Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 283, 7 October 1920 — Page 7
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. RICHMOND, IND., THURSDAY," OCT. 7, 1920.
HOUSING CONDITIONS IN SERBIA REPORTED AWFUL BY QUAKERS According to report received by the American Friends 'service committee from their "workers in Serbia, the housing shortage there Is very serious. In Petch. a city of 20,000 near the Albanian border, the conditions are frightful. There are thousands of i refugees living there -whose villages
were destroyed during the war. isow ttiov iiva in ntahlpa which are usually
Imply the first floors of dwelling-
fcouses with the pigs, dogs, cats, goais. cows, rats, mice and lice. There are
no sanitary arrangements. uarDage and sewage go into the stream from which drinking -water comes and In which the people wash. No Hospital for 20,000 People. There was no hospital In the city where civilians could be treated. Many children have ulcers and running sores on their heads, and suffer from all diseases due to dirt and filth. When they are cured of one sore they soon get a new one. The women know nothing of hygienic care of babies. They reither understand the necessity for nor know how to keep their babies Tf thev knew how they could
not get, the necessary clean clothes.
Since the war conditions nave oeeu much worse. Tha jmoriPAii Friends service com
mittee is maintaining a hospital in Petch. A doctor and two nurses are stationed there and an effort Is being made to teach the women to take proper care of themselves and their babies. The hospital will become. It Is hoped, a center to which the people can come to learn how to keep well, and avoid the plague which so nearly wiped out the Serbian race In 1916 and J 917. The work is now In charge of Dr. Antoinette E. C Russell of Philadelphia, who has been singularly successful. The American Friend3 service committee has appropriated $5,000 per month for the work. JAPAN YANKS WARN AMERICA TO BO SLOW
TOKIO, Oct. 7. The American associations of Tokio and Yokohama have cabled the following joint resolution-to Bainbridge Colby, the American secretary of state. "We, the American associations of Yokohama and Tokio, in a conference definitely representing all American Interests in Japan, busines, missionary, and professional, have resolved to acquaint our countrymen with the intense feeling aroused throughout 'inran hv thn nresent action in Cali
fornia, threatening the destruction of
the traditional friendship ana a iuture estrangement between too two peoples. Ask for Patience. "We earnestly teg our countrymen to act with sober deliberation and patience, trusting the respective governments to find a 6olution satisfactory and effective without affronting Japan nor sacrificing the principles of equity on either hand." The executive committee of the American-Japan society has requested two of its American members, E. E. Frazar and John Richard Geary, general manager of the General Electric rnmnanv in JaDan. to go to America
and assist if possible in the Improve
ment of Japanese-American reiauuua.
DUIBIICTIIVI . v . . .
w Advices from northern Corea today
Bay a body or uussian DoiBueviru, Chinese bandits made a
second attack on Hun-Chun, a town of.
Manchuria near the uorean ironuer, ti tha niirht of Oct. 4 and eneaeed the
Japanese troops dispatched from Corea after the first attack on the town on Saturday night. The advices Btate that the situation Is serious. It appears that during the first attack the attacking party used field guns commanded by bolshevik officers. Tbe foreign office in an official statement today says Corean malcontents are co-operating effectively with Chinese bandits and Russian bolshevik! and that renewed attacks on frontier towns are feared. Officials Seek Legislation Revising Indiana Game Laws INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 7. Because existing fish and game law3 of Indiana are cumbersome, inefficient, antiquated and do not permit the conservation, propagation and perpetuation of wild game and aquatic life as they should if any appreciable supply of either Is to be insured for the future, legislation will bo sought at the next session of the General Assembly to enact additional laws and amend some the present statutes. - According to Gcoise N. Mansfield,
superintendent of the division of fish
and game of the state department of conservation. 10S fish, game and pro-
m tectivo associations now functioning
tion Is known as the Indiana Fish, Game and Forest League, are co-operating with the state department in an effort to secure more adequate fish ami game laws. The Indiana League will hold its annual meeting at the Denison hotel in Indianapolis on Thursday, Oct. 28, and a representative of the state department will attend and discuss with delegates present it3 plans and purposes. Department officials have in mind 31 principal subjects that they hope to f ee worked up 'into bills and presented for consideration by the next general assembly session. Commiites Probes Alleged $5,000 Gift to Cox in 1919
DAYTON, O., Oct. 7 Investigation
by the senate sub-committee which is Inquiring into campaign expenditures of an alleged $5,000 contribution to the 1916 campaign fund of Governor Cox, Democratic presidential candidate, was scheduled to begin here today. Senator Pomerene. Democrat, of Ohio, and Senator Edge, Republican, of New Jersey, are to conduct the hetring. The hearing scheduled for this city is the result of testimony brought out In Washington at which I It had been intimated by witnesses that a ?5,000 note given by the Dayton Metal Products company to Governor Cox was in fact a contribution to the campaign fund in the interest of his candidacy for governor in 1916.
THE- HIT THAT WON THE OPENER CAMERA CATCHES ENTIRE ACTION
mD ttfhs tt" rxrffgp m& f "' V , a 5 ,. fi. - 7 -"TT-'"-1 r-Tri'i-i,ifiri-TVJl ti" rm-Ti-mpfi riiin iiiir nr "i 1 1 inn n mn ... . i n T-r r-"-
Steve O'Neill ending Joe Wood over the plate for the second and winning: run with a double.
The picture above is one of the most remarkable action pictures ever taken at a world's series. The play shown in its entirety occurred in the second inning. Barns had opened the innug by
scoring the first run of the series on his double and Konetchy's wild heave. Gardner groun ded out. Then Joe Wood walked. Young Sewell put Wood on third with a single. O'Neill then
crashed a double to left. The camera cauprht the entire play as O'Neill dashed for first. He is shown nearing the bag. Sewell is tearing for second and Wood is romping home with the run that
proved the winning tally, as Brooklyn scored only or.e run. All four umpires can be seen in the nicture looking to left field to watch the fielding of O'Neill's drive.
IMMIGRATION TIDE FOURS WESTWARD; MINES AND STEEL MILLS CLAIM ALIENS
NEW YORK, Oct. 7. The west Is getting a large share of the present immigration. The new arrivals, the bulk of them, are heading toward the mining fields, the steel and Iron districts, and the factory centers where much unskilled labor is employed. Many of them remain in New York where the clothing industry absorbs them; a comparatively small number make for the textile mills in New England, but most of the tide rolls on toward Pittsburgh and the regions west Large numbers are drifting to Chicago, especially to the Calumet district, which, ever since the steel strike, has experienced a movement of alien labor back to Europe. Many have tickets for Denver and other Rocky mountain points, where for the last twelve months the migratory drift has been back to the old country. Many of the immigrants, too, are hound still further westward, with tickets for San Francisco, Seattle and Portland. Bound for Many Points. In one typical queue of arrivals In the ticket office at Ellis Island, about 150 being in the line, thirty were bound for Chicago, ten for Detroit, 6lx for Denver, fifteen for San Francisco. Of the remainder no two had destinations alike. They ranged from Florida to Thief River Falls, Minn., and from Pittsburgh to Salt Lake City and Sacramento. Officials at the island say the incoming movement is more widely dispersed when it leaves' New York for the interior than has been usual In many years. There is no direction, however, so far as employment conditions are concerned, and this is one phase to which congress will devote attention when it takes up the problem of Immigration. For instance, one group of six young Irishmen had tickets for Detroit, semi-skilled factory hands. They had heard the automobile business was flourishing, and that a great shortage of men existed. They will reach that labor market at a time when jobs instead of men are at a premium.
Laborers for Chicago. Another group of husky young fellows, Scotch and Irish, unskilled building laborers, who were en route for Chicago, spoke of the $1 an hour schedule for common labor in the building trades, which it seems has received some exploitation abroad. They expect to find work at the rate abundant. Yet in Chicago now building is in the doldrums and the next thirty days is expected to bring activities in that line practically to a standstill. Immigration officials comment upon
the homeward tide of Americans from Europe. In September the Ellis Island figures show 23,646 American citizens returned, as compared with 70,062 aliens who came in. The statistics are not well sorted, but it appears the
greater part of this back to America
movement was composed of natural
ized citizens who returned to Europe
to look things over and are now beating it back as fast as they can get
passage. Most of them bring back a
relative or two. Permanent Type of Workers.
Officials Bay the present Immigration appears to be more permanent in type as a general rule than in the years just before the war. Nations which have a large body of migratory labor, which moves back and forth from one country to another, according to the slackness or abundance of wages and employment, are furnishing a less roving class of immigrants. It is particularly noticeable in the case of the immigration from Italy, larger proportions of which are now coming over for permanent residence. Some organizations for the encouragement of immigration dwell upon the passport charge. The fee for vlseing a passport is now $10, but the worst of it is that the vise seems to have become a mere formality as performed by American consuls abroad.
Local Lutheran Pastors
Attend Washington Synod Rev. F. A. Dressel, pastor of the First English Lutheran church, and John F. Holaday, of the Second English Lutheran church, will attend a conference of the Synod of the United Lutheran churches of America, to be held In Washington, D. C, Oct. 19 to 29, inclusive. They will be local representatives of the Indiana United Lutheran Synod. Mr. Holaday is one of the five lay delegates from the Indiana Synod to be appointed to the conference. The Rev. Dressel will leave in time to attend the brotherhood convention, Oct. 18 and 19. He was appointed chair-
ELKHART GETS CONVENTION. ELWOOD, Ind., Oct. 7. Elkhart was chosen as the meeting place in 1921 of the National Horsethief Detective Association at its convention here Wednesday.
NEW FALL BLOUSES Now on Display
lIGRAN'
W LADIES' SHOP 923 Main Street
SELECTED AS IDEAL CANTEEN GUIL TYPE
if v- 1 n i t ;
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EVIVAL!
First Christian Church So. 10th and A Sts. Commencing Sunday Morning, Oct. 10 Preaching by E. M. BARNEY Singing by the "BROCKS" HEAR THEM
Miss Mittie Burch in her Bed Cross uniform. Miss Mittie Burch of Washington, D. C. formerly a Red Cross overseas worker, has been selected to pose for the reproduction of a typical canteen prirl in the elaborate miniature model of the Red Cross canteen at Issoudan, France. It was the first American camp from which the Red Cross flap: flew. The miniature will be placed in the museum at the Red Cross national headquarters. American aviators raised the money for the model as a tribute to the aid given them at the camp.
GOODWIN'S CASH GROCERY 301 Nat. Road West SATURDAY SPECIALS MILK Van Camp's tall. Per dozen S1.69 Van Camp's small, per doz. 79 Van Camp's Pork and Beans (medium) doz S2.19 Van Camp's Soups (assorted) per dozen S1.69 Save money by buying by the dozen. White Spray Laundry Soap, per bar 5 Phoenix Corn Flakes, 3 boxes for 05
Phone 1335
Pohlmeyer, Downing & Co.
Funeral Directors 15 N. 10th St.
Weisbrod's have just received another supply of the Columbia Record "Let The Rest of the World Go By" (Campbell and Burr) Please call at once if your name is on the waiting list for this vocal duet record. Balance of shipment on sale while they last.
man of the delegation from this district.
SLEEP WALKER, 13, GETS SEVERE BUMP IN FALL ANDERSON, Ind., Oct. 7. Carl Burgess, 13 years old, was seriously hurt when he fell from a two-story window at his home early Wednesday while walking in his sleep. He suffered a broken arm and internal injuries.
250,000 FEET OF FILM
USED BY UNIVERSITY
BLOOMINGTON, Ind.. Oct. 7.-
More than one quarter million feet of educational films and 6,000 lantern
slides are being sent over the state of
Indiana by the- extension division of Indiana university for use In schools
for educational purposes.
Masonic Calendar
Thurfday. Oct. 7 Wayne Council No. 10, R. & S. M.. stated assembly. Friday, Oct 8 King Solomon's Chapter No. 4, R. A. M-, stated convocation.
Maunt Ararat Is a volcano, the last eruption having been in 1840.
SHIPPING BOARD TO KEEP TAB Ot-l t.rr.CIENCY WASHINGTON". Oct. 7. Investigation of the efficiency of concerns operating shipping board vessels has been started by a special committee, representing the board. Chairman Benson announced Tuesday. Steps to obtain greater efficiency, the chairman said, will depend on the committee's report. It i3 expected, "however, that vessels will be withdrawn from the control of operators found inefficient
Taste Good
Makes Bread
IT'S the cream of nut butters I In flavor, texture, nutrition youll say Cream of Nut truly liVwS up to its name. Have you ordered your first pound yet?
yriiltnan OmA Crmmm Oleoma rgrin ofqnI1y high qaallty -rwaamndtd tm Xhrm wbo prate tha animal product.
OMER G. WHEUS AVbolmnlp Dlatrtbntori SI sad 93 South Sixth St. Fhone 1079. Richmond. Ind.
FRIEDMAN MFC CO,
Factory No. 1 lat District BBawia CHICAGO
559? 1
p K! It If
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y
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To see how really clean teeth shine
Men who smoke will cee a quick, conspicuous change Tobacco stains the lm-coat on the teeth. So men who smoke will see a great change quickly. But millions of teeth have that same film-coat with a lesser stain. Children's teeth are most affected by the film. Young teeth seem most subject to decay. Dentists advise that Eepsodent be daily applied from the time the first tooth appears. Otherwise, decay is almost certain. Pepsodent brings to women whiter, prettier teeth. But that mean3 cleaner teeth and safer. The luster comes from constant film removal and the high polish given to the teeth.
Your teeth" are coated with a film. When fresh the film is viscous you can feel it with your tongue. Later it forms a cloudy coat. It enters crevices and stays. It dims the teeth, and now we know that it causes most tooth troubles. There is now a way to end it. This week your druggist, if you ask, will give you a 10-Day Tube. Get it and see what it does for your teeth. Learn what film removal means. Old ways don't end it Old ways of brushing do not end film. Millions of people know that. Teeth discolor and decay despite the daily care. The reason lies in film. It clings and hides, and very few escape its damage. It is the film-coat that discolors, not the teeth. Film is the basis of tartar. It holds food substance which ferments and forms acid. It holds the acid in contact with the teeth to cause decay. Millions of germs breed in it. They, with tartar, are the chief cause of pyorrhea. All these troubles have been constantly increasing some have grown alarming. And all because we knew no way to daily fight the film. A new dental era Dental science has for"years studied to combat film. Ways have now been found to do it. Able authorities have proved those methods by many careful tests. Now leading dentists everywhere are urging their daily use. ,
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Watch these effects. Note how clean the teeth feel after using. Mark the absence of the viscous film. See how teeth whiten as the film-coat disappears. . Compare your teeth now with your teeth in ten days. Then judge this newday method by what you see and feel and know.
REG. U.S.
PAT. OFT. ft
JTVt
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Your Name
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