Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 190, 11 August 1922 — Page 14
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND.. FRIDAY, AUG. 11, 1922.
INTOXICATED DRIVERS WOULD LOSE LICENSE UNDER PROPOSED LAW
INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 11. Declaring that the present law provides entirely inadequate penalties for driving an automobile while under the influence of liquor, the directors of the Hoosier State Automobile association have pledged the efforts of the asso
ciation toward obtaining much more drastic legislation on this subject at the forthcoming session of the general assembly. It was the sens? of the automobile association officers and directors that not only should the courts be permitted to assess a heavier fine but that a jail cr state farm sentence might be added and in addition the license for the offender's automobile should be revoked. "The extreme penalty should be meted out to drivers who cause accidents while they are under the influence of liquor," the association states. "Not a day passes but what there are a half dozen or more accidents due to one or more drivers being under the influence of liquor," it was pointed out. . "Our business primarily is to look out for the welfare of the , motorists and the general public as affected by
motorists. We are doing this to the limit of our financial ability and doing it unselfishly. We are now sending out a Macedonian appeal to all motorists In Indiana to get in with our state-wide association and help us in the tremendous amount of work there is to be done all over Indiana," the association states.
HAROLD F. M'GORMICK WEDS GANNA WALSKA IN PARIS; DUDLEY FIELD MALONE, WITNESS
GRAVE ONLY PLAGE STATE HAS TO TAKE CONSUMPTIVE WIDOW
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RICHMOND CHILDREN TO BE ENTERTAINED BY SALVATION ARMY
Community games, contests where prizes will be offered, and special music will feature the picnic for the kiddie's cf Richmond which m be held in Glen Miller park on Wednesday, Aug. 16, under the ausp'ces of the local unit of the Salvation Army. Captain M. R. Calvert, of the Indianapolis citadel, and his family will be present and furnish the music. His is a musical family, he playing the
tenor, his wife the alto, while two of j the senate by a vote of 46 tQ
- ! Br DR. J. X. HI RTV j Mate Hiptth fomroUsiioiier j The eldest of the three brothers was nine, the second seven, and the third fire. They had come, the younger j ones hold of hands, to the office of the i rtate board of health to see what could be done for their mother. Montgom-1 ery, the oldest, said: "My mother is j pick tn bed- with- consumption, and j Mrs. Homer told us to come and tell j you and- you would tell us where to I
take her." "No," he said, in answer t nn. nnafltinne "wa - ha vpn't AT1V
father, he died 16 'months ago of con-j married today to Ganna Walska
sumption and me and my two brothers .and his wife were the witnesses to the and mother are all there is". "Yes. ceremony which took place in the city mother, worked to support us. She!" of the sixteenth arondissement ,ewed and I was elevator boy at The Malones then motored - out of m,t,- rwu t ain't rinin? nnthintr! Paris with the bride and bridegroom.
now, and we haven't anything to eat;Tlie destination
neighbors
his daughters play the cornet and an
other, the bass horn. All members ot the family also play stringed instruments.
Captain Calvert will spend his furlough in Richmond and aid in t'ie conduct of the Salvation Army meetings! while he is here. He and his family j will arrive next Tuesday and iemain( over the following Sunday. Will Issue Tickets Tickets will be issued to the children to attend the picnic on Sunday morning at the Salvation Army hall on Fifth street. Arrangements have i
to the park by means of motor trucks and here they will be given a fine picnic dinner. After dinner, it is planned to entertain the boys and girls with contests and games. Prizes for the contests were donated by the local merchants last year and 'in addition, about $18
in cash was given toward the chil- j dren's picnic. A similar appeal will i be made to Richmond this year, it is j understood. I It is announced that all children who J expect to attend the picnic must be present at the Salvation Army hall be-! fore 9 o'clock Wednesday morning.
By this is meant making it a crime for either a striker or a railroad manager to defy or conspire to defy the decisions of the board. This question was before congress two years ago and there is not much reason to suppose that the attitude of congress on it would differ now from what it was then. The law which creates the railway labor board was passed in the senate under the name of the Cummins Act and the house under the name of the Esch Act. Lower House Balks In the senate the Cummins Act contained the so-called "anti-?trike" clause, making it a crime to conspire against the .decisions of the labor
board. The act in this form Dasscd
30. Pres-
i ment Harding, then a senator, wa among those who voted in favor ol i the act containing this provision.
I Eut the lower house in handling th
I bill, refused to include the anti-tiike j I clause. In the conference that fol
lowed the house tood "stubbornly by its position and ultimately the b'll became a law with the anti-strike clause omitted. The strain between the two houses on that bill as a whole was such that the conference dragged over two months. It is probable that today the senate and the house each would take the same line taken two year-? ago. The senate probably would be willing to adopt an anti-strike law, but the house would be more reluctant. The conditions now are not materially
more menacing than they were two i
years ago. Then, as now, there was a coal strike and a very serious railroad strike threatened. Copyright,
1922, by the New York Evening Post, Inc. i
BAND INSTRUMENTS
iltALtV
Opp. Post Office
Phone 1655
Gaaua Walska and Harold F. McCormick.
PARIS, Aug. Harold F. McCor'mick, American multi-millionaire, was
Pol-
. 'ish opera star. Dudley Field Malone
in the event of prolongation of the strike, they might be important. It would not teem likely, that congress will be asked to pass legislation of any drastic nature or in any way going to the heart of the situa tion unless conditions should become more serious than they now are. There is too much doubt about what response congress might make to a request for drastic action. - There is much talk about congress being asked to "put teeth into" the decisions of the railway labor board.
sxcept what the neighbors - give us.
Phase tell us where we can take mother. She coughs all the time, and and I am afraid she's she's going to die." - - - In imagination, there appeared a picture of a true, good woman, fatally stricken with the great white plague.
in a bare room. Piece by piece it
had been stripped of its furniture to procure food. The .thin, transparent hands, pale wan face, unnaturally bright eyes and hollow cough haunted me without seeing them. Only Few Days Remained Afterward, a visit and an investigation proved that imagination had not run riot. Indeed, it had not pictured all. The last stages of the relentless
hnt a fpw rtavs for the mother who
had given birth to four souls and who i had fought a good fight. Between'coughs and in gasped whis-j pering she made no complaint,, ut- . i . . i . - ,i , i
erea no Fc6 n., .mi - u o - . f f f tfa rQund
mick and Ganna Walska have recently i
been divorced. McCormick was divorced by his wife, Edith Rockefeller McCormick, in Chicago, on grounds of desertion. He did not contest the action. Ganna Walska recently obtained a divorce in Paris from Alexander Smith Cochran, who before his
Paris with the bride and bridegroom, marriage to the diva was known as
of the honeymoon j New York's most eligible bachelor.!
party . was unknown. A wedding i Dudley Field Malone who was McCor-
luncheon was given at the Ritz before mick's best man, obtained the divorce , the party motored away. Both McCor-for Walska.
A Clean Shave Gives you new pep. 5 skilled barbers Harter's Shop In the Murray Bldg.
for the ton of cure, unlimited expenditures would be allowed. "Please tell us ' where we can take mother." I might have replied in truth, "To a
grave; tnat is tne only place tne great
i Christian state of Indiana has for the
reception of poor widows with advanced consumption." SECRETARY HOOVER IS 48 WASHINGTON", Aug. 11. Secretary
Hoover celebrated Thursday his forty- ! eighth birthday. Commerce depart
ment officials declared the only notice
I he took of the anniversary was to be
busier than ever."
(Continued from Pajre One.)
I affected might defeat the operation of
the system. It is obviously desirable for congress to be on hand in case any legislation should be needed. In addition to this, it is quite con-
ceivable that if President Harding ar
rives at the point where ne wishes to f do certain definite things, he will prefer to have his action endorsed and supported by formal authorization 0:1 j the part of congress. Such things might be relatively unimportant, or, !
Paint for 1 cent a square foot two coats use SHERWIN- Wiluass PAINTS
A. G. Luken Drug Co. 626-628 Main Street
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3ren. They had come out of her life, she. had worked all her life for them, md now. when that life was on the eve rt departing, it was not herself, but the beys whom she had hoped to bring to useful manhood, of whom she spoke. The room was dark and damp, and the four dollars a month rent went to a man whose name was on the tax list as paying taxes on- $100,000 and over. The window admitted filthfainted air from the back yard, and through the front door came the hot rtrett nir laden with infected dust.
Nothing could be done except to J minister a dose cf morphine to give j temporary sleep with its brief oblivion 1 3 pain and care. It would be murderto give enough to hasten the perma-1 rent cfclivion which was inevitable in j a few days. Yes. it would be murder, and the law, silent and inactive before j pnd during the killing by the prevent-' able disease, would then tremble with pctivity. Detectives and police would 1 'hunt the murderer; the last cent in!
the county treasury would be f-pent to apprehend and convict him, and the economy quack would declare against "spending money for any such crank Pica ar preventing consumption." Yet,
HALF-FARE RATE GRANTED
FOR G. A. R. ENCAMPMENT! DES MOINES, la., Aug. 11. A rate!
trip to j
the G. A. R. national encampment 1
here, Sept. 24 to 20, was authorized by railroads of the country, it was announced here today.
The 1923 Baick is a Real Good Car Chenoweth Auto Co. 1107 Main St. Phone 1925
; ARMY DIRIGIBLE PLANS
TRANS-CONTINENTAL FLIGHT i WASHINGTON. Aug. 11. The army dirigible C-2, now at the Aber-; deen proving grounds, Maryland, will!
make a trans-continental flight from Langley Field. Virginia, to Ross Field, Arcadia. Cal.. early in September.
vf':.Lgjitmiii; mu i ' h a
n
1 Thistlethw
e's
Solid Oak Porch Swings ?2.9S
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HOT BREAD and ROLLS Every Day Henry Farwig & Son 1031 Main St.
The Original Cut-Rate EVERY-DAY PRICES in Effect at all 7 Stores Tooth Pastes 50c Pebeco 13c 60c Pepsodent 19c 35c Senreco 29c 30c Kolynos 24c 25c Colgate's .21c
0
Larsre JUMBO PEANUTS
Try our delicious Salted Pearuts, the best you ever ate. Salted fresh, and roasted to the finest taste. To get you better acquainted with these delicious
Peanuts we will sell them for
a few days only at per lb
Iarge Jumbo Salted Pecans Large Jordan Salted Almonds
39c
ALL SCRAP TOBACCO, 3 for
25c
Don't forget to Cream for your
order your Ice Sunday dinner.
Our 57th Year
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SNOWFLAKE 6X Icing Sugar assures CERTAIN results in making Icings, Candies, Sauces, etc., by eliminating the uncertainty of cooking.
It's Entirely Different! Don't Confuse SNOWFLAKE 6X Icing Sugar With Ordinary Powdered Sugar SNOWFLAKE 6X Icing Sugar is 8 times finer than ordinary powdered sugar and 500,000 times finer than granulated sugar. It is pow- , dered sugar in its finest form. That's why it makes in a minute WITHOUT COOKING the creamiest, smoothest icings, candies, sauces, etc. and it never fails. Use it also for fruits, cereals and beverages for every household sweet need. Made from the best Eastern cane sugar. Absolutely noncaking, and always fresh in sanitary packages untouched by human hands. Ask your grocer or write for free SNOWFLAKE Recipe Book by Mary A. Wilson, noted food expert.
In the Blue end Gold Package Ttith the Brownie At All Grocers
6XXXXXX .
At Felt man's
Brown Calf
(New Fall Style) for Men Brogue style, genuine calfskin, with first quality rubber heels
-Sit
eltman
9s Shoe Store.
'he World's Largest Shoe Dealers
25 Stores 724 Main Street
1 1
11
11
65c isn't much for a tie, and often a tie for 65c isn't much ! But here's a clearance where that modest sum buys the kind of silk and knit neckwear a man can tie with pride. It's a final clearance or the price would be much higher.
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The Dennis- Gaar Company Incorporated '"Style Correct'' HABERDASHERS TAILORS 1 Hotel Westcott 1010 Main St.
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Facts Only-
Truth Always
Group
of Extra Quality Value-giving Specials for Saturday
Ve offer SATURDAY what we think is one of our biggest value-giving events of the season. These bargains are. genuine money-saving articles. You will profit by purchasing now for Fall. Some quantities are limited.
One Lot of Suit$
14, 16, 18, and
$25.00 to $50.00, sizes one 40, close at
$10.00
One Lot of Blouses and Waists; Silk Pongee, Crepe and Georgette, $5.00 to $12.50 Half -Price
One Lot of Children's and Ladies' Rain Coats and Capes, HALF PRICE
Wool and Cotton Goods Specials One lot Ail-Wool Suitings, Serges, Wool $1.25 Sport Silk Skirting, in H(n Voiles, Diagonals, etc., 36 to 45-inch, colors, 36-inch, yard Si 'yard5 Prked 79C Wool Homespun in four leading QQ shades, yard wide, yard iOv 32-inch Danish Poplar Cloth in QO 7 shades, a real value, at OA L $4-00 Banner Krepe Knit, black, brown, . , . , , red and green; special Sat- T0 3r"?ch ess 9mghams. 1,noC!iecisnd urdav, yard tW. 0 plaids, a 29c value; special Sat-OQ urday at &hds Van Raalte Silk Gloves, all sizes, in the Daisy Bleached Muslin, a 20c value, fino ailted sh?des' values UP to 3 ' Q Q n even thread; special Saturday, rn choice- Pair 3 yards for Out 15c Huck Guest Towels, good 1 A EXTRA SPECIAL 12-m. Pongee, JaP rade' with red striPe border goods, government passed; spe- QQ 7c Silk Stripe Madras in good CQ cial Saturday, yard tOv stripe patterns, yard JUs Hosiery and Underwear Specials Men's Ecru Balbriggan Shirts and Ladies' Brown and Black Sport Hose in Drawers; shirts with long or short dropstitch style, extra good for Chausleeves, all sizes in both Shirts and tauqua and school wear; espe- CQ Drawers, regular $1.00 values, f cially priced for week-end t)Us Saturday Ladies' Pure Thread Silk Hose, full Children's Black Ribbed Hose, values up fashioned, in black only, Cf f)fl to 59c, extra good for early Fall OK,, regularly 1.75 values $l.t and Winter wear; per pair LdOK, , ,. , , Ladies Fancy Mushn Petticoats in lace o1,6,11 sBlack, ?,nd- Br.0WnJ P ure Thr mT1 and embroidery trimming, regular $2.25 Silk Hose, full fashioned, heavy silk, values; priced special for 1 AQ regular $1.2o values; week-end Qff the week-end $1.4o special, per pair UtJs One lot Carter's Union Suits, regular Children's Combination Waists and $1.50 values, shell tailored tops OQ, Bloomers, just the thing for rjQ and wide knees J70C scho1 wear, regular $1 values. . iVK, One lot Baby Bibs, 25c to 39c 1Afl One lot of Corsets, $1 and $1.50 PAp values, to close at XUC values, sizes to 28, choice tJU One lot of Rubber Pads, your FAp One lot Brassieres, 59c to $1.25 FA choice at t)J, values, choice OUC LEE B. NUSBAUM COMPANY NUSBAUM BUILDING
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