Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 172, 21 July 1922 — Page 7

1HL KiCHMOND PALLADIUM AND S UN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, 1ND., FRIDAY, JULY Zi, 192.

17TH TEXAS DISTRICT CONGRESSIONAL RAGE ATTRACTS INTEREST

(By Associated Press) DALLAS, Tex., July 21. Of the eleven congressional districts in Texas in hich there are contests for the Democratic nomination in the primary of Saturday, July 22, the Seventeenth, which now is represented by Thoma3

things by peaceful and constitutional means is as much entitled to express his opinions as I am and those who would attempt the forcible repression of free speech even upon these subjects are not 100 r er cent loyal American.

"The place to draw the line is this; i

whosoever opposes the constitution and laws of his country by violence and unlawful acts or who by mouth or pen seeks to investigate and encourage such violations of the law, that man the law can reach and his unlawful act should be prevented or punished. These are the real enemies to American liberty; ours is a government o laws made by our-

the

TWO KILLED, THIRTY INJURED IN MILLION' DO LLAR CHEMICAL FIRE

because of the action of the house in selves and the law breaker is

censuring him. Mr. Blanton has four "W"' . M o mn opponents. Mr. Blanton has defended 'But some who cI3rm to have a mohimself energetically in his own dis-inopoly of Americanism ant to limit trict. where he claims many staunch ! it to certain classes of Americans suDDorters. That is a most un-American thing to Those opposing him are Ernest G. do. One set of men, for instance beii.k. "r n- raiiv lieve that Americanism must be con-

way, Comanche; J. B. Dioreii, uoieman; and ... S. Holland, Jones county. Usually nomination at the Democratic primaries in Texas is equivalent o election. This has not been the rule, however, in the Fourteenth district, which now is represented in congress by Harry M. Wurzbach, a Republican. The Democrats believe thev can defeat

the Republicans in this district this year, and six men seek the Democratic nomination. All are from San Antonio. They are Carlos Bee, J. H. Cunningham, , Harry Hertzberg, W. D. Glover, S. D. Hopkins and James A. Harley. One woman, Mrs. F. M. B. Hughes, of Wharton, is seeking nomination for congress. She is running in the Ninth district, and is opposing not only J. J. Mansfield, of Columbus, the present congressman, but four other men W. M. Fly, Gonzales: W. S. Holman, Bay City; George J. Schleicher, Cuero, and J. W. Griffin, Davy.

FOULKE

(Continued from Page Ona )

promoter of that good will to men

which we all should cultivate is close social intercourse. "Of course, no man can be always in communication with all his fellow' men even in towns the size of Muncie and Richmond, but the more we can get together, the more likely we will be to be fond of each other. The Rotary clubs of this country, if they had no other aim than mere social intercourse, would have been doing no little service to America, and International Rotary, if it had no higher purpose than to bring together its members throughout the world would not be without service to humanity. "Fortunately we have other fields, the relief of suffering, the promotion of

prosperity, indeed Rotary is hospitable to all good enterprises, but still not the least of these is that it promotes our knowledge of each other. Richmond and Muncie know each other better because of reunions such as these. We will mutually look upon our good points with greater enthusiasm and admiration and upon our shortcomings wtih greater toleration than if we were strangers. Recognize Others' Merits "If the Christian ideal that we are brothers is to prevail (and a man need not be a Christian tof acknowledge that), it must be from recognizing the merits of others as we would have them recognize ours. Any community or any nation which wraps itself in its own self-sufficiency, is as untrue to Itself as" it is unmindful to others. "We hear a great deal about 100 per cent Americanism. This word has been used as a. cover for the abuse

of the thing itself. The two rre-em-inent things for which America stands are liberty and union; the liberty to say and do all things which do not

interfere with the equal liberty and welfare of another and that union which stands for the co-operation of Americans in the things that add to the common welfare of the whole the welfare of the whole; not of our own particular city or state, nor of any class' nor creed nor race. "What are the essentials of liberty? Foremost among them, freedom of speech and of the press; these are embodied in the very first sections of our bill of rights adopted by our whole people as part of the federal constifution when Washington was president. Xo man can be 100 per cent American who does not believe in them; that means that however strong our convictions on any subject all our fellow citizens have an equal right to the expression of theirs, however divergent from our own ar.d yet some men say that unless men believe

in our form of government just as it

is they ought to be restrained from

propagating their opinions, t We must

not let them advocate any changes in our government.

Had to Make Changes "The American form of government as established in our constitution was better, I believe, than any other then known in the world, yet we had to amend our constitution in many important matters. The constitution recognized human slavery, we abolish

ed slavery and struck that part out. "The constitution allowed the states to limit suffrage in any way they chose; in many states a whole race and a whole sex were disfranchised. We have changed that, anl now suffrage is universal. The constitution provided that senators should be elected by state legislatures; we changed that and they must now be elected by the people of the respective states. There are othr clauses which are obsolete, like the clause creating the electoral college which was to deliberate and select a president. "That body is now a mere formality and the constitution may well be changed in that regard. So there are other changes which may have to be made in our government sometime, and the man who advocates changes, however radical, by lawful and constitutional methods Is not necessarily more unpatriotic than the one who opposes it. , Entitled to Beliefs. "I am opposed to Socialism and still more to Communism, yet the man who odvocates. the adoption even of these

fided to the care of Protestants alone,

that no Catholic, no Jew, no agnostic, shall have any hand in it. Others insist that none should be trusted except our native born citizens; that no

man born in foreign parts should ever

be relied upon to preserve our institutions no matter how loyal a citizen he

may have been nor for how long a time. Leads to War "Others say that none but the white race shall have any part or parcel in

our heritage and others go so far as

to demand exclusion from their com panionship in efforts to purify Amer

ica, of all except those of Anglo-Saxon blood. It is just this kind of a division into various sects, races and classes

which is sure to lead to the ruin of liberty and of all genuine democracy. "It was just this sort of bigotry

which led to the terrible religious wars which have everywhere stained the pages of history. It was just this claim of the superiority of one particular strain of blood that led to the oppression of subject nations all over the world and in every age. It is just this

one thing from which we must be free if we would preserve the real glory of the American people. "And it is only by knowing other kinds of people better that we can acquire a toleration of those whose blood, antecedents and methods of thought are different from our own. I am not a Catholic, but I know of no examples of more perfect devotion and higher Christianity than that church can show, and how dare we say that those of other communions and peoples who laid down their lives for us on the fields of France are not as patriotic as ourselves? I am not a Jew, but I would not deprive that race, which has preserved through long persecution,

the faith handed to their fathers on Sinai, of the smallest right or privilege cf American citizenship. I am certainly not a negro, jet I am sorry to hear that some of our people are so jealous

of 'white supremacy' that they are ask

ing for the dismissal of all negroes from the city service. Mayor's Stand Praised

"I congratulate our mayor upon his refusal. I am rot foreign born nor

the son of an alien parent, yet I re

ject the imputation that those who

have sought America as a land of promise, as a refuge for the oppressed in every clime, may not have just as good a title to the heritage of our in

stitutions as I, whose forbears came with William Penn. Every last one of us i3 descended from alien ancestors and it does not lie in our mouths to upbraid with the title of 'Dagoes,' men whose conduct may be as praiseworthy as our own. I have lived with some of these 'Dagoes' in Italy and know them intimately and those I know are just as good men, as honest, as industrious

and as kindly as any of us here in America. "Even the Redskins, whom many regard as treacherous savages, are better than we think. Away back in 1870 I spent a summer with the Pawnees in Nebraska, and Superintendent Janney,

who knew them very well, told me he

would trust the chiefs of that nation

as implicitly as any white men he ever

saw. Many years afterwards I was at

Muskogee, then in Indian Territory,

and the judge of the federal court told

me after long experiences with witnesses, that while among the white men some were truthful and some

were not, that a full blooded Indian

would never lie. Reasornfor Hate

vThese inferior races as wo call

them, are better than we think. The reasons we despise them is because we do not know them. The thing Is to know them better. That man is not

th.fi best friend who insists that I have

all the virtues and that others have all the vices, and he is not the best friend

or America who declares that our

country has a monopoly of all the ex

cellencies in the world. Our view

Ii.imimi.ji..,..:. .,.jaj,w--mW'.M.mm..M.ww- -vnm.:mmt i M.n I ,ijiwwwwwww i'W'iiwiJ, nwl '' -......-- . o '"'-w i.SSSf2S??. ZfZ f:&r?i: H?y

the morning and 7:30 in the earning. Rev. W. W. McMtchel, pastor; prayer meeting Wednesday evening, 7:45; everybody welcome. Chester M. E. church Victor E. Stoner, pastor. Sunday school, William Wesler, superintendent, 9:45; morning worship, sermon by the pastor, 10:45; Epworth league, 7:30. Ev-

, erjone welcome.

Webster M. E. church Victor fc.. Stoner. pastor. Sunday school, William Culbertson, superintendent, 9:30; evening evangelistic service, sermon by the pastor, 7:30. Everyone welcome. Dublin Friends church Pastor Percy Thomas; Sunday school superintendent, Roy Heacock; Sunday school at 9:15; preaching, 10:30 a. m.; special. Dr. Dennison, the pastor of the Baptist church at New Port News, Va., will have charge of the services both morning and evening; preaching 7:45 p. m. Whitewater Christian church Sunday school at the Christian church at 9:30 sharp, Ollie Hunt, superintendent. A joint picnic with the Fountain

I' City school is being planned. Union services in the evening. The young

i people oi me cumiiiuuuy win meet i

7:15 to discuss Christian prayer meet

ing and teacher training Wednesday evening; Endeavor plans. Edward Rudicel, pastor. Fountain City Christian - church Sunday school at 9:30 sharp, Ora Wright, superintendent; Lord's Supper and preaching following; services Thursday evening at 7:45. Edward Rudicel, pastor.

i

New Paris Christian Church Pastor Tenders Resignation NEW PARIS, Ohio, July- 21. The Rev. I F. Fightriaster has' tendered his resignation as pastor of the New Paris Christian church, which he has served during the last 10 months. His resignation becomes effective at the close of his month's vacation, beginning July 23. The Rev. Fightmaster win preach his farewell sermons Sunday at the regular morning and evening hours for worship.

LIMA MAY BE CALLED "THE ENTERPRISE CITY LIMA, Ohio, July 21. Lima in the future may be known as "The Enterprise City." The name, first used by the Chamber of Commerce in its early days, is suggested by Mayor Cunningham as a proper designation for the city.

ABANDON PAY CUTS MARION, July 21. The Marion board of education reversed their decision to slash teachers' pay 10 per cent when they found that teachers in surrounding centralized and rural schools in some cases were receiving more than the Marion teachers.

The army in the United States, as defined in the new law, comprLes lis? regular army, the national guard ani organized reserves. . ..

Two firemen were killed, thirty persons injured and a million dollar loss realized, when a fire broke cut in the seven story warehouse of the Manufacturers' Transit Company in New York city, where a large amount of magnesicm was stored. The fire was attend by a series of explosions which rocked the earth within a radius of several blocks and was the direct cause of one death. This picture shows firemen playing high pressure water against the flames. Forty streams were kept going for hours at the rate of 20,000 gallons a minute. In insert, Fireman Enright carrying Miss Anna Wallace to the safety zone. He acted as;a human ferry when the street became flooded.

must be broader than this. We must learn to appreciate others as well as ourselves. We must act, in the vords of the greatest American who ever lived, 'With malice toward none-and

charity for all.'

"And we can not begin at any' better place than in the appreciation of the good qualities of the people in. our neighboring cities. Richmond and Muncie are good examples. If we never knew anything about you, and relied only upon-what we see in the papers of the political doings in your city, we might think you were a bad lot. If you knew nothing of us except from the accounts you read, you

might think the same of us, but now

we see you face to face, nobody could

tell either of us that the real people

other people under the sun. We ( tion from the Muncie Rotarlans to the

should do more than this. We ought

to be generous to those who have suffered more than we. We should, if necessary, remit at least a part of the great debt and burden which weighs upon our allies in our common war for the redemption of humanity from arbitrary rule. "We ought to recognize in the word3 of Edmund Budke, that magnaminity is not seldom the truest wisdom ani that a great empire and little minda go ill together. The principles of Rotary and the principles of America are and ought to be 'live and let live; obey the law; succor the needy; relieve the oppressed; trust your fellow men and love them'." Speech of Thanks

Following the dinner a brief speech

Richmond Rotarians and golfers to visit Muncie for a return joint meeting at their country club on Thursday, Aug. 24.-

County Churches

of Muncie and of Richmond are notJ of thanks and appreciation to the

what they ought to be. I Richmond Rotarians was made by John

There is no agency any stronger Maxim, president of the Muncie Rotary

than Rotary to promote this mutual

knowledge and appreciation. The Rotary is a representative body in all lines of human activity. In the late

meeting at Los Angeles, it helped titeJ

j people of the east and of the west,

tne people or America ana or otner countries to understand each other better than before. It is this mutual

understanding and tolerance to which

we must look to preserve the world

in the future from such a terrible calamity as the late war.

Give Others Credit. "For even in International relations

the man who is 100 per cent American is bound to discover that in the long run America can only be at her best by acknowledging the achievements

as well as the just rights of every

LUMBER

WSTS ROOFING , BUILDING MATERIALS of All Kinds Right Prices Prompt' Delivery MATHER BROS. , Company

1

club, for the entertainment and courte

sies extended to their members and the visiting citizens of Muncie. A varied and entertaining program was present ed following these remarks. Prof. Samuel Garton, of Earlham, gave a solo. The Muncie Rotarian entertainment committee presented a brief program consisting of a "Greek Bridal Dance" by Miss Mildred Piner and two songs by Miss Lola Yoakum, both of Muncie. These two numbers were accompanied on the piano by Miss Adine Macy, also of Muncie. Frank Holland presented a part of one of his vaudeville acts from the Murray theater which also was well received. A duet by Frank Holland and Robert Heun

completed the entertainment program.

Green's Fork Christian Church-

Sunday school at 9:30, Miles Bradbury, superintendent. Green's Fork Methodist Church Sunday school at 9:30, Newton Brooks, superintendent. Preaching at 10:30, by Rev. Knowls. Epworth League at 6:30. Green's Fork Friends Church Sunday school at 9:30, Eli Bane, superintendent. A missionary lecture by Sylvester Jones at 10:30. Preaching at 7:30 by Rev. Hinshaw. Everybody is welcome. Whitewater M. E. church Sunday school 9:30 a. m.; Lawrence Hiatt, superintendent; preaching 10:30 a. m., by the pastor, L. F. Ulmer; prayer meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 8 p. m. Middleboro M. E. church Sunday school, 9:30 a. m., Clyde Thomas, superintendent; class meeting 10:30 a. m., Minnie Clark, leader; preaching 8 p. m., by the pastor, L. F. Ulmer; prayer meting and Bible study Thursday, 8 p. m.

Williamsburg M. E. church Sun

day school picnic, Friday, July 28. All meet at First National bank for Glen Miller; time, 9:30. Fountain City Wesleyan Methodist

Sunday school at 9:30, Eva Leovin,

The meeting closed with an invita-i superintendent; preaching at 10:30 in

c

Jrc kest Jalu on tLe marWl tJaj.

ITaoftons water IT loosens dirfc ITsavx?s soap

I-'!' E."-I,l!il-i-

mnniniiiniHinimiiiiitiuuiiiiiiiiiniiuiiMiramiiwHiHiHimiuuiitiiiiiumiunit I Ginghams, Voiles, Organdy 1 Dresses, $3.95 to $7.95 ' j WHEN STORE, 712 Main ( i-t Ti"nii-imritrinninmirinmiiiiniiiriiininiinii -iniimiimiiiiimiiiiiiimB

DRS. CRAIN SANITARIUM 22nd and Main Across the street from Glen Miller Park. Phone 3812. Office Murray Theatre Building Telephone 1983

Our July Clearance Sale Now On KNOLLENBERG'S

Had Tour Iron Today?

That Delicious of Energy and Iron

rea

SERVE raisin bread twice weekly on your table for three reasons: 1. Flavor; 2. Energy; 3. Iron You remember how good a generously filled, fullfruited raisin bread can be. Your grocer can supply a loaf like this. Insist if he hasn't one he can get it for you. Full-fruited bread is full of luscious seeded Sun-Maid raisins rich in energizing nutriment in practically predigested form. Raisins also furnish fatigue-resisting iron for the blood. Serve plain raisin bread at dinner or as a tasty fruited breakfast toast with coffee. Make delicious bread pudding with left-over slices. No need to waste a crumb of raisin bread. Begin this week the habit of raisin bread twice weekly in your home, for raisin bread is both good and good for you. SUN-MAID Seeded RAISINS Make delicious bread, pies, puddings, cakes, etc. Ask your grocer for them. Send for free book of tested recipes.

Blue , Package

Sun-Maid Raisin Growers Memberskipl3J)00 Dept. N-95-8, Fresno, Calif

! WSZ BUY THE KIDS A VELOCIPEDE ! jSssiw A styles and sizes, rubber tire. ball-bearing, some with regular" . jO( f jfSv coaster-brake, enameled in. all J jl colors. Bring the kids to see . irL -

! , j

J YouSave : $1.35 rN fy j Pair!

Never have we offered such amazing values never have we done such a tremendous business. Every pair of Ladies White Pumps, Ties and Oxfords in our stores is included inthis sweeping reduction sale. The regular price of $3.50 it embossed on the soles of this footwear, so you know to the penny the exact saving you effect. Everything that is new and popular will be found in the assortments including a big variety of sport models. Choice of white canvas, kid and nubuck, in military baby Louis and flapper heels. No matter what you want in white footwear, you are bound to find it in this sale at this big saving.

Hundreds of Pairs of White Pumps

and Oxfords in this Sale at

i 1

Were Formerly Priced $3.50 to $5.00. We offer a tremendous selection at these three greatly reduced prices. All of them were formerly priced $3.50 to $5.00. Included are stunning Goodyear Welt Sport Oxfords in Black, Russia and Buck combinations. Every conceivable style in White Pumps, Ties and Oxfords is represented, in Military, Baby Louis and Flapper Heels. This sale abounds with marvelous opportunities. You simply cannot afford to miss it. efteunak Sii&t Stes&Ca The Largest Cbaia of Shoa Stores ia the United State. RICHMOND STORE f 705 Main Street Colonial Building kAJl Newark Stores Opee Saturday Evenings to Accommodate Customers