Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 206, 11 July 1921 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

CHAUTAUQUA PROGRAM FOR CAMBRIDGE CITY ANNOUNCED MONDAY Complete program of the Chautauqua to be held In Cambridge City beginning with Thursday, July 14, and continuing until Monday. July 18, Inclusive, was announced Monday. Proceeds from the sessions of the Chautauqua- will be applied to the fund which Is being raised to buy a building site for the new Jackson township public library building. The first session of the meetings will be held Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Lectures and musical numbers will feature the programs during the five days. The program for the entire session follows: THURSDAY, JULY 14 Afternoon , 3:00 Popular concert, the Chicago Comic Opera company, an organization of nine high-grade, professional artists. Evening 8:00 Comic onera, "The Pirates of Penzance," the Chicago Comic Opera company. This Is one of the cleverest of all comic operas and this company one of the finest doing Chautauqua work. FRIDAY, JULY 15 Afternoon - 2:30 Popular concert, Goforth's Orchestra, a six-piece entertaining orchestra playing popular and classical 'music. 3:30 Popular lecture, Victor Ilahi-t Baksh, a native of India, educated in I the United States. Mr. Baksh will be one of the most interesting speakers on the entire program. Evening 7:45 Popular lecture, Victor IlahiBaksh. Mr. Baksh is naturally witty and his lectures are very entertaining. 8:45 Popular concert, Goforth's Orchestra, featuring xylophone and marimbaphone solos. SATURDAY, July 16 3:00 Popular - concert, the Fisher Shipp Concert company, known as one of the most entertaining and versatile companies on the Chautauqua platform. Evening 7:43 Popular concert, the Fisher Shipp Concert company. Their programs include vocal and instrumental solos and combinations, and character sketches. 8:45 Entertainment program, Manlove, the Mn of Many Faces, one of the cleverest Impersonators on the Chautauqua platform. SUNDAY, JULY 17 ' Afternoon 2:30 Popular Concert The Bernabo Concert Company, consisting of unusual soprano, fine tenor, with splendid violinist, 'cellist and accompanist. 3:30 Popular Lecture "America, It's Duty and Destiny" Hon. Henry R. Rathbone, an eloquent speaker. Evening 7:45 Popular Concert The Bernabo Concert Company Their programs offer great variety in vocal and instrumental solos and combinations. 8:43 Dramatic Reading, "The Money Makers" Hazel Dopheide, unusual dramatic play reader. MONDAY, JULY 18 Afternoon 3:00 Popular Concert The Ladies' Saxophone Band An organization of ten expert professional lady musicians. Evening 7:43 Popular Concert The Ladies' Saxophone Band Ensemble numbers, vocal and instrumental solos, and combinations. S:30 Popular Lecture "The Orgell, a speaker with a national reputaell, a sptaker with a national reputation. Officers, directors and the committee in charge of the Chautauqua follow : Officers President, Arthur H. Hines; vice-president, Elbert R. Huddleston: secretary, George E. Callaway; .treasurer, M. R. Krahl. Director. A. H. Hines, E. R. Hud- . dloston, George E. Callaway, M. R. Krahl. E. R. McGraw, F. W. Danner, O. U. Toppin, C. H. Graver. I. J. L. Harmeier, A. C. Reese, H. D. Morris, Frank Myers, E. R. Callaway. Committees' Chairman program committee. Harry D. Morris: chair man ticket committee, Forrest W Danner; chairman advertising committee, Arthur C. Reese; chairman of tent and grounds committee, Harry L. . Cotter. General Superintendent James L. Loar, Bloomington, 111. QUAKERS TO DEPICT Outline of the pageant to be given by the Friends of Indiana yearly meeting at the Centennial celebration at Earlham, Monday afternoon, Aug. 13. 1921, was made public by Mrs. Cornell Hew:on, of the Friends Central offices, Monday. The pageant, to start at 2 o'clock, will begin with historical numbers and follow the progress of the Indiana Yearly Meeting up to the present. Its conclusion will be more of an inspiralional character. It is called "A Pageant of Service." After the foreword, it will open with a scene at the founding of the yearly meeting in 1S21. Other scenes are as follows: 'As the Years Passed By," showing the progress of the organization; "In dian Concern, ana feopie or color," these two latter scenes deal with the work of the Friends among the Indians and the negroes in this continent; "Foreign Missions". General Conference" this conference that Tt-ipetine of Friends The Richmond it was out of the Five Years sprung; "First Day School", depicting the school years ago and at present; "Earlham college"; "New Opportunities for Service"; "A Service of Love in Wartime"; and "Continuing the Service." Seven Republicans Seek Nomination for Mayor Further assurance of a large field of candidates for the mayor's office in the coming primary was given Monday morning with the filing of a declaration by Frank T. Strayer that he was a candidate for this office. This brings the field to eight, seven of these being Republicans. Three new councilmanic aspirants also made themselves known by filing with City Clerk Stevens Monday. Frank J3enn and Cornell Hewson both seek to be councilman from the Sev,enth ward. All are on the Republican ticket

THE

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Where Am I Safe

Nowhere, is Answer of Scientists Research Unable To Determine Where Fifty Billion Volt Column of Fire, a Mile in Height, is Going To Strike One Chance in Million

Now that hot spells are making it the vogue for nature to tear a perfectly good gray sky to pieces with long yellow stabs of lightning, and break up a summer evening with crashes of thunder, it is natural for a layman to seek the experts for a few pointers about dodging the bolts. It takes ony a few chats with the electrical specialists to discover that their ideas on the subject are anything but alike. If there were such a thing as a lightnins congress, it would never get a majority vote on anything. They say practically the same thing as to the cause of lightning, its nature, and hew it jumps from cloud to earth. They echo each other with such words as ''ionized air," and "negatively charged water particles." But these are not the things that concern the man that walketh down Main street with an umbrella up, or drives his automobile to the top of a hill, when the skies are flickering. What he wants to know, for instance, is whether the end of one of these nasty bright yellow stabs is more likely to nip hi mon top of the court house or in his cellar. An it is not quieting to hear the experts beat around the bush and contradict each other. Science Baffled. Yet it is not fair to be disappointed when science cannot tell where a fifty billion volt column of fire, a mile or more in heifght ,is going to strike. That column takes only about one ten- thousand of a second to make up its mind. So it wouldn't do much good to know what it had chosen, once it has got started. However, people keep on asking questions, and they feel they are entitled to something in the way of definite information. Here are a few results of conversations with scientists who have given thought to the subject: Q. A baby was killed the other day sleeping in a metal crib on a porch, j is it aangerous lor babies to sleep m metal cribs on porches? One Answer. The metal probably had nothing to do with it, but the chances would have been better in the house. Another Answer. The metal crib should have acted as a wire cage, which was suggested by Clerk Maxwell as the best protection against lightning. If the. crib had been thoroughly grounded, the lightning would have been conducted away harmlessly. Still Another Answer. The lightning's striking at that point was determined by deeper causes, of which we know little as yet. The baby just happened to be there. Q. Golf players have been struck while on the links. Was it due to the metal clubs they carried? One Answer. The metal club had nothing to do with it. That is absoforces involved. Another Answer. A man ought to know enough not to play golf in a thunderstorm. Q. Is there any use in closing windows in a thunderstorm? One Answer. If the lightning were going to strike there, it would do no good. What can a window pane do against a force which can knock down a stone wall? Another Answer. Closing the window would probably help. An experi ment has shown that a spark, leaping across a spark gap, which resembles lightning, will be deflected to a burning candle set near by, because hot air is a better conductor than cold. If the air in the house were warmer than outside, the lightning might be deflected toward the window if it were open. Q. Is it dangerous to telephone during a storm? One Answer. In a city where the wires are under ground there Is no danger at all. Where wires are strung about ground, as in the country, there is danger. Another Answer. The telephone girls stick to the switchboard all through storms. The telephones have lightning arrestors, which prevent any sudden great charge from reaching the receiver. The keynote of it all, in the opinion of the experts, seems to be that in the comings and goings of lightning man plays a small part. Safety Is Negligible Many of the precautions which it has become a habit to take are born of blind instinct, that sees safety in obvious things, where there is really no safety at all. But from the vagueness of expert opinion a few generalities emerge, which offer some consolation as being the best possible under the conditions. It is generally conceded that to seek refuge under a tree is more dangerous than to stay out in the open. Some trees are more often struck than others and one scientist describes the sycamore tree as the most susceptible of all But the man who considers himself safe under an oak because there is a sycamore a few yards away, is putting a sublime faith in statistics City dwellers are safer than counl try folks The great high masses of

RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

From Lightning': steel and masonry towering overhead offer a protection. There are the thousand pet aversions and precautions wnich cause the scientific man to smile. The man who wears rubbers to insulate himself may be keeping his feet dry, but he is not warding off lightning any more than the old magician who burned a pinch of magic powder to drive the devils away Against a charge that can break dowa so poor a conductor as air and use if for a mile or more, what can avail a quarter of an inch of fabric under foot? Small Consolation And even if he were insulated, what difference would it make if the 5,000,000,000 volts more or less, were ordained to strike there? Apparently, the man who puts down his umbrella and takes a wetting in the hope of escaping a shock is making an unnecessary sacrifice of himself "It is remarkable what ideas people have about lightning," says one spark specialist. "Take the old saying that lightning never strikes twice in the same place. Some men are sure of it that in a storm they will go to a place where lightning has struck, trusting that it will not come there agin" A farmer told me that his barn has been struck five times and burned down three times. Yet he always builds it again in the same place. The barn is by no means the highest point of ground. His house is more exposed, but the lightning picks the barn It is concluded by all the students that lightning is the prize freak of nature It knows no rules or, bet ter, man does not yet know its rules The difficulty of studying it retards our knowledge. A re-searcher will go to a locality noted for storms the previous year, and when he has set up all his apparatus there, the next town, thirty miles away, will be treated to a frolic in the skies, as though seven milion Levden iars were at j play. Or he will train his camera on that part of the clouds where the flashes have been disporting themselves for the last fifteen minutes, and then find them leaping at his back. It is not a wonder that no more definite results have been obtained when one considers that the nearest the machines of men can come to reproducing the five billion volts of a flash, which is the Bureau of Standard's estimate, is a few million volts. Joseph H. Krauss, editor of Science and Invention, has even gone a long way toward reproducing that most puzzling of all big electrical phenomena, "globe" or "ball" lightning. Does Much Damage. This seems to be produced when a fork of lightning strikes in such manner that it is not immediately conducted away. It then forms an incandescent ball, wihch hisses over the ground with miraculous speed in an irregular course, and is finally disana in this brief time can do great damage. It has been known, says Mr. Krauss, to bore its way through the walls of a building like a bullet. Lightning is too closely connected with the emotions and the vestiges of a remote ancestry to make the data of the average observed of much value. As one expert says, lightning must have frightened our ancient ancestors almost to death with the fear of the unknown; and now, although we know why it is, we are still hounded by that hereditary fear. Statistics on Lightning. The Bureau of Standards gives these interesting figures: Of 460,395 fires in one year, 5,000 were due to lightning; 42 per cent, of all oil tank fiires were caused by lightning, 14 per cent, of all fires in telephone and telegraph offices, and 2.2 per cent, of all fires in dwellings and tenements. Barns were

round to be more liable to fire fromjilome of Mrs. N. S. Gills caught fire lightning than houses. anci caused some excitement at the The only clear drops than can be I home but were nut out without dam-

squeezea irom an tne vintage or expert wisdom seem to be that the city man is fairly safe almost anywhere in his domain, and the suburbanite is safest in the middle of his house when the electric switch is pulled off, and more so if the house is supplied with some such contrivance as the metal roof. The danger to the man without these safeguards is one chance in millions, and the man with all of them may be struck, anyway. Nature's most dramatic display of her might leads inevitably to the amendment of an old saying: "Time and tide and lightning wait for no man." KILL FOOD OFFICIALS. (By Associated Press REVAL, Esthonia, July 11. The Moscow newspaper, Economic Life asserts that during the month of May more than 200 employes of the Bolshevik food department, making requisitions of food, etc., in the country, were killed by peasants or bandits. FIGHT FOOD PRICES. ROME, July 11. The citizens of Milan are trying to bring down the price of food stuffs by appointing a commission of experts to fix the prices at which the immense stocks of food accumulated by the wholesale dealers . shall be sold.

SUN - TELEGRAM, RICHMOND,

I I 1,1 " I

VIENNA PREPARES FOR ANOTHER SEVERE WINTER

Residents in and near Vienna suffered untold hardships last winter because of lack cf fuel with which to heat their homes. To prevent a repetition of this situation Vienna officials have been laying in prreat stores of wood in the Valley of Vadc near the Austrian capital. Tart of WAYNE COUNTY TAX HEARING IS SET FOR JULY 22 BY BOARD CBy Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, July 11. Equalization of tax assessments among the various counties of Indiana will be begun by the state tax board on July 20, according to an announcement made today by the board. Various Hnfps were spt bv the board lfor puDiic hearings on the modification of assessments in each county, such hearings being to determine the rate of addition to or reduction from the assessed valuation of property. After these hearings the board will certify its findings to the city auditor where it may appear to the board that the assessments are not uniform or equal, either as to local units, or as to classes of property, and are not in harmony with assessments in other counties. The date for the hearing in WTayne county at which local officers or tax - payers may July 22. appear, was set for Short News of City Recruiter Visits Here H. F. Roberts, formerly local navy recruiter, motored here with his wife, Saturday and returned to his home in Fort Wrayne, Monday morning. Hasemeier Attends Convention Mr. Ed H. Hasemeier is spending the week in Philadelphia and New York attending a meeting of the board of directors of the International Sunday School association. Auto Dealers to Meet Members of! the Wayne County Automotive Dealers' association are to meet at 6:30 o'clock Monday night at the Steinhart Dlant. from which they will mo - tor to Cedar Springs for their regular meeting. Following the meeting a short program will be given. To Fix Hibernian Convention Officials of the Ancient Order of Hibernians in Richmond said Monday that so far as is known no delegates of either the order of the Ladies' auxiliary are to attend the national convention of the organization to be held in Detroit from July 19 to 23, inclusive. Date for the Indiana state convention will be named at that time. It is believed that the state convention will be held in Muncie, and that delegates fro mRichmond will attend. Small Fires Monday Two small fires occurred Monday morning shortly after 10 o'clock. Curtains at the age. A coal oil stove caugnt lire at 44 Fort Wayne avenue but was put out without damage. Sues for Divorce Ida Guerin, filed suit for divorce from Ernest Guer in, owner of a garage at Webster, m Wayne circuit court Monday after - noon. The niaintnt cnarees cruei and inhuman treatment and asks for $500 alimony, and restoration of her maiden name, Ida Fortman In the complaint Mrs Guerin states that her husband continually nagged her, and at certain times kept her imprisoned in his home at Webster. She alleges that he is of unsound mind, and has commitea assault ana Dauery on ner numerous times Sues on Note Complaint on a promissary note demanding $325. was filed by William Paddock against Douglas Druley in Wrayne circuit court, Monday afternoon. Refused Divorce Decree James L. Willis was refused a divorce from Melissa Willis, in Wayne circuit court, Monday afternoon. ELECTED CATTLE JUDGE. (Bv Associated Press) W-AUSEON, O., July 11. W.. H. Standish, of Royalton Township, has been elected judge of Holstein and Brown Swiss cattle at the state fair this year.

IND., MONDAY, JULY 11, 1921.

the store of wood piled in the Valley cf Jewelry Store Robbed of $5,090 by Bandits fBy Associated Press) SCHENECTADY, N. Y., July 11. Two armed men entered the jewelry store of Charles Grupper, in State street, this afternoon, held up Grupper, who was alone, and escaped with diamonds and jewelry valued at $5,000. PORTABLE BUILDINGS WILL MEET GARFIELD JUNIOR HIGH NEEDS Two portable buildings of two room each, to be ereted on the vacant lots adjoining the Garfield junior high school, are to be used beginning with the fall school term, instead of the Garfield, annex, located at North Twelfth." and B streets. For two years and a half the Garfield annex, formerly the tabernacle for the Central Christian church, has ' been used by the Garfield boys. It

has housed the machine shop, bench pany. room, printing department and boys'. Fj)e Away Bid gymnasium. ( s received for the building of a The erection of the two portable j 50 foot gtack over the city crematory buildings will take place as soon asjwere filed away as the city counca they arrive. It is pointed out thatfalled t0 make an appropriation to

tne placing or tne aeparimeiiLs luimcily housed in the Garfield annex, in the portable buildings adjoining the school will facilitate the work. Very i little time will need be lost in stu-

dents going from one period of workjSouth Seventeenth and Eighteenth

to another Use of the temporary school buildmgs probably will be needed until the

erection or tne east nme junior u.ru , th resident property owners defeated school nether or not they will bethe resolutjon. AU previous actions

side junior, high school is problem ir.,,i 1 . nn) ,n n nn llirn UAkII Nil III IIM IVrK 1 UHllUlllU IU ULL1IU1I r HIS BONUS MESSAGE (Bv Associated Press) WASHINGTON, July 11. White House officials indicated today that President Harding probably would deliver in person his special message to congress regarding bonus legislation. Under this program the senate and house would hold a joint session to receive the message, which probably will be presented within a day or two. Mr. Harding returned to the White House today from a' week-end cruise down the Potomac to Chesapeake Bay, and continued work on his message which he is understood to have started during his trip. Two Jurors Accepted Tentatively for Ball Trial (By Associated Press) CHICAGO. July 11 Two jurors were accepted tentatively by both j tQday bringing the total chosen to sis unless those selected today should be challenged. Suburban LOSANTVILLE, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Wenlin Holiday are the Droud narents of a baby girl, born July 4 b. C. Freeman attended the funeral j 0f his sister, Mrs. Kate Heener, at ! Martinsville, Saturday Mr. and. Mrs. Charles Denny, Mr. and Mrs. Will Wooters of Muncie, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Freeman and family, Howard Varague and Miss Mahnetta Freeman of Richmond, Mr. and Mrs. Ibry Cory of Moorland and Mr. and Mrs. David Metsher were guests of B. C. Freeman Sunday. In filling nightly engagements at four vaudeville theaters a prominent English actress has been required to make thirty-two changes of costume and four changes of mnkeup every night.

Vaden.

TRIAL TRAFFIC LAMPS TO BE INSTALLED AT ONCE BY CITY FORCE With the arrival of the two traffic lamps ordered on trial by the board of works, installation will be started at once. One lamp will be placed in the center of North Seventh and A streets and the other at South Fifth and A streets. Each lamp stands about eight Inches above the surface of the street and is j approximately two feet in diameter. " 6'.'" ""..7 red light at night warns the autoist of its location. Providing the lamps prove effective, the board is expecting to place orders for additional lamps to , be placed at dangerous corners in the itv work of installation will be ac complished by the street department, Wirine. o the iamDS u to be done by j the Municipal Light and Power corncover the expense of a stack, at its last meeting. The matter will be pre sented again to council at its next regular session. Improvement of the alley between streets, from South A north to the , , !, t. monstrance of more than one half of by the board were rescinded. The board confirmed the resolution for the improvement of the alley first east of South Eighth street from South H to J streets. Bids will be advertised for soon. Primary assessment role for the improvement of the alley between West Kinsey and West Pearl streets, from West First to West Third streets, was I approved. Mrs. Levi Ritz, Eldorado, Succumbs Saturday Night ELDORADO, O., July 11 Mrs. Levi Ritz, 25 years old, died at her home three miles southwest of Eldorado Saturday night. Funeral services will be held at the U. B. church at Ithaca Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock. Burial will be in the Ithaca cemetery. She is survived by her husband, parents, Mr. and Mrs. Randall Cushen, five sisters and three brothers, and a number of distant relatives. Release Connersville Man Held on Theft Charge James Hamilton, of Connersville, was released on his own recognizance by Judge Bond, Monday morning. Hamilton was arrested recently on a charge of grand larceny in connection with the stealing of an automobile belonging to Fred C. Rogers, of Cambridge City. Prosecutor Beckett made the motion recommending the temporary release of Hamilton, whom he stated had furnished valuable information to the state in connection with the automobile theft. Enrollments in Y Camp To Be Closed Wednesday Camp applications for the Y. M. C. A. summer camp to be held at Camp Kerns, Ohio, will not be accepted after next Wednesday at 6 o'clock. Perry Wilson, boy's secretary of the Y, who will have charge of the camp, urges every boy who has applications out and is planning to attend the camp to get his application in immediately. The alloted number to go on the camp is 30 in each group. About 25 boys have signed up for each group. The younger boys will leave on July 2 and the older group will leave on Aug. 1.

FEDERATED CHURCHES

WILL BOOST GOODWILL OF NATIONS OF EARTH Departments of work were specified by the commission on international justice and goodwill of the Federated Council of the Churches of Christ in America at its sessions in New York last week. Prof. Allen D. Hole, of Earlham, delegated by the Five Years meeting of Friends to represent the Friends church at the commission conference, returned from the meetings ia New York Monday. He said that the work of .the commission for the present will cover four fields: One committee from the commission to formulate a statement of what should be the field of the churches in America ; a committee to deal with the question of relationship between this country and the Orient; a committee to determine what should be the relation of the churches with Mexico and Latin America, and to promote the proper relationships with those countries, and a committee to consider the question of all reliefs. Show Brotherly Interest Under this head would be the establishing of a commission to provide means by which suffering countries, such as China and Armenia, could receive organized assistance. Prof. Hole said that the reason for these activities by the council of churches was to show evidence of brotherly in terest in the world. Another matter which received consideration by the commission of justice and good-will was the bill draften by ex-president Taft, and presented to the senate, providing for the protection of aliens. The chief feature of this bill is the provision for the United States to deal directly with any problems which may arise in any states of the Union because of aliens. It is now the custom, according to advices, for each state to deal with such- maters: Dr .John H. Finley, who has been conspicious in educational work in New York for a number of years, and who for the last year has been connected with the editorial department of the New York Times, was selected as chairman of the commission on justice and good-will. Dr. Sidney Gulick of New York, is secretary. Robt. E. Spears is president of the Federated Council of the Churches of Christ in America. HALF HOLIDAY LEAGUE ORGANIZED TONIGHT Baseball teams compose the halfholiday league are to meet at the community service headquarters in the K. of P. building, Monday night, to organize Four teams are already to play next Thursday afternoon. They are the department store, headed by Bruce Cline; shoe store team, headed by Earl Bills; barber's team, headed by Verne Penticose and the Pennsylvania team, headed by William Loose. Other teams to be in the league, but which have not yet been organized, include the American Railway express team, furniture store team and the clothiers' team. A meeting of the Industrial baseball league will be held at 7:00 o'clock Monday night; and the Commercial league will hold its meeting at 7:30 o'clock. ARRIVAL OF BODY OF GRESHAM UNCERTAIN (Bv Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, July 11 Cothpi. a- m i i uu ui d.i idiici-'i.'if n n it j i inp nnnnrc flanned to be paid the body of Corporal James B. Gresham, one of the first three American soldiers to fall In the World war, were held up today pending receipt of the word when the body would arrive in Indianapolis. Adjt. General Harry B. Smith, and officers of the American Legions. had no word whether the body would reacn here tonight, but thought it would not arrive before Tuesday afternoon. No word had been received from New York whether the body had been routed by way of this city or Louisville, the later city being said to be distributing point for fallen soldiers from southern Indiana STATE RESTS CASE IN KABER MURDER TRIAL CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 11 The state at noon today rested its case in ,the trial of Mrs. Eva Kaber, for the murder of her husband Daniel F. Kaber, with the exception of one witness who cannot be heard until the middle of the week. The defense is to begin its testimony tomorrow morning. For the fourth time the state today produced a witness who testified ' that Kaber deslared Mrs. Kaber had; him stabbed The witness was F. W. Utterback, Mr. Kaber's male nurse. He said he was aroused on the night of the murder by Kaber's cries: "Utterback, , Utterback, come quick Murder!"