be on hands at all time. . ' Resume Building Work.

Building operations are again being

started at the local institution. The industrial building which was started earlier in the year, but which has been held up because of shortage of build

ing materials, will be finished in the near future, work to be begun next

week. No other new additions are planned at the present. ' Has Four Assistants. Dr. Smith has four medical assistants with him at the present time, which is more than he has had since the war. He expects to add another man to his staff soon. With this num

ber of assistants he expects to start

some research work which has been seriously hampered by shortage of help during the war. The venereal clinic which is being operated by Dr. Smith has treated about 90 patients since the establishment last May. The number of new cases is decreasing according to the clinic head, and a few are being discharged.

LOUISVILLE EDITOR "DRAFTED"

LOUISVILLE, KY., Sept. 10 An announcement in the Louisville Times that its editor, Arthur B. Krock, has been drafted by Chairman George White to serve with the democraic national committee at headquarters in New York, until the end of the presidential campiagn. Mr. Krock, the statement says, has arranged a leave of absence and will leave without salary.

INGENUITY HELPS BUND MAN "TO SEE"

Cannot Visit and Search, Rales Judge in "Wet" Case NEW YORK. Sept. 11 Federal Judge Garvin in Brooklyn Friday upheld United States commissioners' decisions that seizure of liquor without a search warrant is a "clear violation of the fourth amendment to the constitution." This finding attracted attention from the bar generally here and was accompanied by much speculation on reports that it largely would do away with attempts to try alleged Volstead act violators on Informations and liquor improperly seized. Sees "Clear Violation" "As the agents of the government had no reason to believe that any violation had taken place," Judge Garvin said, "their search of the premises without a warrant and the seizure resulting therefrom were a clear violation of the fourth amendment to the constitution and no conviction could be had upon evidence so obtained. "The rights guaranteed to the people by the fourth amendment can not be disregarded. As a part of the fundamental law of the land they were

.granted as a safeguard against op

pression. The judge quoted from authorities, showing that an information is ordinarily desirable, expediting justice, but said that there must be a substantial reason for granting it.

FORT BEN IS ESTABLISHED AS ARMY CORPS HEAD INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 10. Headquarters of the Fifth Army Corps area comprising the states of Ohio, West Virginia, Indiana and Kentucky are now established at Fort Benjamin Harrison with Maj.-Gen. George W. Read In command. General Read recently arrived at Fort Harrison from Camp Jackson, Columbia, S. C, where he has been in command since his return from Europe in April, 1919. The garrison at Fort Harrison now includes the second battalion and the Twentieth U. S. Infantry. It is expected this number will be increased now that the fort has become headquarters for the fifth corps area. $50,000 IN BONDS IS STOLEN " FROM SOUTHERN MAIL TRAIN ATLANTA, Ga., Sept. 11 A shipment of bonds understood to be valued at $50,000, was stolen from a Southern railway train near Cornelia, Ga., Thursday night, according to dispatches received here late today. The first knowledge was when a station agent at Cornelia investigated smoke in the station lavatory and found partly burned papers and a rifled mall pouch, the Cornelia report said.

1920 POTATO YIELD

TO BE NORMAL ONE

Potatoes promise a . normal yield

this season, not a record, but the in

dlcatlon of 393,000,000 bushels brings

prospect up to the good crop classification. The nation requires 400,000,000 bushels of potatoes and 1917 and 1918 the crops exceeded that figure, with a resultant cheapening and a rapid descent from the high prices of 1915, when the crop was the worst in many years. Last season the total yield fell to 338,000,000 bushels and the price advanced 50 per cent. The crop in the states around the lakes is the heaviest, being 40,000,000 bushels more than last year, an increase of 40 per cent. The crop in the east and New England shows a slight falling off. The average increase of 12 per cent on an acreage of four per cent lower, shows that the potatoes have been benefited by the cool summer, following the late and rainy spring months. On the other hand, reports from Texas show that the crop in that section is the worst in history. It is said that the season just closed has been the most unprofitable ever experienced by growers of Wharton county. Approximately 9000 acres were planted at a cost of $4.50 per bushel for seed. About 20 per cent of the crop reached the markets in selling condition and went for 5 cents a pound. Many cars sent to markets, is is asserted, rotted completely while en route and the shippers were called upon to pay the freight. Because of the high cost of labor many growers abandoned their crops in the spring and thus thousands of bushels were wasted in the fields.

SOVIET IMPERIALISM

IN RUSSIA TO WRECK SELF, IS DECLARATION LONDON, Sept. 11. Just as imperialism killed czarism, so will Imperialism be the death of Russian sovietism. is the orediction mod a in

the Associated Press correspondent

by M. flip, the Esthonian foreign min ister in London, in analyzing the consequences of the Bolshevik offensive in Poland. While foreign minister last year, M. Piip pitted his wits against the Bolsheviki at Dorpat, and he is regarded as one of the best authorities in Europe on Russian political and economical conditions. Watches Interest in Poland. In common with representatives here of other Russian border states, Piip is watching with profound con cern the developments In Poland. "The Bolsheviki are fighting Poland with the Allies' ammunition which they captured from Denikine and Kolchak,". he said. "This is almost ex bausted and Russia can not now ie new it." Discussing the possibility of an at

tack by the Bolsheviki on Esthonla,

Flip said: "We are ready for them. The" Es

thonian frontier is now closed by our

troops except the gates through which we are trading with Russia. The So

viet government must know if it succeeds in obtaining a foothold in Esthonia, the Allies would instantly cut off Russia from the vitally needcO food supplies it is now receiving

tnrougn us. we might perish but So

viet Fussia would go down with us." Says Crops Were Failure.

Piio asserted that Russia's economic condition was rapidly getting worse.

because the season's crop was a fail

ure.. He said it was not unlikely that the cities will soon be wholly depopulated. "The Soviet government dare not reduce its enormous army," he concluded. "Unemployment is now a critical problem throughout the whole of Russia, and if the men who, a soldiers are comparatively well oared

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CUPID WINS RACE WITH LAW SOUTH BEND, lnd., Sept. 11 An attempt to prevent the marriage of Josephine Suit. 17 years old, and John Gershauffer, 33 years old, both of this city, who eloped to St. JoseDh. Mich..

I failed today, due to a delay in tele

phone service. Officers at St. Joseph, who had been asked by a sister of the bride to stop the marriage, arrived at the court house just as a justice of the peace completed the ceremony.

A motor bus service is operated in Philadelphia, Pa., for the transportation of crippled children to and from public schools.

(Political Advertisement)

We Made It We Can Repair It Or We Will Rent You An UNDERWOOD For service in connection with the Underwood machine call up the company that made it. Underwood Typewriter Co., Inc. 31 East Ohio St, Indianapolis, lnd.

REPUBLICAN mm

COLISEUM

This

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nin

at 7:30

Frank Murphy with his ingenious device on Fifth Ave-, New York. It is customary to thinly of a blind man as led through the streets by a boy or groping along with the aid of a cane. Here is an up-to-date blind pedestrian, perhaps the only person so afflicted who can walk fearless and alone among crowds without danger of bumping or stumbling en route. With this device the inventor, Mr. Murphy, walks daily among Fifth avenue crowds at a goodly speed.

ptflCADCLPHfA

y With tt PHTLCO Slottd Refiner

GUARANTEED FOR 2 YEARS 2 The Battery you will soon wish you were using. All Sizes Are Here, Ready For Immediate Use

THE CHENOWETH ELECTRIC SERVICE Co.

1115 Main St.

Phone 2121

MONTAVILLE FLOWERS one of America's foremost orators. The topic of Mr. Flowers' speech is one every American is interested in THE

for, were thrown on their own re

sources, a revolution would result. The chief terror which the Soviet

rulers have to face is peace and de

mobilization."

In Austria, university professors of 20 years experience earn 40,000 kronen a year. One kronen is now worth .56 of a cent. .

PiMPLESON FACE FOR TWO MONTHS Hard and Festered. Itched, Burned. Cuticura Heals.

"I noticed pimples appearing on my face. They were hard, festered.

and scaled over, and were scattered over my face. I wss getting worse every day, for my face was itching and burning, which caused great lossof sleep. "The trouble bothered me for two months. In

about two weeks I was completely healed, after using three cakes of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment." (Signed) M. Lavrenuk, 1626 Riverbed St., Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 8, 1919.

BVCuticuraToiletTrio'W Consisting of Soap, Ointment and Talcum, promotes and maintains skin purity, skin comfort and skin health, often when all else fails. The Soap to cleanne i.-d purify, the Ointment to soothe and heal, the Talcum to powder and perl acne. You can do no better than make these fragrant super-creamy emollients your every -day toilet preparation. 0SS Cuticura Soap shavaa wifhaat

-HIT

-A-WEEK"

Sept. 6th to 11th MURDER"

(Saturday-

Saturday night is always a busy shopping time at our store until 10 o'clock and we always have hearing rooms and sales-people s u f t icient to serve you. Come in tonight and hear your favorites in records, player rolls and .sheet music.

GUARANTEED ELECTRIC IRONS, $4.98

Premier Electric Cleaners Sold by Richmond Electric Co.

Palladium Want Ads' Pay, -j

SUFFERING OF YOUNG WOMEN . i

This Letter Tells How it May be Overcome all Mothers Interested. ' Fort Dodge, la. "From the time my J - vi.. 14 Au - t.;t -1. -

uauuwr ttH jcaio viu uiit.11 oiio waaj

16 sne suffered so badly each month, I that lATnotimH T flail !

to call in the doctor. She had headaches, backache, and such pains and cramps that she would have to stay in bed two or three days. She became terribly run down in health and at. laat frianrf who

i had used Lvdia E.

Pinkham's Vegetable Compound told her about it and she has used sixteen bottles, and we always have it in the house. She feels fine now and she has no trouble at all each month. We always praise it and advise any friends who suffer to use your wonderful medicine." Mrs. Minix Masdelko, 1005 S. 18th St. & 10th Avenue, Fort Dodge, Iowa. Girls who are troubled as Miss Mandelko was, should immediately seek restoration to health by taking Lydia . Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Those who need special advice may write to Lydia E. Hnkham Medicine Co. (confidential). Lynn, Mass. Thes letters will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in stricl confidence.

Sturdy School Shoes

Service and Stylish

TEEPLE and WESSEL

L2 I

1 1 P m

Silver for Your Own Ik yf ANY a family who have tflven j$h(fCft

IVI extravagantly for Wedding f,fl f

Gifts, have left their own . I -jffiMiBMii

table tor future consideration. The present prosperous times are Ideal for stocking your own homes and experiencing the pleasure you have afforded others. Select a pleasing pattern, buy what you can afford, and add to it when you like. We carry patterns of standard make and fhftt are never disappointing. Cased Silver Makes Appropriate Gift

CHARLES a HANER 810 Main St. Jeweler Glasses Fitted

LEAGUE

OF

IMTONS

If you want to know about the League of Nations' do not fail to hear . MONTAVILLE FLOWERS American Legion Band

GffiloIjcnWgi Gft

Another Fall is Upon Us The cool evenings will soon be here and with the fired energy and ambition born at the first touch of cool, stimulating weather there comes a desire to give our homes more attention. We have anticipated your wants in this respect and our Annex is stocked as never before with beautiful Cretonnes, Curtains, Draperies and Floor Coverings for turning the home into a haven of comfort and beauty. Suggestions for Furniture Covering and Window Draperies are on every side in this department, and free consultation and estimates may be had for any of your needs, be they large or small. Our selection of Floor Coverings was never more complete than now and at prices that will astonish you for their lowness. Do you know that we sell the Hoover Vacuum Cleaner on easy payments? Let us demonstrate this Hoover that beats and sweeps as it cleans. We will deem it a pleasure to have you call, for the showing we welcome you to is the greatest in our career.

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