Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 302, 29 October 1920 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGR4M. RICHMOND. IND.. FRIDAY, OCT. 29, 1920.

PAGE THREE

REWARD OFFERED BY SOVIET FOR CAPTURE ! : OF CHICAGO MAJOR! 1 WARSAW. Oct. 29. Polish army InteMgence officers report that Moscow ; offered a reward of 1,000.000 rubles for j the capture,, dead or, alive, of Major Cedric E. Fauntleroy, of Chicago, and McOehee. Ark., commander of the Pol- J ish air forces of the southern front. ! General Budenny's failure to take Lemberg, when the bolshevikl made . the August drive upon Warsaw. Is attributed by Lenine and Trotzky chiefly! to the fight against the Cossacks from j . i i

1 BR air. Major Fauntleroy was recently appointed chief of aviation of the Sixth Polish army. He has four squadrons under his command, one of which is the Kosciuszko air organizations composed chiefly of Americans. Aviators of that squadron, under the command of Captain George M. Crawford, of Wilmington, Del., are known by bolshevik soldiers of the southern front as "devils of the air." according to recently captured red soldiers. During two days in August when General Budenny was striving with every force at his command to break the southern front and dash into Lent-

berg, the bolshevik! in the north hav-j

lng virtually reached the outskirts of Warsaw, the four squadrons of the Sixth army made 129 flights, dropped

15.000 pounds of bombs and used !

16,700 machine gun bullets in attacks Squadron Doe Good Work.

General Rozwadowski, chief of staff

of the Polish army, in a communication to the chief of aviation, says: "Activities of the squadrons of the Sixth army in. battles with the cavalry army of Budenny were directed with ihe greatest efficiency, this being acknowledged by statements of the bolshevik prisoners, and wireless messages." One wireless message signed by Budenny and intercepted by the Pole3 said: "In battles near Lemberg our cavalry troops sustained great losses from Polish airplanes which few fn squadrons of 12 planes bombing and covering the soldier with math ino gun fire." Reviewing the work of aviators of the southern front General Rozwadowski wrote: "The extraordinary manoeuvres of the air squadron of the Sixth army are due to the organizing

nbility and unlimited energy of the j

prmy s chief of aviation. Major Faunt'eroy. to whom I convey the highest praise' for the enthusiasm with which be 1ms fought for Poland's cause." Major Fauntleroy was decorated recently by Chief of State Pilsudski with the virtuti militari, the highest military award of the Polish government. The major, who has been a member of the Polish army more than a year, receives in pay, at the present rate of exchange owing to the low value of the Polish mark, about $16 per month.

haly to Bary Soldiers Of Mountain Campaign (By Associated Press) "f,ME. Oct. 29. A great national v-arr'pt'on is now being made to col- , fogether all the bodies of Italian ,Mirs who died fighting on the i"-onnt.ain front and are insufficiently ' -Tied, p 11 the bones which are whiten!,t on the rocky mountain sides and to give them fitting sepulchre on one 'hp highest peaks, probably San

Michele. It is proposed that a simple,! noble monument should be erected under which will rest together officers and soldiers, rich and poor. One of the sad phases of Italy's wari on the mountain front was the diffi-l

i:uny ui uuijiug muse wuu leu Liguiing. The soil on the Carso range is such a thin crust over the massive rock of which the mountains are formed that dynamite had often to be used in order to make a sufficiently deep grave especially on those historic peaks like Monte Santo, Monte Nero, the Grappa and the Hermada, where Italian blood flowed like water. The Austrians originally held all the passe; there and dominated the Italians a' every point but they were taken a d re taken over and over again until He final victory gave them to Italy lor ever.

WHEN AN ELEPHANT RUNS WILD. CALCUTTA Billigania, the largest lr coy elephant, in Ceylon, recently r?n vihl after trampling its keeper to clti:th. Nearby was a bungalow in wlndi were a planter and hi? wife mid daughter. Fearing an attack, the r.iar.ter had fires lit around his compound in the early part of the night, but the fuel soon gave out. Soon afterwards the elephant was heard crashing his way through fences and plantations towards the bungalow. When it came in sight it was seen to pause vitli ears cocked and trunk uplifted, but suddenly it turned away, and. trumpeting loudly, pulled up a score of plantain trees. The planter and hl3 family had no way of escape, but after an hour the elephant disappeared. xt morning it was found in a water tr.nk. London Mail.

Quebec produces by far the greater part of the world's asbestos.

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Hears famous artists compare art with RE-CREATION by Edison's new phonograph could not tell the two apart.

O ARVEY HINDERMYER and THE DANN TRIO gave an extraordinary recital last night at the Washington Theatre. Mr. Hindermyer walked on to the stage and stood beside a stately cabinet. He began to sing "Home At Last". The audience immediately yielded to the spell of his beautiful voice. Then suddenly there was a stir a subdued murmur of surprise and a perplexed rubbing of eyes. The voice continued to fill the theatre with undiminished sweetness your ears were proof of that but his lips had become absolutely silent your eyes told you that.

What wizardry was this? It was the test of direct comparison with the living artist, which Thomas A. Edison has developed to demonstrate that the Official Laboratory Model of his new phonograph will sing any song exactly as it was sung by the artist, and that his Re-Creation of a singer's voice, as it comes from his wonderful new phonograph, positively cannot be distinguished from the singer's actual voice, when both are heard in direct comparison. Mr. Hindermyer made repeated comparisons always with the same result. It was truly wonderful. The Dann Trio made similar tests, which were equally amazing. This master achievement of the great wizard, Edison, marks a new epoch in music.

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NEW EDI

The Phonograph With A Soul

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You can have a duplicate of the wonderful instrument used at the Washington and, if you act quickly, we can furnish you with an engraved certificate ( signed by these artists) certifying that it is an exact duplicate in tonal quality of the instrument they used in their, amazing comparison; also that it will sustain precisely the same test.

We have ten of the famous Official Laboratory Models and the artists have certified every one of them. Come to our store at once and ask to see and hear the Official Laboratory Models on which Mr. Hindermyer and The Dann Trio have issued their Certificates of Authenticity.

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