Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 291, 7 December 1922 — Page 11

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND THURSDAY, DEC. 7, 1922.

PAGE ELEVEN

PEACE Hi NEAR EAST DELAYED BY SELFISH NATIONS --HARAMY

"Co-operation between the great

powers of Europe Is the only logical

solution of the great problem of the

Near East," declared John J. Haramy,

who spoke before the Billy Sunday

club at the regular meeting of that

organization in the T. M. C. A., Wednesday night. The speaker, who is a native Palestinian and who was born in Jerusalem, spoke from personal experience, he having spent his youth and several y?ars of his later life in the Near Eastern countries and coming in contact with the great re

ligious problem of the peoples of that part of the world. Mr, Haramy is a graduate of Earlham college and is

That the great Christian nations, Great Britain, France, Italy and Russia could have settled the great Near East problem years ago if they had not been obsessed with selfish desires, la the opinion of Mr. Ha: amy. The epeaker outlined the division of the spoils of the late war and related how Eng

land, against the wU.' of Vranee, gave

Mesopotamia to King Feisul to rule as an Independent state France in turn,

ceded Selesia, populated almost entirely by Christian Armenians, to Turkey

as reclprocatory action against Great

Britain. Blames Powers The possession of the territory in

habited by the Armenians by Turkey

was the cause of the great Armenian

massacres, said the speaker, and he declared that these great European

powers are responsiole for the out

rages which have been perpetrated by

the Turk in the Near East. ,

The wholesale transference of peo

ples of various religious beliefs from

one country to another so as to promote unity and hamony in the Near

iast crisis as proposed In the Lau

sanne conference Is a partial solution

of the problem, said the speaker, but to obtain absolute harmony, the great powers of the world must study the history of the countries and' co-operate for the establishment of international

'Justice. "Can the Mohammedan and the Christian peoples live in peace together?" was the question asked by the speaker to which he gave an emphatic answer. "No." The people of these faiths are of such different customs and ideals that" they can never live peacefully together, Mr. Haramy said. "'The Mohammedan looks low in his desire to satisfy his lustful desires "while the Christian looks to serve the living God through Jesus Christ. It is a high standard against a low standard and the two won't mix," was his emphatic assertion. Will Aid Campaigns. i That the Billy Sunday club's evangelisticcommittee will function when needed if requested to do so was one

of the announcements made at the

opening of the meeting prior to the Epeaking program. Any community or

church that feels the need of laymen

evangelists should place its request

with Guild Copeland, chairman of the

evangelistic committee, it was an

nounced. It was stated at the meeting that the Union mission is in need of some song books and it was suggested by one of the members that those members

of the Billy Sunday club who have

copies of the Victory tabernacle hymn

al which they do not need and are

willing to give to the mission, turn them over to Arthur L. Smith at the

Second National bank. It also was deeided to take a voluntary collection from the members of the club to buy new hymnals for the mission and $9

for that purpose was secured in this

way. The Rev. Gordon Nixon, head

of the mission, stated that 100 song books are needed and that the clothbound books would be more desirable for use at the mission.

Resolutions were adopted expressing the sympathy of the Billy Sunday club to the members of the family of the late William Henderson, who was a member of the organization. The scripture reading was given by William H. Romey, president of the club. Announcement was also made at the meeting that Billy Sunday will speak at West Manchester, Ohio, Friday morning. The triple quartette of the Billy Sunday club will sing at the Sunday tabernacle meeting in Dayton on Thursday night.

SPEEJACKS BACK AT MIAMI AFTER 35,000-MILE TRIP

:;:;;:iS'i-,;:;.;;;x;:;:;i::.:V;-: - 4 ' i '

Welfare League Officers

To Be Elected Today Officers' of the Welfare league will be elected at a meeting of the board of directors of the organization at the annual meeting to be held at 4:30 o'clock Thursday afternoon in the di

rectors' room at the Second! National bank. Another matter which will be under consideration by the board is the action to be taken in the collection of unpaid subscriptions to the Community Chest. It is affirmed by members of the board that a number of subscribers have not met their final payments to the fund which was due Dec. 1. The method to be used in getting in these delinquent payments will be decided upon at the meeting

Thursday.

FASCISTI MENACE BAVARIAN REGIME

Albert Y. Gowan and his bride, at the rail of the Speejacks, greeting Miami friends on their arrival. Inset, nicety-eight foot motor cruiser arriving in Miami harbor after round the world voyage.

thfe ancboraee. But this par- I and his bnde aro'ind .he world

ticular motorhoat is enjoying a well-earned rest. For it's ' -Speejacks, thrice reported lost at sea, which carried Albert Y. Gowan of Chicago and C vtland

Came to anchor in tho placid harbor of Miami, Fla., r ceiitlv, a trim little 98-foot motoT cruiser. To the casual observer it was no different from r score of similar craft scattered about

and his bride around

on their honeymoon trir. The little vessel arrived i.i Miami after being fifteen month in the circumnavigation of tlie globe with its honeymooning pa.ty. .

A Free Booklet On House Plans

Every person, sometime or other, has hod a longing for a home of his

own. Here is a free booklet which

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This booklet gives exterior view3

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All of these plans have been pre

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No prospective builder can afford to be without this booklet. You can get your copy from our Washington Information Bureau if you send in your name and address with two cents in stamps for return postage. Write your name and address clearly. (Do not send tho coupon to The Palladium. Mall It direct to Washington, D. C.)

shall ba eligible for pensions at the full rate provided for widows in the act. It is further provided in the Bursum bill that all widows of veterans who remarry once or more after the death of their soldier husbands, if it be

shown that such subsequent mar

riages have been dissolved either by

death or divorce for any cause, ex

cept infidelity on the part of the wife,

shall be entitled to pensions.

For each child, under 16 years of

age, of a deceased veteran a pension

of $6 per month la provided, payable to the mother or to the guardian. -

At the present time there are prob

ably less than 150 veterans of the

Civil war receiving pensions who re

side in Wayne county, Ind. This is

an estimate based on a report made by the pension bureau in June, 191S,

which listed 319 Wayne county veter

ans on the pension rolls, and the heavy death rate which has prevailed

among these pensioners for the last

10 years.

No figures are now avaiilable as to

the number of widows of Civil war

veterans receiving pensions who reside in Wayne county, but it Is esti

mated that there are oyer one hun

dred. It is probable that at least half that number will be eligible for pen

sions when the Bursum biE becomes

a law.

It is believed that not more than

600 Civil war pensioners now live in

the eight counties of the sixth con

gressional district of Indiana. In

June, 1918, they numbered 1,150.

A firm of Berlin engineers have con

structed an apparatus for recording telephone conversations. The message Is taken on a wax cylinder in the ab

sence of any person and reproduced by

the phonograph stylus when wanted,

FRIEDA HEMPEL ROBBED NEW YORK. Dec. 7. Frieda Hempel, operatic, star, returning today to her apartment after a concert tour, was notified) that the suite was looted yesterday. Jewels, furs and apparel composed? the greater part of the loot, estimated to be worth from $25,000 to

Santa Says:

Dr. Ton Knilling. Bavarian premier. The new government of Bavaria, formed by Premier von KEilling, is being threatened by the Fascist! organization in -the country. Hitler, the Fascist! chief, is said to be stirring up the masses, while the government fails to explain why National Socialists ha vent been suppressed.

Egyptians cut their granite monu

ments with copper chisels.

COUGHS AXD COLDS IJT WINTER

Indoor sedentary life in Winter has a

direct bearing on the prevalence of

couens ana colds. Keen the bowels ac-1

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for attacks of coughs and colds," wcites

W. tl. iray, Venice, California. A. (.J.

LuKen Drug Co., 626-638 Main BL Advertisement.

Information Bureau, Washington, D. C. Frederick J. Haskin, Director. THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM I enclose herewith two cents in stamps for return postage on a free copy of the Modern Homes. Booklet

V

ICTf'

is a

cert

at hop

Name Street City . State

CIVIL WAR

G. O. P. LEADER PAROLED WASHINGTON, Dec. 7. The Parole board today granted a parole to Fred W. Ossenberg. Republican leader' of Evairsville, Ind., now serving a term in the Atlanta penitentiary on a charge of having conspired to violate the Volstead law. Attorney-General Harry M. Daugherty later approved the action of the parole board.

(Continued from Page One) quire the services of an attendant.

That class of pensioners receive no In

crease under the Bursum bill.

The bill now in conference increases

the pension rate for widows from $30 to $50 per month. Also it lets down the bars to widows who had contracted marriages with veterans in recent years. Under the existing law widows who had married veterans of the Civil war after June 27, 1905, are not eligible for pensions. But the Bursum bill provides that widows who were married prior to June 27, 1915, or widows who have married veterans after that date and hwe lived and cohabited with their husbands for at least two years and continuing to do so until the death of their husbands

Don't lef chill slaybilious, constipated

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Fig Syrup" hands. They know a teaspoonful today may save a sick child tomorrow. It never cranrps or overacts. Ask your druggist for genuine "California Fix Svrun" whir.h hnj di

rections for babies and children of all

ages printed on bottle. Mother! You must say "California" or you may get

an Imitation fig syrup. Advertise

ment.

''ill Vktrota No. 330, electric, $390 , jj JIM Other styles $25 to $1500 lllf U

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