Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 108, 6 May 1922 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1922. , , , V

PAGE THREE

HENRY DAVISON- DIES ON OPERATING TABLE; NOTABLE FINANCIER

(By Associated Press)

NEW lOKK, May 6. Henry r. Davison, of J. P. Morgan and company, died on the operating table today.

This announcement was made at 2 o'clock at the Morgan offices. Mr. Davison died about 1:30 p. m. A notable financier, Henry Pomeroy Davison will best be remembered, perhaps, as the man who at President Wilson's request directed the work of the American Red Cross in allied

countries for the two years the United J

States was at war with the Central Powers. Taken out of the hurly burly of Wall street, one of the most active of the 15 partners in the firm of J. P. Morgan and company, the man who 28 years before had walked the streets of New York looking for a job, directed the first "drive" of the American Red Cross for funds, raised $114,000,000 and within a few weeks had Red Cross workers at their tasks in Italy, Belgium and Switzerland as well as war-torn France. H. P. Davison was one of the most trusted lieutenants of the elder J. Pierpont Morgan, who commissioned him to represent the firm in numerous financial negotiations abroad. He made many trips to London, Paris and Berlin. He made a study of the financial system of Germany in 1908 and, three years later. In that city, presid

ed at a conference of international bankers regarding the Hankow-Sze Chuen railway loan in which the socalled six powers group was interested. Honored for Work In 1915, he was one- of the negotiators of the $500,000,000 American loan to the Allies. For his war work abroad he was honored by many governments and Columbia and other universities conferred upon him the honorary degree of doctor of laws. Mr. Davison was especially interested in the conservation of child life in Europe after the war and, with Herbert Hoover and others, planned a world-wide- campaign in behalf of the children abroad. He also directed Red Cross relief work in Russia, Poland and other countries in Eastern and Central Europe. Shortly after his return from Paris in April, 1920, he emphasized the gravity of conditions abroad and suggested that congress appropriate $500,000,000 for European relief. Congress, hpwever, was cold to his appeal. In 1919, he was one of the advisers of President Wilson at the Paris conference. That same year, when the war council's work had ended, he was elected chairman of the governing board of the World League of Red Cross societies at its meeting in Paris.

THE AMERICAN LEGATION IN PEKIN, CHINA.

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Fighting between the troops of Gen. Chang Tso-lin. Governor of Manchuria and Gen. Wa Pei-fu, commander of the forces in central China, bas caused the foreign legations to send the Chinese Government a Joint warning against possible fighting in Pekin and warning that they would take measures for the protection o the Pekin-Tien-Tsin Railroad The picture above shows the American Legation.

VOGUE FOR LACE IS MARKED IN

NEWEST FROCK!

BREEDING HAS MADE A PERFECT FOWL OF FORMER JUNGLE BIRD

This is the season when men are divided into two classes: those who garden and those who grow chickens. As far apart as the East and the West, they meet frequently sometimes in municipal court. Because the chicken U a jungle fowl, from the Jungles of Central Asia from where it first was taken and domesticated thousands of years ago -to the back section of a 30-foot city lot is a long journey. And

while the chicken has made the Jour

ney it hasn't lost its jungle instincts

Chickens crow and scratch for feed,

just as they did in the jungles. Hence the disagreement between the fowl

owner and the gardener. Hence the fact it is not always good policy attempt to grow chickens where there; are gardens, shrubbery, flowers and well kept city lawns. But it is a vastly changed chicken, even over a few years ago. And f arther out where there is more room, thousands of families are adding to their incomes as well as enjoying fresh eggs and fine meat because they recognize the chicken's jungle instincts must be considered and, in pens and sheds, some of them fine enough to be called chicken apartment houses, grow great "crops" of chicks each year. Changed By Breeding In changing the chicken from the jungle fowl into the modern beauty the biggest change has been made, of course, by breeding, it was pointed out by T. E. Quisenberry, a middle West poultry authority. Take the Barred Rocks. The beautiful, profitable chicken of that breed today is the product of careful breeders who set out to improve the old speckled hen. A few years ago the Rhode Island Red was a mongrel fowl in the shipping regions of Massachusetts The Leerhorn. a few years ago was

smaller than it is now and laid smaller eggs. But it laid many of them so breeders set out to produce the larger bird, laving a larger egg and more of

them. The- utility Leghorn of today!

is the result. The three most popular breeds in the middle West today are those mentioned, according to Mr. Quisenberry. Similar improvement has been made in the other breeds. Hatching, producing better chicks through modern methods, has greatlyincreased the output. The incubator started that. Caring for the eggs properly, modern methods in handling

and the perfection of shipping details has resulted in thousands of persons buying baby chicks or buying eggs to be hatched in huge Incubators at commercial hatcheries. Feeding Important. It no longer is difficult, according to Mr. Quisenberry, to get the chicks. The difficult part is to grow them to usefulness after hatching. According to one Kansas authority only four out of each ten chicks hatched reach marketable age. Various factors are blamed, but the most important, according to poultrymen, is feeding. Feeding the chicks too soon after they are hatched is one almost universal trouble. Improper feeds are another. A chick doubles its weight in about a week. It must have proper feed for euch development. Poultry experts have found the proper mixtures and they are now available to all chick growers, farmers as well as the sublrbanites using them. No attempt is made to prevent the thicks scratching; Instead they are en--.ouraged to. Eut the scratching is lone in pens carefully fitted for that mroose in a litter, usually of straw.

n which certain feeds are buried, so he hen will have to scratch to get hem. Thus what makes enemies of :ity neighbors makes better fowls

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FIREFIGHTERS TO GO

THROUGH AIR NEXT, SAYS GOTHAM CHIEF NEW YORK, May 2. Fifty years hence in New York, fire engines mounted upon helicopters will hover over blazes and extinguish them with gases, alarms will be sounded by radio and rescues will be made from airships. This future means of fire fighting was predicted tonight by John Kenton, fire chief, speaking at

dinner given In celebration of the

thirty-fifth anniversary of his entry Into the tire department. Chief Kenton first recalled the early

days of his fire fighting career, when j firemen had the championship of "the

noble hcrse and the fire dogs; when the fire fighting rivalry was so keen stern company captains sent their men to suburban outfits when they failed to get out of the fire house within twelve seconds after the sounding

of an alarm."

Motorization Took Away Thrills. The motorization of the department and other modern methods have taken away the sensationalism and the thrills of old, he added. "Within, say, the next fifty years,"' said the chief, "I can see a new New York, a new world. Streets will be free from vehicular traffic, such streets as there are being devoted exclusively to the use of pedestrians and lined from curb to curb with moving sidewalks. "Fire houses as we know them will disappear. They will be located on

the roofs of buildings and the engines

NEW COLOMBIAN MINISTER TO U. S.

The vogue for lace- is distinctly expressed in this lovely gown fo.' summer. Orchid georgette maktws the plain, gathered skirt. All-ovei cream lace makes the blouse whir1 boasts sieves a yard long. Noi the oriental girdle.

that grow faster and lay better for the

men who, having room to grow chick

ens, take the proper precautions to

prevent annoyance to neighbors.

I boss of the old school. Before his death he regarded the primary with ' Vl I trVl f.H.B t. a . n n knlni, that 1 ,1

was twice elected to the senate, each time by immense majorities, under the primary system, although proponents

of the primary had Insisted that it would drive men like Penrose out of public service. Standard Deteriorated Commenting on what he believes to be the starting of a trend of public sentiment favorable to a return to tho convention nominating system, the political expert of the Washington Post writes: "It Is generally admitted that the

standard of legislative bodies has deteriorated during the period in which the direct primary has been in vogue. There are fewer men in the halls of national legislation, particularly in socalled popular branch, whose names are household words than there were 20 or even 10 years ago. . . . The

country has witnessed in recent primary years some results in the choosing of demogoglc and incompetent officials for high places in state governments that were sadly repented results which hardly could have happened under the convention system at Its worst. Demagogy never has had such sway as it has enjoyed since the direct primary threw open the door to men who previously might have knocked but never would have been permitted to pass the threshold." Corrupt Practices Opponents of tne primary also ca'l attention to the fact that since its advent congress and the state legislatures have been called upon to enact corrupt practices legislation on .'i scale unheard of during the period of the nominating conventions. These laws have not prevented frequent scandals, hpwever. Furthermore, the federal law under which Senator Newberry was tried was later nullified by a supreme court decision. Granting that the convention system of ante-primary days embraced serious evils, the contention is advanced by those who favor returning to the convention system that the primary has not eradicated those evils, and the assertion is made that new evils have been developed under tho primary which more than offset any benefits which may have been derived under it. So, if the voters of Maine place the stamp of approval on the abolition of the primary in that state, their, decision will be hailed with delight by most men in public life in Washington.

MAY BE FRANCE'S NEW AMBASSADOR TO UNITED STATES

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Dr. Enrique Olaya Herrera. Colombia's new minister tj the United States has arrived in Washington to assume his duties. He has served his country jn several important posts including that of minister of foreign affairs.

WATCHING

(Continued from Page One.)

mounted upon helicopters, will extm-jan Indiana man, formerly in the govguish the most stubborn blazes with i ernment service and now leading a newly-discovered gases, harmless to. retired life in Washington, humans. wil1 venture the opinion that w. -t0iInMtiiC Radi?A'arm8- . J each of the Republican candidates for "Every building will be equipped .. . .. . , ,. , . with radio fire alarm systems, which! the senatorship in Indiana will find

will react automatically at the start' that his campaign expenses amounted

of a fire. Airships will carry firemen, and persons caught in burning buildings will be rescued from the air."

In keeping with these changes h?

to more ' than a senator's salary for one year, $7,500, and I know that the expenses of each candidate were legi-

said he could imagine homes and of-Inmate, principally for traveling, ad-

THOROU Rug Cleaner "The Brush That Brightens"

French Inventor Haunts

Fortress, Arrested as Spy

M. Clement Ader, of Paris, credited

with being the inventor of the airplane, went to Algeria to study the flight of vultures, and to Alsace to watch the storks. Ke watched them so attentively, circling round a fortress in course of construction, that he was arrested as a spy, and it was with the greatest difficulty that he persuaded the German authorities that he hoped to discover the secret of flight and not the military secret3 of Alsace. M. . Alder's first machine was begun in 1882 and completed in 1889.

fice buildings heated in winter and

cooled in summer by electricity broadcasted from enormous radio stations and light and power projected through space, thereby doing away with al wire and cables systems. Science, he continued, will extract heat from the sun's rays and from the air the component gases of which water is constituted, thus solving one of the most serious problems the ultra modern city will have to meet.

INTERESTING FACTS In England the rolling chairs used by invalids and other have to carry a motor license.

Thirty per cent of the World war

veterans re-enlisted in the navy.

vertising and the maintenance of a, headquarters," he added. I Many Opposed j It has been candidates for state of- j fices and for senatorships who have found the primary most burdensome, financially. Candidates for representa- j tive in congress, as a rule, are not j put to exceptional expense in run-' ning for office because they do not j have to conduct state-wide campaigns, i

dui it is proDaDiy sate to say that a large number of the members of the lower house, of both parties, are opposed to the primary on principle. It is recalled that when the agitation for the establishment of a primary election system first started to sweep the country the movement was bitterly opposed by the late Senator Penrose, of Pennsylvania, a political

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ABINGTON FARM MEETING ABINGTON, Ind., May 6. A meet ing of Abington township fanners tc discuss twine and threshing coal or ders, has been called for Tuesday evening, May 9, at 7:30.

Count de Peretti de La llocca. From both Paris and Washington comes the rumor that Jule3 Jean Jusserand is soon co be succeeded as French ambassador to the U. S. by Count de Peretti de La Rocca in the near future. Displeasure over Ambassador Jusserand's showing at the armt parley and his views on other crises previous to that are given as th reason for the expected change. Count de La Rocca is now political director of the French ioreign office

Linoleum Rugs Wonderful values. These are size 9x12 and sell at $12.98 CONGOLEUM

Art Squares, size 9x12. Wonderful values at only . $8.40 Get our prices on Rugs and other Floor Coverings.

VJJI.'ri.J)I.T.I J J.PIJ Mil . J IPJWUU,

17 S. 7th St.

The 22-4 Special Delivery A Sturdy Buick Design for Quick Hauling Anywhere The powerful Buick valve-in-head, four-cylinder motor and a rugged chassis are the foundation of this new delivery model. Expert engineering and the best of materials have produced in this vehicle a full-powered, economical and well-balanced light commercial car. Moderate in price, it is big in transportation value and will give typical Buick service. Prices of Buick Special DeliveryOpen Express Delivery, complete $945.00 Canopy Top Delivery, complete with roll curtain 965.00 With screen sides, add 20.00 Panel Sides Delivery, complete with steel panels 980.00 With vehlsote panels, add 25.00 F. O. B. Factories Chenoweth Auto Co. 1107 Main Street Phone 1923

WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM

Burglar Killed During Attempt to Escape ' (By Associated Press.) SOUTH BEND, Ind., May 6. Slgmund Wisneski was killed this morning when he attempted to escape from the police after having been captured in the act ofatte mpting to burglarize a store. He is the second burglar to be killed by the police in a week.

BOYS' SPRING SUITS AT LOWER PRICES

803 Main Street

GOVERNMENT

(Continued from Page One.) the station. Bread is being distribut

ed to the soldiers, all of whom on! their arrival made a wild rush, plead-1 ing for water. A few have been wound-! ed by the guards. There has been no;

disorder but Tien Tsin is apprehensive. American troops are guarding the property of their nationals and keeping watch at the railway station. The U. S. Cruiser Huron arrived yesterday and landed 150 miles. Reports that the railroad line to

Mukden has been out by the forces of : Gen. Wu Pei-Fu, are unverified. Occasional Firing j An American military observer re-' turning to Tientsin from Machang ' says Chang's forces are still holding . seven kilometers beyond that town,; where there is occasional firing. He : saw scores of dead, while hundreds of : wounded were uncared for in the inv j provised, inadequate hospitals, where , they lay pleading for water and food, i Admirai Strauss, commander of the : American Asiatic fleet, has left Tien-! tsin to rejoin his ship, the cruiser Hu- j ron, and additional marine guards are arriving. The American consulate has j ordered all Americans living in Chinese territory to come into the foreign

concessions. The allied forces in Tientsin have ben mobilized in their barracks.-

Fatal airplane accidents in France have no apparent deterrent effect on passenger traffic.

Quality Butter The unusual demand for "Quality Butter" made it temporarily impossible to take care of all the trade. But we have now met the situation and you can get all the "Quality Butter" you want at your grocery or at our plant. Be sure to specify 'Quality Butter" to your grocer.

Milk and Cream A trial of our Milk or Cream will convince you that we are not exaggerating when we say it is as good as money and science can produce. Cottage Cheese Don't fail to try our Cottage Cheese and Buttermilk. You can get these by merely leaving your note in the milk bottle the evening before or by calling the plant office.

Wayne Dairy Products Co.

South Sixth and A Sts.

Phone 5238

3 ZZ

A Service that Satisfies Our policy has been to build up an organization of men who, by training and experience, are experts in trust matters. Our steadily increasing business is evidence that in the administration of estates, the care of trust funds and the investment of money, we' are rendering a service that satisfies. Come in and Talk It Over With our Trust Officers RESOURCES OVER THREE MILLION DOLLARS

Dickinson Trust Co.

'The Oldest, Largest and Strongest Trust Company in Eastern Indiana"

JTEDCRAI, BESESVE