Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 56, 7 March 1922 — Page 8

) PAGE EIGHT

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 1922

ASK PUBLIC TO AID III $1,600 DRIVE FOR LOCAL REFUGE HOME

, A drive for $1,600 has been started by the trustees of the Mary E. Thomas Refuge home to meet the indebtedness of the home. Dr. W. O. Huffman and the committee In charge hopes to obtain the necessary funds without making a canvass of the city. A phonograph concert will be given at the A. M. E. church. South Sixth and B streets. March 28. The drive will continue until that date. Help 18 expected from all persons In Richmond. The funds which axe obtained will be taken care of under government supervision. The home's indebtedness must be paid if the home Is to continue to do Its service, according to a statement made by Dr. Huffman. The home has been doing a good work among the people of Richmond. Persons desiring to aid In the work 'to obtain finances are asked to communicate with Dr. W. G. Huffman, 28 North Sixth street, telephone 1817. Tickets to the concert may be obtained from him. The entire profit realized from the concert will be turned over to the fund. The phonograph program which will be given in the A. M. E. church March 28 follows: "Rienzi Overture," Sodero's band: , piano solo, "Barcarolle Op. 10," quartet,, "Bella Figlia Dell 'Amore;" "Silver Threads Among the Gold." violin solo. "Ave Maria;" "Love's Old Sweet Song;" selections from "Rigoletto," by the American Symphony orchestra; Polka" (Rachmaninoff), saxaphone ' solo. , "Vaisa Llewellyn." "The Anvil ; Chorus"! and "Miserere". from "II Trovatore," "Lead Kindly Light" (John B. Dykes), "My Old Kentucky Home," Freda Hempel and Criterion quartet.

HORSE IS FIRST AID TO CUPID IN SOCIETY THESE DAYS

HARTMAN ACQUITTED; FACES OTHER COUNTS

INDIANAPOLIS. . March 7. The next step in the prosecution of the remaining charges pending in the federal and state courts against J. Herbert Hartman, who was acquitted late Monday by a jury in the criminal court on a charge of receiving goods stolen in another state, was a question which confronted William P. Evang, prosecuting attorney, and Homer Elliott. United States district attorney, . today. A definite announcement as to plans for the further prosecution of the charges against Hartman; his wife; his brother. Fred Hartman; Frank Francis, alias Moore, confessed burglar, and others, it is believed, will not be made until the two attorneys have conferred on the matter. Mr. Evans was silent today regarding his plans and said he probably would confer with Mr. Elliott soon. Followed Disclosures Hartman and the others were indicted by the county and federal ' grand Juries last summer on charges

of receiving stolen goods, transporting

stolen goods and transporting intoxl

eating liquor: The charges were "based largely on disclosures made at that time by Francis, who then had been arrested and who was in jail at Louis

ville.

PRINCESS' MUSICAL PROGRAM PROMISING

r hStt f-n --N i (F5- fj'K j, x hJ ' f mi ff i V

Four daughters of society who osii their hearts when Cupid enlisted the aid of a horse. Above, left to right, are: Mrs. Thomas Leonard, , who was Louise Beavor Webb; Mrs. George Miles, who was Edith Beavor Webb, Louise's sister, and Miss Mathilde McCormick, who is to marry Max Oser, Swiss riding master. Below Is Giulia Morosini, who married Arthur M. Werner. When the announcement was made recently that Miss Mathilde McCormick, John D.'s jrranddaughter, is to marry Max Oser, Swiss riding master over twice her age. it spelled another victory for the coble horse as a first aid to little Dan Cupid. For several romances of late have had their beginning on the bridle path or in chance meetings in which a steed was concerned. Giulia Morosini fell in love and married Arthur M. Werner, mounted policeman. The ro-

PREPARE RECEPTION FOR MERCHANTS WHO WILL VISIT RICHMOND Definite plans for the reception! of the 100 or more retail dry goods merchants who will' meet, in Richmond March 23, were made Tuesday morning by local merchants. The delegates who will- come to Richmond from Indiana cities will be retailers of ladies' read to wear goods. Two sessions probably will be held. One Will be in tne afternoon and one at night, with a dinner during the intermission. Emmett Bartel and Frank Haner were appointed a local committee to take charge of the arrangements for the big meeting. They will have complete charge of the plans for the reception of the delegates. Roland Nusbaum represents the Indiana Dry Goods association in arranging local plans. Delegates from the following Indiana cities are expected to meet rn Richmond: Anderson, Brookville,

Cambridge City, Connersville, Farmland, Greensburg. Hagerstown, Lynn, Knightstown, Liberty, Muncie Newcastle, Rushville, Shelbyville, Union City and Winchester.

Corydon Bank Loss May Reach $500,000, Report (By Associated Press) CORYDON. Ind., March 7. Invest I. gation of the three defunct banks :n anil near Corydon, has not yet been completed, but it was said by ban examiners yesterday that the loss of the Corydon national bank will reach $500,000. The loss of the Elizabeth bank will run as high as $17,000 and that of the Farmers' Savings and Trust company $100,0C0, the examiners said. Receivers of the bank have been appointed and will take over the affairs of the institution as soon as the examiners have completed their investigation.

ROME, CATACOMBS SUBJECT OF TALK

WOMAN LEGISLATOR IN POLITICS BECAUSE OF MAN'S INSISTENCE

KANSAS CITY. Mo., March 7. Miss Alice M. Robertson representative in congress from Oklahoma, speaking at a rally of Republican women of thii city here yesterday, told of her early antagonism toward woman's suffrage, of her reason for being a Republican and her reason for running for congress. Miss Robertson once was vicepresident of the anti-suffrage society oft Oklahoma. "I used to think that not one woman in a hundred knew anything about politics. she said, "but experience has , taught me that not one man in a hundred knows anything about politics, so there you are."

will be! she said that when she was first

Dr. Ed- asked to run for congress she waj

mance ended unhappily. Louise Beavor Wtbh, well-known at New York horse shows, is happily married to Thomas Leonard of the New York mounted squad. Theirs was a romance cf the park bridle paths. Her sister, F.rtith Heavor Webb, is the wife

of George Miles a groom in the stable at Lake Forest, near Chicago, of Benjamin Behr. They live Lappily in a cottage. Mathilde McCormick is stiu to find if her marriage to a Swiss nding master will prove as felicitous as she expects.

PHna - WatnhwnKo. the Indian

singer, who is to appear in Richmond j Picion.

March 16, will afford an entertainment of extraordinary order for those interested in this sort of high class entertainment. Princess Watahwaso will give two concerts on March 16, one being in the afternoon for the children and the evening being for adults. Both entertainments will be held In the high school auditorium. The princess showed an ability to ping early in life, and now has a very fine cultured voice and has a remarkable talent for interpreting the Indian dances and song. A different program will be given in the evening than in the afternoon. Proceeds of the entertainment will go toward the expenses of the high school's orchestra trip to Nashville, Tenn.

KELLOG TELLS SENATE 1

PACIFIC PACT IS FREE OF ENTANGLEMENTS i (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, March 7 Advocating ratification of the four-power Pacific treaty without hesitation or qualifications, Senator Kellogg, Republican, Minnesota, today told the senate that the pact was so free from entangling commitment as to make reservations possible sources of embarrassment rather than of advantage. The Minnesota senator declared no

agreement to employ force or to de

fend any other, nation's rights was contemplated by the instrument and characterized the "no alliance" reser

vation approved by the foreign relations committee as "wholly superfluous.

Mr. Kellogg reviewed the negotiations leading up to . the treaty and asserted that 'one of the most , important provisions was that abrogating the Angle-Japanese alliance which, he said, long had been viewed with sus-

Short News of City

Urge Parents to Attend

Garfield Session Tonight

Parents of children attending school at Garfield junior high school are especially urged to attend a meeting of the Garfield Parent-Teachers associa-

that he will not take his minstrel tion to be held Tuesday night in the company to Whitewater Wednesday j gymnasium building, just north of the

Postpone Minstrel Showing Be

cause of the condition of the country roads, Will McVay has announced

DAVIS PRAISES ' CITY PLANNING AT SESSION

"City Planning commission will be a great financial help to the city of Richmond if it were adopted here," said Dell Davis, city engineer at the

meeting of the Rotary club Tuesday noon in the Arlington hotel. He urged the club to get behind the movement and do all they can to have it in Richmond. On many occasions, Mr. Davis point

ed out, if Richmond had had a city planning commission it would have saved the city much money. He cited the instant where the street is being widened on the corner of North Third and C street. This could have been done at a much less cost had it been done several years ago, he said.. Funeral services for Dr. Charles R. Marvel, member of the club, who

died Sunday will be held Tuesday nie-ht at 7:20 o'plnrV Tlio TnomKoi-o

; of the club will meet at the Westcott

hotel, going to the home in a body.

Fred Rapp, Billy Sunday's business manager, was a guest at today's meeting.

"Rome and the Catacombs," tVin fiiihippt unnn which Rev.

mund Stein, of Rome. Italy will i- "SLKr JSSST .JSrlJIS;

an liiusiraieu lecture m lug ok. drew's auditorium Wednesday evening at 8:45 o'clock. Dr. Stein's long residence in the Eternal City, where he made a study of archeology and particularly of the catacombs, makes him an authority on ancient Rome, and he is equally well versed in Its modern lore. The City of Seven Hills, with its interesting monuments of antiquity, its ruling of by-gone ages, its splendid churches, is today the center of European culture, ' and yearly attracts

many thousands of visitors

came to me and asked me if I woul l consider the nomination," she said. "At first I thought I could not successfully run for dog catcher, but the man argued and argued well if any man had ever approached me with the same persistence, insistence and eloquence in the matter of changing my name, I never would have remained an old maid." : She said she was often asked how she became a Republican. "My grandfather was a missionary amont, the Cherokee Indians of Georgia," she said. "When the state of Georgia

Dr. Stein was for years associated nt tne waians out . ... . ' rofnean Trt loavA them Kftr thia no

was sentenced to four years in ths

with Monsignor Wilpert, the most

eminent archaeologist of modern times and is a fellow of the Goerres Historical society of Rome.

The lecture will be illustrated with

a hundred original stereopticon slides, many of the views never having been

shown in America before.

Drop Case Against James Morgan, Teacher Because Amy Smith, prosecuting witness, had disappeared from the city with her family, the case of the state against James Morgan, formerly a school teacher in this city, has been dropped. The Smith girl had brought a statutory charge agalnpt Morgan last fall. She left Richmond, in company with her parents, Dec. 21. Investigation by Hie prosecuting attorney brought out

the fact that Fhe had

charges against another man. Her fa

ther is a fugitive from justice from an Ohio town, according to the motion to .drop the case which was filed by Prosecutor Paul A. Beckett.

He alluded to the Bryan arbitration

treaty and similar international agreements as furnishing precedent for the four-power pact and declared there was no semblance of similarity between the new treaty and the obligations of Article 10 of the League of Nations covenant.

U. S. STAND IN REGARD TO GENOA DETERMINED

(By Associated Press)

WASHINGTON, March 7 The at

titude of the United States government toward participation in the forthcom

ing Genoa economic conference has

been formulated and shortly will be

announced it was learned today at the White House.

night as had been planned. Clemency Is Denied Executive clemency was denied to Russell Batch-

elor who is serving from two to 21

years in the state prison, when his petition was heard by'the state board of

pardons, says an Indianapolis dispatch ' Tuesday. j Frank Clements Files Frank Clem-j ents filed for the Republican nomina-! tion for sheriff. ' J Held in Jail George, E. Justice was arrested by Pennsylvania detectives on a charge of petit larceny Tuesday. He is being held in the city Jail pendind arraignment Wednesday. i Spivey is Fined George Spivey, ar-! rested Monday on a charge of petit larceny, pleaded guilty and was fined ' $1 and costs Tuesday. Spivey was

arrested in connection with the dis-i appearance of eight chickens from the j yard of Adam Ebling. i Strangers Are Invited. A special musical program will be given by the Get-together club Tuesday night in the lecture room of the Reid Memorial church. The meeting is called at 7:30 o'clock. There also will be a program

of community singing. Every stranger

in the city is invited to attend. People coming to the meetings for the first:

time are asked to come to the A street 1

entrance. Following the program refreshments will be served. Plead Not Guilty Ralph Devers and James Burton arrested by Officers Vogelsong and Bundy on a charge of petit larceny Monday pleaded not guilty when arraigned in police court Tuesday morning. They will be tried Wednesday.

Arrested on Suspicion Everett ! Alexander was arrested late Tuesday I

at tne westcott hotri on suspicion

main building. Erection of the pro

posed junior high school building in the east end of the city will be discussed. ,

CLYDE MANIFOLD FILES Clyde Manifold, of Dalton township, filed for the Republican nomination for the office of township assessor ia the county clerk's office Tuesday afternoon. 1

Appoint Three Chairmen

For Sunday Campaign Mrs. H. R. McQueen has been appointed chairman of the nursery division of the Billy Sunday campaign organization here, it was announced Tuesday. The Rev. E: Howard Brown, pastor of the East Main Street Friends church, has been named chairman of the shoD work committee and W. L.

Stump publicity chairman. Fred W Rapp, Sunday's business manager arrived 'in the city Monday and occupied the city headquarters.

room 309, Colonial building, Tuesday. Miss Alma Thomas, secretary to Mr. Rapp, announced Tuesday that the headquarters will be open each day from 9 to 5 o'clock. Number of the telephone is 1509.

iss Elizabeth Brickdale, of San Francisco, Cal., is proprietor of a goat farm where, for the last eight years,

penitentiary. The case was tried in many courts and finally the U. S. supreme court decided that it was il- f legal to hold him. But the sovereign state of Georgia, aided and abetted Andrew Jackson, decided they wouflu-" do as they pleased in the matter. "So whenever I am asked why I am a Republican, I always say that I can never get over Andrew Jackson keeping my grandfather in the penitentiary." In conclusion Miss Robertson said concerning President Harding: "Wo have in the White House the most human kind of people your kind and my kind. It is an administration that

recognizes God."

James C, Hurst, Richmond, Files His Declaration INDIANAPOLIS, March 7. Several candidates for seat in the state legislature filed declarations which Secretary of State Jackson today so theii names might appear on the May primary ballot. Among them were Elmer Waters of South Raub, Republican; James C. Hurst of Richmond, Republican, and George W. Simms, of Terre i Haute, Republican.

SIX PERSONS KILLED IN TERRIFIC STORM

By Associated Press) AUGUSTA, Ga., March 7 Six persons were killed and scores injured in a tornado which just before day-

Deaths and Funerals

GEORGE R. STEIN George R. Stein, 24 years old, died Tuesday morning at 6:25 oclock, a his home, 813 South Sixth street. Death resulted from a complication of diseases. He was born in Richmond, Feb.. 28, 1898, and had lived here all his life. He was a member of St. Andrews church. ' The deceased was a very popular

young man or St. Andrew's, and was

break today swept the mill town of

filed similar! Warrenville, S. C. and the, villiage ofja member of the Y. M. I. and Holv

I nnn-lA,. Q 1 M YT 1 1 A J ' T ( a n . . - .

iame society, or si. Andrews. He is

County Commissioners Buy Truck For Road Work One three and one-half ton motor truck to be used in hauling road material was .purchased Jrom Clem McConaha by the county commissioner late Monday afternoon. The truck is the same make as the. two already In t'.se by the county and was purchased because the county officials wished to follow out the most efficient practice of large business Institutions in keeping the equipment interchangeable it was said. Hear Defense Witnesses In Obenchain Trial - LOS ANGELES. Calif- March 7. Mrs. Bessie Wiedoft. one of the first witnesses called by the defense, "wp expected to take the witness stami again today with the resumption c' the trial of Mrs. Madalyne Obenchain, for the murder of J, Belton Kennedy. Mrs. Wiedoft. who was testifying ypsterday when court adjourned until this morning, taid she hal lived in a flat in the same building with Mrs. Obenchain. then Miss Madelynne Concor, here in 1918, and that Kennedy called frequently on Miss Conor. Mm. Wiedbft also told of having attended the wedding of the defendant, to Ralph .R." Obenchain; Chicago at tomey. In 1919, and of incidents aftot1 Mrs. Obenchain's return here in 1921. following her divorce from Obencha'n.

Stifleton, S. C. Langley, S. C, 10 miles from Augusta also was reported to have sustained heavy damage as a result of the storm.

Three Games Tonight - In Service League Three games are scheduled to be played in the "Y" gym Tuesday night in the Community Service league. There will be only one more scheduled game after this week's games. The first game of the evening will be between the Motorcycles and the Gloves, the second game will see the Beverages and the Hills Laddies mix; the last game will be between the Williamsburg team and Kayee.

St Patrick's Party to Be Given By Joy Club A St. Patrick's party will be given next Friday night in the high school art gallery by the Girls' 'Joy club. Irl3h songs will be sung, and Irish games played during the evening. The party will begin at 7:30 o'clock.

This club is composed of girls who

are members or the Cms Community Service, basketball league. The initiation committee has completed a variety of stunts that will be used in fhe initiation of new members.

PEACE IN STRIKE AREA ' PROVIDENCE, R. I., March 7. Peace reigned early today in all sections of the Rhode Island textile area where many mills are closed by a strike now in its seventh week. Troops and deputy sheriffs, however, guarded the plant at Hope. Attleboro, and in tne Blackstone val'ey. .

survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs

Herman E. Stein; three brothers, Jos-j

epn stem, or Muncie, ind., and Everett and Leo, of this city, and four sisters. Rose Dominic, of the Order of St. Francis, Cincinnati, Ohio, Miss Laur.i, Miss Cornelia and Miss Agnes Stein, all of this city. Funeral services will be held Friday from St. Andrew's church. Burial will be in St. Andrew's cemetery. Right. Rev. Monsignor F. A. Roell will officiate. Friends may call at any time. FRANK G. HOLLMANN Funeral services for Frank G. Hollmann, who died Sunday morning at his home, two and one-half miles north of Middleboro pike, will be held Wednesday morning at 9 o'clock from St. Andrew's Catholic church. Burial will be in St. Andrew's cemetery. Rev. Monsignor Roell will officiate. Friends may call any time. SISTER MARY ALICE LUKEN. Word was received Tuesday afternoon of the death of Sister Mary Alice Luken, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Luken, at St. Mary's in the Woods, after a lingering illness. The funeral

is to be held from the convent chapel Thursday morning.

, WILLIAM A. LEWIS The body of William A. Lewis, who was found suffocated in a car containing smoldering cinders at Boston, has been taken by his brother to his home In New Port, Tenn. Mr. Lewis' father was a farmer living six miles out of New Port and his brother is the owner of a steam laundry in the city. He was only 24 years old and was an ex-soldier.

Breaking the Shackles of Time

CLOCKS are as much a matter of course as suspenders or sausages. But it took energy and initiative to get the first clock on the kitchen shelf and start it going. The Yankee pack peddler was sole distributor arid transporter. His lean, lanky loose-jointed legs set the limits for most distribution problems in those days. Modern transportation with progressive sales methods and advertising have broken the shackles of time. They make a cjuick job of what used to take years. Through advertising, many an article has been introduced simultaneously in stores all over the country. The Richmond Palladium does you a two-fold service. It not only brings you news of the world, but alsa news of what to buy, where to buy and how to buy. The advertisements are news columns of merchants and manufacturers who have important stories to tell you. Take advantage of them. Read the latest news of good things to be had and where to get them.

Make sure you get all the news

THE RICHMOND PAIXADIUM Esiablishcd 1831'