Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 348, 28 December 1921 — Page 1
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T IMON PALLABIUM H VOL. XLVL, No. 318 Palladium. Kst. 131. Consolidated With Sun-Telegram, 1907. RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY EVENING, DEC. 28, 1921. SINGLE COPY, 3 CENTS
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IRISH TREATY IS APPROVED RY SINN FEIN Convention of Clubs Adopts Resolution by Unanimous
yJflrr Satisfac1REV. BROWN TO GIVE
null Willi 1 dtl. URGE VOTES IN FAVOR (By Associated Press) BELFAST, Dec. 28. A convention of Sinn Fein clubs of North Donagal, held at Buncrans, has adopted a resolution by unanimous vote expressing satisfaction with the Irish peace treaty as embodying the essential of Ireland's freedom and safeguarding Ireland's honor. Reports submitted before the vote showed that each district in the constituency favored ratification of the pact. The resolution called upon the six Dail Eireann members representing the district not only to vote for the treaty but to use their influence to bring about ratification. Failure to do this the resolution stated, would be re garded as betrayal of the best inter-! ests of the country and gross contempt for theopinion of their constituents. ( Donegal, although the most northern Irish county, is under the south ern parliament being one of the three counties excluded from Ulster under the government of Ireland bill of 1920. NAVAN, County Meath, Ireland, Dec. 28 The urban council of Navan has adopted a resolution favoring ratification of the Anglo-Irish peace treaty. This action was taken at a meeting of the council yesterday. FRENCH LAWMAKERS MUST GIVE UP SEATS OR QUIT CORPORATIONS (By Associated Press) PARIS. Dec. 28. Eleven senators and 13 deputies will have to give up either their seats in parliament or their positions as directors of corporations if a resolution in the chamber of deputies is carried out, according to the newspaper, L'Ouevre. The resolution forbids members of parliament from accepting places on directorates Among the senators listed by L-'Oua-vre are Paul Doumer, minister of finance; Plecre Marraud, minister of interior and Andre Berthelot. former president of the Industrial bank of China and a brother of Philippe Berthelot, who resigned Monday as general secretary of the foreign office. Among the deputies named are Mau rice Le Rotsehild and Charles Dumont,
1r former minister of finance
M. Marraud already has resigned ns a director of tho Indo-Chinese bank. it is announced. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH LEADER SUCCUMBS tB.v Associated Press)
W ABASH, Ind., Dec. 28. Dr. Char-j tions of the parties to the dispute proWs Little, pastor of the Wabash Pres-jVides continuance through 1922 of byterian church for 50 years, and for-. present, wage scales, including the iner moderator of the Presbyterian j extra dollar a day granted last May, church of the United States of Amer- j subject to modification, and a wage ira, died suddenly at his home here to scaP for 1923, based on living co.sts
day. nr. inline was id years oiu :uiu is survived by his widow and one son. He was secretary of the Indiana Synod of the Presbyterian church. YOUNG WIFE KILLS HUSBAND, WAR VET (By Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS, Dec. 28. Mrs. Florence Simmons, 21. shot and killed her husband, James, 32, a world war veteran here this morning after the couple had quarreled, it was said throughout the night. Four bullets ntered the man's groin. Following th?! shooting Mrs. Simmons ran 1o a neighbor's house and asked that the police be called. The police however, were on their way to tho Simmons residence, having been called by a telephone operator who was trying to complete a long distance connection with Louisville. The telephone message was to tell Mrs. Simmons that her father was dying. The operator reported hearing what seemed to her to be a fight in progress at th Simmons residence. The couple had been married five years. GRAND JURY REPORT EXPECTED THURSDAY The grand jury wm meet icursudj . ... . rwt j
morning to render final report for the.f a Missouri Pacific train, Joplin to October term, it was announced on Kansas city an(j looted the safe In Wednesday. It is expected that little !tne expresg car iate last night. L. H. beyond routine business will be taken , .1.11..J thn exnress messeneer. was
up at this meeting as the jurors will be together for one day only. A number of matters which were cited by Judge Bond for investigation at the opening of the sessions, have yet to be reported upon. Some of these matters have been investigated and the final report of the Jury Is attracting a great deal of interest en this account. HARVEY TO BE OBSERVER AT ALLIED COUNCIL MEETING (By Associated Preas) LONDON, Dec. 28. George Harvey, the American ambassador, accompanied by Mrs. Harvey, left for Cannes. France, today. He will act as observer for the United States at the conference of the supreme council, which will open Jan. 4.
Ability to Cook Earns Woman $60,000 and Auto ( By Associated Press) PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 28 Her ability to cook has earned Mrs. Anna Souder $60,000 and an automobile. This sum and the motor car were left to her by the will of Samuel W. Ihling, for whom she was housekeeper. After the death of his wife, Mr. Ihling frequently came to the Souder home for meals. They appealed to him Mrs. Souder said, with the result that he invited her and Mr. Souder to live in his home and keep house for him.
SERMON IN HONOR OF 30TH YEAR IN PULPIT In celebration of his thirtieth anniversary in the ministry,' Rev. E. Howard Brown will give a special sermon in the East Main Street Friends church next Sunday morning. His sermon will be from the same text which he used 30 years ago. Rev. Brown preached his first sermon at the Friends church in Indianapolis on the first Sabbath in January, 1892 while a student in Earlham college. During the 30 years, he has conducted a total of 3,120 Sabbath services and has served in the capacity of a minister in Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Iowa and Colorado. He has also conducted a series of 76 revival meetings. These services have meant about 2,000 evangelistic ser mons. No record has been kept of converts made or members taken into the church. He ha3 conducted 136 funeral services. Lectures Many Times, Rev. Brown gave his stereopticon lecture. "War Against War," more than 100 times More than one hun dred temperance addresses have been given besides scores of Sunday School i and other addresses.
He has deliv-,tne
ered more than 5,500 sermons and public addresses during his ministry and he estimates that he has visied more than 6,000 homes in gospel service. During the most of his ministry he has taught a Sunday school class about 1200 times. Mr. and Mrs. Brown are completing their third year as pastors- at East Main Street church. Open house will be held at the church New Year's day. Members of the congregation and Sunday school and their friends are urged to be present. Those attending are urged to bring their dinner and spend the day. Hot coffee and cocoa will be j furnished for the dinner. Those who cannot bring dinner are invited to call any time during the afternoon and remain as Icing as possible'. ' Sunday school and church will be held as usual in tho morning. DISCUSS COMPROMISE PROPOSAL TO SETTLE BUILDING TROUBLES (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Dec. '28 The Board of governors of the Building trades employers' association, today had under consideration Samuel UnterI meyer's suggested agreement for sett ling the controversy betwen the association and the Building trades council. The plan has received the approval of the executive committee of the Union body. The proposal representing a comnromise between divergent suggesm the coming yea The conditions are to be determined by a board of arbitration, consisting of three men representing the employers, three the workers and a seventh to be chosen by. the other six. This board would have authority to discipline union organizations for falling below certain efficiency standards by cutting of the extra $1 in pay until efficiency is restored. OCCUPANTS OF AUTO HURT BY FIRE TRUGK (By Associated Press) EIKHART. Ind., Dec. 2S. Two fire engines running to the same fire late last night, met with accidents in distant parts of the city, six persons being injured when one of the trucks hit an automobile at a street crossing. Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. Cochran, the most severely injured, are in the hospital. The other fire truck smashed into a concrete retaining wall and was wrecked, althought no firemen were hurt. Meantime a garage containing two automobiles, one valued at $1,300 and one at $250 burned down, destroying the cars, which were uninsured. Police Are Searching For Two Express Bandits (By Associated Press) KANSAS CITY, Dec. 2S Police toAtr 11 t-,rt coarrhinir for two hancltts ; VI o ' ' .v .....n . i . ... n th messenger j gnoti but his condition was declared not to be serious. The amount or the loss was not made public. Harding Has Abandoned Visit Daring Holidays ( By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Dec. 28. While there was no official statement, indications at the White House today were that President Harding had abandoned his tentative plan to spend a portion of the holidays at Pinehurst, N. C The president had a full list of engagements for today and one of the menbers of the cabinet was authority for the statement that the cabinet would meet Friday as usual.
OHIO RIVER TO REACH FLOOD CREST TODAY; HIGHEST IN DECADE
(By Associated Press) LOUISVILLE. Dec. 28. The Ohio river, after having reached the highest stage here in almost a decade, today will reach the crest and will be stationary for several days, according to the official forecast of the weather bureau. When the muddy waters begin to re cede a number of families that werej unven rrom tneir nomes in me iowlying sections of the city will reclaim their own, but not until after the city health department has mopped up a bit, according to announcements. Although the river above the falls reached a stage five feet above the flood line, comparatively little damage has been reported. Practically all river traffic is suspended because the steamers cannot get under bridges. Small towns along the river that are without railroad are reported running short of food. One fatality has been reported, a girl being drowned Sunday night when an automobile in which she was riding backed into a ditch filled with water 25 feet deep. WORLD WAR FACTORS HARD TO DETERMINE, HISTORIANS ARE TOLD (By Associated Press) ST. LOUIS, Dec. 28. Historians have an important task m judging correctly the factors which went to make the World war, Wayne F. Stev ens, of the history department of i Dartmouth college, told members of National Historical association in annual meeting nere. Me aaaressea a luncheon conference on the history of the World war. The world will judge the actors and peoples who took part in the struggle in the light of the historians' findings, he said. He pointed out that the documents which tell the story of the war were written under, great pressure and often contain errors. Code messages, loose translations, incorrect transcripts of original documents, technicalities, and the vast mass of matter to be arranged and organized all pre sent difficulties. . , - . , . j ' He made a plea for intelligent and , ' i ""-l arcuivea Historians already have
TCI L Vir -or ,Vi0 u initne central compettive field, according . the issue- of the war while it as in t aor savase. secretarv of the
progress rwir.it. w hrfj. in uv i h kfnrv er ' h. h?i haps have the peoples of any belliger-
ent nations had mich definite oncep-i,.,,
tions of' the ends for which they were striving," he said. The international state, which flourished 'in' the middle ages after the feudal period, has not yet been equalled in practical idealism, A. C. Krey of the University of Minnesota, declared in an address during a discussion of medieval history. Lynn Thorndyko of the Western Reserve university of Cleveland, Ohio, said: "Medieval enthusiasts have hitherto centered too much attention on a few great personalities and that, at the beginnings of modern literatures have been over studied at the neglect of their mother, the richer and more scholarly Latin literature." Jean Jules Jusserand, French ambassador, president of the American Historical association, was scheduled to deliver an address on "The Rearing of Ambassadors" at a banquet given by the American Catholic Historical association tonight. ZITA WILL REACH SWITZERLAND JAN, 8 (By Associated Press) BERNE, Dec. 28 Former Empress Zita of Austria Hungary is expected to arrive in Switzerland about Jan. 8, coming by way of Paris from the Island of Madeira, where she and former Emperor Charles are exiled. Zita is going to Zurich under special permission of the allied council of am- ! baspadors and the Swiss government j to be present when an operation is performed on her son, Robert, i It is said that she may take two children back to Madeira with her. A dispatch from Funchal, Madeira, on Dec. 17, states that Zita expected to start for Switzerland Dec. 26. Advices to the London Morning Post from Funchal Dec. 26, said that the governor of Madeira had received orders from Paris to prevent her departure. $100,000,000 SPENT BY U. S. FOR TOYS
(By Associated Press) J NEW YORK, Dec. 2S. More than For Indiana, by the United States $100,000,000 was spent by the Ameri- Weather Bureau Unsettled weather can people for toys and games during tonight and Thursday ; probably local 1921, the National City bank has fig- snows in extreme north portion; coldnred. The factory value of toys man-ler in northwest portion tonight; much
ufactured in this country has more than trebled, it was estimated, since tne war cut ou ine supply irom uer - many, chief source of America's toy imports. The value of toys made here in 1919 was given as $46,000,000 com - pared with $14,000,000 five years pre viously. Capital invested in the American industry advanced from $10,000,000 in 1914 to $25,000,000 in 1919. Toy imports declined from $8,000,000 in 1913 to $1,000,000 in 1918, while imports rose in 1920 to $6,000,000 and to $10,000,000 In 1921. Exports of American toys jumped from less than $1,000,000 in 1913 to $4,000,000 last year. NOTED ACTOR DIES (By Associated Press) LONDON, JJec. . 28. The death of Sir John Hare, noted English actor and manager, was announced today. He was 77 years old. .
Latin America Invited
Left to right, above: Miss Mary Anderson, Mrs. Maud Wood Park and Mrs. Mabel Miss Grace Abbott and Dr. Valeria H. Parker.
To brine the women of the United America, Mexico and Canada, the first
1922, at the call of the National League of Women Voters. Prominent among the women who will take part in the conference are Mrs. Maud Wood Park, suffragist; Miss Grace Abbott, chief of the Children's bureau, U. S. department of labor; Miss Mary Anderson, chief of the women's bureau of the U. S. department of labor; Dr. Valeria Parker, executive secretary of the U. S. interdepartmental social hygiene board, and Mrs. Mabel W. Wi'.lebrandt, assistant U. S. attorney general.
CLOSING OF NEGOTIATIONS NOT TO CAUSE IMMEDIATE STRIKE OF OHIO COAL MINERS
(By Associated Press) COLUMBUS, O., Doc. 28 An immediate strike of Ohio coal miners will not result from the announcement. i u t u i nr iiirui iir 1 n villi V uai . ancro . .ta yorhora mines in southern Ohio would discon
done JVnr negotiations of wage scale in:ization, taken at a meeting yesterday,' pf.ntini-!-1clnt mee,ings "wit1 other districts in was not intended as a "blow to union-;
Ohio Miners' union. The exitinS contract will expire ; 31 Mr- SaS said today and! th n.. rriinr,.o ti t .,,r : ,. -,,.-' j.flit' ,.,! under which they can work. Should the miners and operators, fail to negotiate a new contract to i supplant the existing contract all work will cease in Ohio mines on April first," Mr. Savage said. "However, lots of things can hapWILSON SPENDS 6STH BIRTHDAY QUIETLY WASHINGTON, Dec. 28. Former President Wilson today quietly celebrated his sixty-fifth birthday at his home here. While no deviation from the daily program of the Wilson household was planned, many cablegrams, telegrams and letters containing greetings were delivered at the Wilson home on South street during the day. Several of tho more intimate friends of Mr. Wilson called to extend their greetings in person. NEW YORK, Dec. 28. Women from all over the United States were here today to attend a luncheon commemorating the birthday of Woodrow Wilson. At the same time they were tr celebrate the first anniversary of the plan to honor the former" president through a permanent foundation. Plans for raising at least $1,0(10,000 as a fund to endow awards for meritorious services to democracy, public welfare, liberal thought or peace through justice, were announced to bo making progress. The campaign f-i-; this fund will begin on Jan. 15, the period between noon and one o'clock i on that day being designated as "Wi son hour." Weather Forecast MOORE'S LOCAL FORECAST Mostly cloudy tonight and Thursday; occasional light snow; much colder Thursday. Under influence of the storm now crossing the Great Lakes, mostly cloudy weather is indicated for the next 36 hours. There were some light snows at intervals, followed by decidedly colder weather. South winds will I shift to strong northwest. colder Thursday; fresh to strong southwest shifting to northwest winds. i ....v.. oui u7. i Maximum 35 i Minimum 20 ! Today. Noon ....34 Weather conditions A Canadian storm is crossing the northern states and a cold wave is moving in behind the storm. The Pacific coast storm continues to cause heavy rains and floods in southern California. Today making the 11 successive day of heavy rains. Paid Circulation Yesterday, was 11,619
to Send Delegates to Conference of Women Voter
i -w2" wel
States into closer relations with the Pan-American conference will be held pen between now and April 1," he added. The announcement w-as regarded in various lights here today. Coal operators, including W. D. McKinney, secretary of the exchange, de clared that the action of their organized labor," but that they were "drlven to the mnv," hv tho awm nf concerns in West Virginia and other fields to undersell them. While officials of the Ohio mines . .. ........ (Continued on Page Four 25 BANDITS SWOOP DOWN ON DISTILLERY; GET S30.000 BOOTY (By Associated Press) j LOUISVILLE. Ky., Dec. 28. Twenj ty-five or more bandits swooped down upon the Blue Ribbon distillery j at Eminence, Ky., early today, locked j five guards in the office of the plant, and stole 225 cases of bottled-in-bond whisky, valued at $30,000, according t a report to Louisville police. The report paid all of the robbers were masked and heavily armed. Two automobile trucks were used to! j haul the liquor away, said the report,) wnich added ttiat the trucks toon the road toward Louisville. Soon after the bandits departed, the five guards, who were bound with ropes, released themselves and notified the Henry county authorities. All cities within a 60-mile radius of Eminence were notified . to watch for the bandits. BELIEVE WADMAN WILL FILE DENIAL Attorneys for Sheriff Wadman did not make any announcement Wednesday as to what their reply would be to the accusation of negligence In duty that had been brought against the sheriff by the grand jury. The answer to the accusation must be filed Dec. 20. The statement of Sheriff Wadman some time ago, that he "would fight the case" is taken to mean that an ! answer in general denial will be en tered. Should such a document be filed, the date for " the ' trial of the sheriff by' jury will be set by Judge Bond. The trial will be held some time in the January term of court. BANDITS KILL GOTHAM INSURANCE SALESMAN (Bv Associated Press) dded another murder' to" the growing list in New York today when three men attacked and killed . Charles Hayes, an insurance salesman, in the East New Y'ork section of Brooklyn. Hayes bravely fought the trio when they attempted to hold him up. He was felled by a blow upon the head with a piece of pipe, and was shot in the groin. A policeman, attracted by screams of an unidentified woman witness, chased the men for several blocks, but they escaped. 3 CARS DERAILED AT DELHI (By Associated Press) ! CINCINNATI. O., Dec. 28. The bagj gage and two storage cars of the Cin-icinnati-St. Louis, Baltimore and Ohio '.express which left here at 8:50 o'clock jthis morning were derailed at Delhi, a suburb of this city. No one was in-ijured.
Walker Willcbrandt. Below:
women of South America. Central at Baltimore, Md., from April 20 to 29, nick is m FOE DIVORCE BT JOHN D.'S DAUGHTER (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Dec. 28 Mrs. Edith Rockefeller McCormick today filed suit for Hivnrrp in snrrrior court aeainst I Harold F. McCormick, president of the ! International Harvester company. ! Mrs. McCormick is the only daueh-
ter of John D. Rockefeller, Sr. She j sired to begin rebuilding replacements returned to this country a few weeks in 1927, although this did not mean ago after spending eight years in Swit-j that she intended placing them- in the zerland. Upon her return she took up water before the replacement period her residence in the McCormick town j provided under the caDital agreement, house, while Mr. McCormick moved to i With so wide a diiference of opinhis estate at Lake Forest. j ion revealed in lhe submarine conAlthough thev are jointly the back- i roversy. however, there appeared to ers and principal contributors to the i be an increasing disposition among Chicago Opera association, and attend j the delegates to consider a plan lor almost nightly, Mrs. McCormick hasi!eavjn the wholp question of auxiloccupied a box on one side of the j iary tonnage later to an international house and Mr. McCormick and bis conference. In the highest American daughter. Muriel on the other. Mrs. c;rc'es u ?"as sal(1 a concrete proposMccormick's suit alleges desertion. !a1Jvr fa future conference might be Rumors of the impending suit have ! laid before the delegates within a few been eurrt-nt ever since Mr. and Mrs. i -S-
McCormick returned from Europe last summer at the same time but on different ships. Mrs. McCormick denied at that time that a divorce was contemplated, while Mr. McCormick issued a laconic statement that he had moved his home to the country estate. FRIENDS, NEIGHBORS WILL JOIN TONIGHT IN GREETING DEBS (By Associated Press) TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Dec. 28 The home town welcome awaited the return to hs home here tonight of Eugene V. Debs, the socialist leader who was released from prison last Sunday through presidential commutation of his ten-year sentence for violation of war law. Friends and neighbors reI gardless of their own views of Deb's I doctrines, as well as his follower?. were expected to meet the train and escort Debs to his home where he wiii meet his wife. Plans for a big reception committee journeying today to Indianapolis, where the socialist leader had a three hour stop over in the afternoon went away, but a small committee headed by George Koop. a Chicago socialist, made a trip to act as a special escort for Debs. A large delegation of Indianapolis socialists also were expected, to join in the escort returning to this city. DENOUNCE CIGARETTES, MOVIES, JAZZ DANCING (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Dec. 28 The movies, jazz dancing and - the cigarette, as they affect public morals, were de-! nounced at today's session of the International Purity Conference. W. E. Fleming, . Chicago, manager of the National reform association, address ed the delegates on "The Menace of ! the Movies," while J. Louis Guyon, a dancing master, a-so of Chicago, told "The Truth about Jazz." Mr. Guyon ocrririorl fiTnoHmcn fa in li i a vv.v, iu.M vaj. iiiiv uuj a i ilia U j dancing academy aoout the manner in which Jazz music demoralized the jazz music demoralized the young. Daniel H. Kress, of the Washington sanitarium, Washington, D. C, told of the relation of the cigarette to crime and immorality. At tonight's session speakers will include John WTesley Hill, D. D.. general prohibition agent at Washington; Mrs. Kate Waller Barrett, Alexandria. Va., president of the National Flor ence Crittenden missions; and Dr. Clifford Gordon, superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League, Melbourne. Ausi tralia.
SUB TONNAGE AGREEMENT IS jIVEN UP Demand by France for Minimum of 90,000 Tons Said To Have Closed Doors Reject Compromise. OTHERS DELAY ACTION
(By Associated Fress) WASHINGTON, Dec. 28 Hope for an agreement to limit submarine tonnage was declared to have been abandoned today at the meeting of the arms conference naval committee. The committee will meet again at 3 p. m. A demand by France for a minimum submarine tonnage of 90,000 tons was declared by delegates to have closed the doors to any agreement, the American compromise proposal having been rejected finally and compdeteIy by the French. . Casting aside the possibilities of harmonizing views on submarine tonnage the American delegation brought forth a new proposal to limit the size of subs and other auxiliary craft to a maximum of 10,000 tons. Albert Sarraut, head of the French delegation, it was understood, presented with an air of finality the declaration that France could not accept less than 350,000 tons of auxiliary tonnage In addition to a submarine tonnage of 90,000. The American proposal would have given France about 31,000 tons of submarines. The British and Japanese delegations are understood to have stated that, in view of the French stand on submarines, they would both feel compelled to reserve action on the submarine tonnage ratio for auxiliary craft allotted Great Britain and Japan under the American plan. Express Regret Italian Spokesmen who followed presentation of the French demand, It was said, expressed regret that France had not seen it clear to accept smaller tonnage, and Japan also, through her delegation spokesman, declared that the French demands amounted to something which Japan could not hope to sanction under the American propOSa!.. herence to the capjtai ship despite disagreement on s l ne trencn aeiegaiion aeciarea aaagreement ubmarines. but with the reservation that sh de VILLA'S FOLLOWERS TO RECEIVE LAND (By ,ssrciated Press MEXICO CITY, Dec. 2S-The men who Fervid under General Francisco Villa, former revolutionist, are foon to receive from the government tracts of i land in accordance with th agrev r.ient made with Villa by the Huerta j government at the time of his surj render, in July 1920. Two Reciantas. one in Chihuahua and the other in Burango, will be used for the purpose and the department of agriculture has appointed commission of engineers to divide the land. It is estimated that each man will receive six heotames (approximately 15 acres.) General Villa is living at Cantucl in a hacienda given him by the government. At the time of his surrender his troops numbered Fix hundred. ITALIAN RED GROSS WILL AID RUSSIANS (By Associated Pref ROME. Dec. 28. The Italian Red Cross is to establish 18 food and medical stations in the famine area of southern Russia, under an agreement signed here by the president, of the organization and M. Vorovsky, Soviet representative. A mission under supervision of thi Red Cross military staff, will start for Russia in February. It is planned to supply food to 16.000 persons, including 4.C00 children. The government has contributed 6,000,000 lire for the work and also 1s supplying the medicines and bearing the cost of the mission's transportal tion. . Indianapolis Man Finds Wife Who Deserted Him (Ey Associated Press) YOUNGSTOWN. O., Dec. 28. After a chase which lasted nearly three years, Luke Lewis, of Indianapolis, today caused the arrest of his wife. May, and of Nelson Coyle. with whom she is alleged to have run away. T "- . . . i : i l I 1 r . 1 . hou8e wher Coyle and Mra. t, were caifl tn have hppn living txrr were said to have been living two brought with them and two born here. The youngest, a babe in arms, is with the mother in jail. Former Governor Bickett, North Carolina, Is Dead (By Associated Press) ' RALEIGH, N. C. Dec. 28. Former Governor Thomas Walter Bickett, who suffered a stroke of paralysis at h'v home here last night, died this morning without having regained consciousness. .
