Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 66, 18 March 1922 — Page 12

'PAGE FOURTEEN

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., SATURDAY, MARCH 18, 1922.

BOND OF R.L. ESTES, DECLARED FORFEITED, NOT PAID TO COUNTY EATON, Ohio, March 18. -As yet the $2,500 bond of R. L. Estes. convicted of automobile theft, which Judge A. C. Rislnger declared forfeit

ed, has not been turned over to the

county, . although .it, is said,, demand

for the monev has been made. Rec

ords of the clerk of the. courts ehow the money has not. been paid In. Estes, after conviction, was sentenced to serve one to seven years imprisonment. His nephew, William Mills, was tried Jointly with him and

convicted. Appellate and supreme; courts confirmed the conviction. Mills j

intered the state reformatory to serve one to seven years. 'Estes has not showed up to serve his term. It is said Estes' counsel is opposing surrender of the bond by the bondsman, although the court has declared it forfeited. It is said Estes' counsel contends he is under order of an Illinois court and . Is . unable to appear here. The same representation was made to Judge Rlsinger by Estes' counsel in a motion requesting the bond not be declared forfeited. Denies Divorce Complaint Answering a divorce complaint filed by Ira Beachler, of Lebanon, in common pleas court here, his wife, Elizabeth, denies his allegations of gross neglect and wilful absence and in a cross peition asks that she be given a decree of divorce. She alleges ex

treme cruelty and gross neglect. A lemporary Injunction granted by the court prevents Beachler disposing of any of his property. The divorce suit is the culmination of 32 years of married life. ' . Grand Larceny Charged Records of common . pleas- court

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Where Seven Met Death' in Railroad Crash r ,...!.,...-

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A broken wheel plunged a passenger coach down a 50-foot embankment at Camp Creek, Georgia, killing seven and injuring 16. The photo shows rescue workers seeking victims.

govern-

be done by t'ae European

ments themselves. Until these two subjects of German reparations and of the maintenance of large land armanents together with the cost of those armaments are

faced by the nations of Europe and

are settled upon a sound basis, there is nothing the United States can do to help Europe toward better things. Just as soon as these two subjects are settled and settled . right, the United States will be eager to put all its weight into an effort to restore normal economic conditions in the

world and in the restoration of the

ANOTHER ROMANCE OF OPERA ENDED

ytlPI country, but it is of no use to

The indictment wa's not made public at the time it .was ; reported .by the

grand jury, settlement of the case was effected, it. is said.- af4ei which the indictment was nolled. Bankruptcy Petition James N. Wilson, Eaton, laborer.

attempt to achieve that result by some kind of economic patent medicine. It

can only be achieved by first remedying the fundamental cause of the trouble. Sef-Help Necessary That remedy is a thing which the

governments of Europe can only

has filed a voluntary petition in bank-j achieve for themseives. We cannot tuptcy in the district federal court In I ,t tum rrarr Tr,ct frc:t

Dayton. Liabilities are given

14.698.29 and assets at $1,250. Cincinnati Woman Speaks Mist) Edna McChristie, connected with the court of domestic relations in

h'mnnse it unnn them Thpv must first

. vim - . u . ... it v i 1 v i . iiv if wi i .i v ii, selves. Thereafter America can be and will be of great help toward the

Jrest of the process.

The .chief cause of the paralysis of

Cincinnati, spoke here Friday after- !internf,tional trade is the fluctuation

.i.-uu ueiore i missionary sotM-iy meei-, of pxrhanfl anrl it is frfimientlv thit

ing In the Presbyterian church. Miss

McChristie is a native of Camden., Preble Marriage Licenses Preble county marriage licenses: Lloyd B. Kiracofe. 21 year old, farmer, Virginia, and Mary C. Kiracofe, 20 year3 old, Camden.

.FRED CLEAR IS DEAD AFTER TAKING POISON

Fome action should be taken with the TJnited States participating for Uiu stabilizing of exchange. But exchang?

1 is merely a barometer and to talk of ! stabilizing it is like proposing to Tie-

ulate the thermometer by some kind of artificial means.

The true way to stabilize interna-j tional exchange is to cure the coniitions which are the cause of its violent j fluctuations. Of those conditions the chief one is the failure of the various ' European nations-to live within their ; incomes, and their continued disposi-. tion to overcome their deficits by the printing of paper money. , - These evil practices in turn a-e ' caused chiefly by the maintenance of excessive armaments. The first step

' ft 'li - - ;i

WIXCHESTER. Ind.. March 18. I'red Clear, 41 years old. residing 7 miles southeast of Winchester, committed suicide Thursday by taking Doison. He left the house in the

morning to go to the barn to do the (toward the stabilization of exchange

feeding. As he did not return, his

wife went out to look for him an hour later and found him lying dead in the yard. A note, written on the back of an envelope, telling the family goodbye and requesting his friend, the Rev. Eldon Thornburg, to preach his funeral sermon, was found. Mr. Clear had been in ill health for some time. Surviving are the widow, two sons and one daughter.

Services at Jccksonburg Christian Church Sunday .TACKSONBURG. Ind., March 13 Services at the Jr.cksonburg Christian ( nunrch Sunday. March 19, have been announced as follows : Morning sermon .'subject., "Power for Servico"; evening subject," "Found AVanting.'; The Rev. D. L. Milligan is pastor.

and the restoration of normal eco

nomic conditions must be for the gov -, ernments. j Concerned to cut off the expense in-! volved in maintaining large armies by doing this they will not only save the money which they now spend on these armies, they will also restore to normal pursuits the large number of men who as soldiers are an economic drain, but who as workers will become an economic asset. It is apparent that there is a hestitancy on the part of our government to say these things directly to the gov

ernments of Europe. Our government does not want to be in the position of telling other governments what they ought to do' about their domestic affairs. We do not want to be in the posi-

Anna Fitziu. : Anna Fitziu, American beauty and opera star, has just announced that her engagement to Andres da Segurola, formerly of the Metropolitan Grand Opera Company, has been broken. "We decided that our temperaments were not suited to each other," she said, "and, anyway, I think international marriages are a mistake. You know Seguro'-u is a Spaniard." Miss Fitziu 5 1 she met Segurola in Paris "years ago." . . , . .

tion of reading to these governments primary lessons in economics. ' Thi3 disposition to refrain from reproach

ing other governments for. what they

is a long patch of different hedge specimens, planted like so many rows, of potatoes. There is a row of yew, and close beside it a row of spruce, and so on, for a large area. It gives the effect of a display in a shop, the strips of

hedge suggesting picture molding samples, or something of the sort. Another feature of the farm is the floral sun-dial, the dial of which is marked nut in red, yellow, and green coleus. The dial is about 40 f?et in

diameter. It is laid out like the ordinary sun dial except that flower beds, divided by narrow strips of concrete, take the place of the stone plate with its lines. The shadow is cast by a long pole set at the proper angle. This dial is said to give accurate sun time, but the government does not depend on it. Just back of the sun-dial is the government observatory whicn supplies standard time by master clocks. . Besides plant investigations, the government conducts poulrty aid stock experiments at the Ottawa farm. The poultry' section has a sign out over one group of coops marked "egg laying contest." Each year, it seems, Canadian farmers enter their best iieDs In a government contest of this sort. ' The hens are boarded at the government farm and their laying records carefully

! kept. The winner becomes a famous

bird, and other hens that rank high are consequently valuable to their owners.

Last year, the winning bird laid 272 eggs. - ' . One of the features of Ottawa waich

I attracts a good many Americans is the I Archives Building. . The Unite! States j has been talking for a good many years i about a suitable storage place for its ! valuable documents and records. Canada has such a building. We road on the brass plate outside that it was (suggested in 1731, but like the United j States, Canada did not wish to rush I hastily into the matter. Nearly two j centuries of thoughtful consideration j intervened, and in 1906 Canada erected ! a gray stone archives building. It is a

; large building, but already, the officials

say, it is inadeqaute. ' Visitors see oniy the halls and the library on the first floor. Once, a good

deal more was displayed to the public,

and valuable documents shown. Bu

tourists insisted on handling tiio fragile papers, and this resulted in crumpled edges, torn places, and dirty spots. So gradually the officials have become less hospitable. . "Only last week,'" the guide remark

ed m disgust, ."a woman poked her din-

to the roof of a specially built ware-; house. ' As yet no plans are going forward for a museum, not until the war and its financial burdens aro laid . aside. . ' Of the war things here the one that strikes people as being especially interesting is the military headdress of Prince Joachim, one of the sons of the former Kaiser. The cap is gray, of Australian opposum, with a scarlet woolen flap across the top and osprey feathers sticking up in the front. . It is difficult to see Ottawa without comparing and contrasting it wJta Washington. Rideau Hall, where the Governor General of Canada, now Lord Byng, lives, is very different from our White House. It is an old farm house, set far back in a park of nearly 90

acres. A long avenue of Canadian maples leads up to the mansion. Be

tween the dense foilage and a high fence all around the grounds, visitors can only glimpse the house through the trees. Only by special permission or by Invitation do the gates open to strangers.

The Duke of, Devonshire, a former governor general did, however, establish a precedent in this connection. He opened a part of Rideau Hall grounds

to the children of nearby homes. Slides, swings ,and a sandpile are installed for them in a corner of the lawn, the only stipulation being that they must go no closer to the house than a set boundary. The Governor General is an interesting institution. He is appointed by the King to represent the crown in Canada. Yet he is practically a figure head. It is his business to open the Canadian Parliament, sitting on the throne in the Senate Chamber of the big Parliament Building. And he signs bills passed by the legislature a mere formality, Canadians say. Outside of this, his real, onerous duties are social. Ottawa, and all Canada from a distance, looks to the

governor general and his lady to set

the fashions, lead the winter sports, give garden parties, dedicate new statues, and be honorary officials of organizations. Canadians hold that Britain would not send them a Governor General who would not be honestly regarded as congenial to Canada. Canadian sentiment is tested out before the King's choice is announced. Lord Byng, the hero of Vimy Ridge, is regarded as a happy selection. He is greeted everywhere

with great enthusiasm. He is a good speech-maker, and that is regarded as a great asset. Canadians in Ottawa seem to be very well satisfied with things as they are. "We have as much independence as any country on earth," one Canadian said, "and besides we do not have the burden of maintaining an army and navy. Britain bears that." Having heard of the project to urge

a Canadian flag for Canada, probably with the Canadian maple leaf as the

emblem, we inquired about it, but could get only the answer that the British flag was all right. There is such a project, but governmental officials in Ottawa, clinging to Government jobs, are obviously not interested.

May Get Red Hat

I -T-

I

MAN IS BLOWN TO BITS TOKIO, March 18. An unidentified

man yesterday afternoon attempted to invade the Imperial palace grounds.

wnen guards attempted to etop him

he started to hurl a bomb at them.

The bomb exploded as it left his hands,' blowing him to bits.

According to word received here by way of France, Archbishop Patrick J.

Hayes was on the list of those whom the late Pope Benedict XV had in

mind to raise to the cardinalate. It

has been pointed out in church circles that it is the custom for a new pontiff to pay attention to the wishes of his predecessor.

Paris has 542 theatres, concert halls

and motion picture theatres.

GULBRANSEN PLAYERS

Opp. Pott Office Phone 1655

Called by Death

BENJAMIN AUKER. WINCHESTER, Ind., March 18. The funeral of Benjamin Auker, 54

years old, was held Thursday morn- j

ing, at the Deerfield church, no$th cf the city. Mr. Auker was unmarried and died suddenly at the home of his sister, Mrs. David Gray, in this city, Tuesday.

Masonic Calendar

are doing is obvious to those who fol

low our policy in international af-j brella through this valuable painting,

fairs.

At the same time it is equally obvious that our . government does not want to be involved in an enterprise which ignores such obvious elementary causes of economic distress. (Copyright, 1922. by The - N. Y. - Evening Post, Inc.)

EUROPE

Canada's Capital - By F. R. CARPENTER

Monday, March 20 Richmond Commandery No. 8 K. T. will confer the

order of the Temple, beginning at 7 o'clock. Tuesday, March 21 Richmond Lodge No. 196 F. & A. M called meeting. Work in the Master Mason degree, 7 o'clock. Wednesday, March 22 Webb Lodge No? 24 F. & A. M., called meeting.

WTork in the Entered Apprentice degree, beginning 6:45. Thursday, March 23 Masonic club will give a subscription dance to the Masons and ladies.

Peace, societies, for the prevention of war. were first established n England in 1816.

(Continued from Page One.) the future economic relations of the

nations of Europe with each other

and with America. ;

It must be known by everybody ju3t what Germany must do ta the future

before business men or governments

can lay out future plans upon fixed conditions. ... That the fixing of these German reparations is not a matter in whicn American should participate, but is wholly a mattter for the European nations to decide of themselves, has been made evident repeatedly as a part of American policy. Europe Must Settle It is the American policy that the subject of the limitation of armament on land must be faced and settled by the European nations before anything can be done either by themselves, or by us to cure their economic ills. So long as France together with several smaller nations in eastern Europe

continue to maintain armies of an unreasonable size, they cannot have economic or financial stability. Some of the armies maintained by these little countries la eastern Europe are of such a size, that if the United States maintained an army in proportion it would amount to a million and a half men. It is to maintain these armies that the governments in question keep on printing

paper money ana Keep on spenaing more than their revenue. j As respects land armament, the' United States is obviously justified in taking the position that this subject tan be only settled by Europe. Cannot Help Them On this point we cannot help them. America tried to do something about Ihe limitation of armament on land. America placed that subject on the agenda of the Washington conference but when the Washington conference got around to considering it France refused. - It was this refusal of France that caused the Washington conference to ' throw the entire subject of land armaments off the agenda and to leave the problem of land armaments just where it was when the Washington conference began. Obviously the United States is not called upon now to again take the initiative on this subject. Something must be done about it and it can only

OTTAWA, Canada, March 18 They call this city the Washington of the North. I But the phrase calls up some associations that are misleading, at this season in particular. The North suggests snowdrifts and people wear

ing iurs ana arctics, ana just now Ottawa is still enjoying the sort of fall you find in Boston or considerably farther south. . . " ; . : Washington, too, is . not at first glance recalled by Ottawa. There 13 r ractically none of the marble whiteness set In green that characterizes Washington. The most elaborate of the government buildings are of cream and red sandstone and the rest of the government offices are housed in plain unobtrusive office buildings. , But later, the city does gradually show its relation to the capital of the United States, in character more than appearance. There is the same govern

ment atmosphere ana conversation.

The buildings at set times swallow up and release the same horde of clerks they call them civil servants here dressed n with the Same ambitious stylishness. ... ' T don't know how they dress tne way they do. on $60 a month. That's all most of them get,", marveled rone government official. A drive around the city adds to the reminders of Washington. -There is

the experiment farm, for instance. Canada, like the United States, has a number of these farms scattered over the country, - and like the - JTnited

States, It has one at the capital to be near the Department of Agriculture. Our experiment farm at Arlington is a purely business proposition. No special effort is made to achieve beauty for beauty's sake. Ottawa's farm is

a show place. Every tjer, plan;., and

siiruo uia-i glows in ijaiiaua is represented in these grounds. There are 28,000 different varieties of plant life here. But instead of planting them la

endless rows, an ornamental park has been made of a large section of the. farm. An Ornamental Farm. Fields where experiments are being conducted with tobacco or wheit are alternated with beautifully kept lawn?. These are shaded, but not too densely, with tree specimens, and flower beds show what can be done with Canada's large variety of blossoms. One unusual feature of the grounds

And he pointed to an obvinuslv

patched place. "She just wanted to

show her friend something in the picture." ' j The library of this building contains a few of the old Canadian historic papers protected under glass and watched by a guard. There are souvenirs of General Wolfe here, notably his baby shoes and a letter written by him. And there are many tattered old flags of Canadian wars. " Plans For a Moseum. A few exhibits of what is some day going to be a fine Canadian War Museum are here, too. Canada'? war , trophies and souvenirs are now packed guiKiiiiiiiiiiiM nmiiiiiuiiiiiiiimiiMiimminiiiiiiiiimTiniiiiiiimmimiinm

Chicken Dinner Sunday 1

I Only 50c Henry Farwig & Son

I 1031 Main St. " 1 iiiiniiniiniHinitiiiiiiiniuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniinniiininiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiMiniiiiii nmiitiminiimiiitinHtiiimiiiiniiiiiiiiliiluitfiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiHiiftiHmmmmtmn I See Our Big 2-Inch Post All-1 1 Brass Bed for $23.60 I

01

WiiiuiHiitHitiiiiiiiiimmiiHiiiiimiiiiititiiim:iiiiiHftiiiMiiiitiiiiiimiiiiiiniiinirt

Treat Your Friends to LUNCHEON at PRICE'S

Thistlethvaite's The Original Cut-Rate EVERY-DAY PRICES In Effect at All 7 Stores

COLORITE, priced OQ now at EASTER EGG DYES r at PL CAMELS " pkg IOC "ALL SCRAP TOBACCO. 25

Battery Service by the Year "Snappy Service" AUTOMOTIVE BATTERY SERVICE CO. . ' 1134 Main Street

f MEN WANTED ! To sell used cars.1 Steady work, 1 1'andan .opportunity for. the right 1 1 party to make big money. , Address 1 I Box H-2058,.care Palladium: ; . llUHiiilinnMlinililluinmnuiiniilliniiiniiiMniiimniinmiiriuniuiiiMinMnMm

If

ti

Prudential Loan & Investment Co.

v, 20 South Eighth MONEY TO LOAN EASY TERMS Weekly, or Monthly Payments 1 ' T ' On Real Estate, Approved Chattels, First and Second Mortgages Mortgage Exemptions Filed at Our. Office 7 Notes Discounted .

Office Hours: 8 A. M.

to 5 P. M. Saturday Night:

7 to 8:30 P. M.

At Feltman's

Always with the Newest Seasonable Footwear Tan Calf

Three - buckle strap, winged tips, with low rubber heels, at the popular price of

$ too

Feltman's Shoe Store. The World's Largest Shoe Dealers 35 Stores 724 Main Street

Everyday Ad-Ventures

When you've been eagerly watching the dropping automobile prices in the fond hope that one of them will slide down to where you can reach it and really own your own the cars in which you're Interested somehow seem to stay just beyond your financial grasp and you've about made up your mind to another year without a car Until someone hands you the redhot tip that some mighty fine cars last year's models and all that are being offered at the lowest resale prices in five years through the Palladium's Automobile columns And you make a dive for that Classified Section and find that what your friend told you and more too is backed up by the opportunities that you can find among those little ads And That Changes Everything!

Because you see an ad about one-

of the cars you'd been hoping to be able to buy, only in this case the price is considerably below what you had figured you could pay, and you find that the car itself is in "A-l" shape and you buy it and apply for your license tags and everything! (Copyright 1922)

Spring Headwear

Our showing consists of the latest styles, with a color to fit every man's preference, including the well known

KNOX HATS

5

and up

MERTON GAPS in clever styles ' and colors $2.00, $2.50, $3.00

I T m - a

FACTS ONLT

TRUTH ALWAYS

, Our Eighteenth

irthdatt Tartu

Continues next week with increasing interest. Every department will share in the many special bargains offered during this celebration. SIX MORE DAYS OF SPIRITED SELLING

Our Birthday Present ; for Monday New Spring Hats

4

A special group of new -Spring Hats that sell regularly for $6.00 to $7.50, but for the one day only (Monday) they will go at $2.50. Each day we will announce our Birthday Present for the following day samethings always' at a much reduced price, at a "give away" price.

Lee B. Nusbaum Co.

NUSBAUM BUILDING