Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 93, Number 7, 8 January 1923 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

FARM MEN, WOMEN : FLOCK TO FARMERS' COURSE AT. PURDUE LAFAYETTE. Ind., Jan. 8. Farm men and women from all sections of Indiana, members of the various livestock, grain and vegetable producers' associations flocked to Purdue university today by the hundreds for the onenlng of the 29th annual farmers short course. Every train and car Into Lafayette brought its quota and with an entirely new program, taken up In a different way, the most successful course ever held is anticipated. Entries In the state corn and potato show Indicated they would far surpass any previous shows. The potato show now is nearly twice as large as last year and the preliminary entries of corn indicated a substantial gain. Judging will get underway today in both shows. "Necessary readjustments In Indiana Agriculture1 was the theme for the opening session this afternoon with W. H. Settle, president of the Indiana Farmers' Federation; Director G. 1. Christie of the Agricultural Experiment Station, and Mrs. Virginia C. Meredith, of Lafayette, a leader of the farm women, as the speakers. They discussed the readjustment problem from different angles. "Indiana farmers must have higher prices for their products," declared Prof. Christie, the first speaker. "In 1922 In Hancock county the actual cost of producing 100 acres of wheat was $1886. The 1900 bushels of wheat sold for $1824.00. 1110 hours of man labor were required to produce and market this crop. The loss equalled 5.6 cents for every hour the farmers worked. Farmers Dissatisfied "In face of high wages on railroads in the coal mines and in every line of industry farmers are dissatisfied. Country people are leaving the farm for town and high wages. The eastern states have gone through this experience with the result of many thmmanrla nf nhanHnnarl foT-mc Three nnints nrndnr-tinn ! tation and marketing or distribution !

?22BUtr? fh6ttle " thtioreV denC; wi7hruIdot be fw fen,ennft into the ri gathered before the first trial was ritir hfnCU tUre- He Tgel,not held which would tend to set aside greater but more economical produc-!the action of the jury in the first . , ! trial. No judgment has been issued No manufacturer could survive who; bv the court on tne verdict of the jury trusted the marketing of his product tne tjrst trjai to someone else. The same is true J ' with the farmer. The farm is his fac-' nnnnn iiAllTnrtlimU tory, and he must market his own M.IIIIK MIIN I llllmrH I products." said the SDeaker in discus- iUUUUIl lIlUIl I WW 111 1-1 1 I

sing co-operative marketing. Mrs. Meredith made a strong pleaj for the employment of home demon-' stration agents in Indiana along with ! county agricultural agents and for a more prominent part in the school by the women, especially the married women. NIGHT CLASSES 50 TO ENROLLMENT Classes of . the second term of night school will convene in the Morton high school building Monday evening with 50 new enrollments additional to those persons who were in the courses last i term. Enrollments will be accepted! Monday night at the office of Daniel Green, vocational director, either in person or by telephone number 5277. A special course in woodworking has been requested by several and with a. few additional enrollments the class will be organized under the instruction of Roy Gibbons, who is teaching the work in the regular high school course during the day. Included in the woodworking course is turning, pattern making, cabinet making and work with hand and machine tools. Equipment in the shop is of the best and the fullest extent of benefit in the course is available. DECEMBER BUILDING WORK COSTjl 65,090 Fifteen building permits were issued during December by J? E. Higgs, building inspector, according to the monthly report released Monday and turned to Mayor Handley for approval i Estimated cost of new work was $165,090. The report follows: Estimated cost of new work $165,090 Remodel and Repair 9,700 Moving and wrecking 2,800 - $177,590 Fees collected for new work $332.85 Remodel and repair 21.60 Wiring 19.00 Heating 4.00 Wrecking and moving 5.00 $382.45 Inspections New work. 14: remodel and repair, 9; wiring, 31; heat. 18; flues, 4; miscellaneous, 5. Total 81. Respectfully submitted, J. E. HIGGS, Building Inspector BENEFICIAL UNION TO HOLD INSTALLATION Installation of officers will be the principal business of the meeting of the Beneficial Union, district .98, to be held in the Beallview clubhouse at 7:30 o'clock, Tuesday night. The following officers will be installed: J. Henry Bode, president, Will Kaeupr, vice-president, Henry Pilgrim, secretary; A. J. 'Miller, treasurer; Mac Kirchembauer, musical entertainment. Matt Brinker, trustee and Charles itackman. sentinel. This union was founded about 30 years ago in Pittsburgh, for the purpose of giving its members sick and death benefit. This union now is represented in 22 states of the United States. Otto Schirmer will act as installing officer He is the district deputy of the Hamilton district. Every member is urged to be present. IRISH RAILWAY DAMAGED DUBLIN, Jan. 8. A map issued by the Southern and Western Railway, shows that during the past year tha right of wav of the line has been damaged at 375 Places. Forty two engines have been derailed. 93 bridges destroyed and 96 signal cabins and other buildings razed.

THE

First M. . Church Launches Three Weeks' Campaign The evangelistic campaign launched Sunday morning in the First Methodist church was received with great enthusiasm by the congregation and community. If the size of the audience and the large chorus choir can be taken as criterion, the campaign of three weeks will be one of outstanding successes in church work accomplished in this city in recent years. Mr. and Mrs. Loren G. Jones, evangelists, were received most heartily, and numerous applauses greeted them as they filled their respective places on the program. Mrs. Jones at the piano, proved to her hearers, her unusual accomplishments. Mr. Jones san as a solo, "Open the Gates of the Temple." R. W. Stoakes, pastor of the church, preached two. sermons. The morning sermon was based upon the necessity of Christ as a complement of life, introducing a study of Christ as a man, as God, and as a Savior of man. This very opening service was marked by decisions for Christ The sermon in the evening treated very largely with the negative side of the same subject and reasons were placed why men failed or only partially succeeded in moral and religious life. The concluding remarks were to the same effect that men everywhere could find their ultimate attainment in Jesus Christ. : . C.-& 0. ASKS NEW DAMAGE SUIT TRIAL Argument on the motion for a new trial in the case of Bessie Meadows against the Chesapeake and Ohio raliway company was opened in Wayne circuit court Monday. This case was tried in Wayne circuit court Oct. 14. 1922, on the complaint of the plaintiff demanding $25,000 damages for personal injury sustained in a rail j way accident at Webster on Nov. 5.1 1921. At that time the jury returned! a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in' the amount of $12,000. i The defendant is now arguing on; his motion for a new trial on thel ground that the jury did not render ground that the jury did not render verdcA U?E LTV TJ COUNTY FOR SLAYER (By United Press) DAYTON, Ohio, Jan. 8. Authorities scoured Montgomery county today for John Szabo, wanted for questioning in connection with the slaying of his wife, Evelyn, declared by police to be one of the most diabolic crimes in the history of the country. Mrs. Szabo's mutilated body, .wrapped in a quilt, was found under the bea in the Szabo home at Beavertown, near here. The skull had been crushed with a hammer, several teeth knocked out and all ribs on the left side fractured, Szabo was arrested yesterday on a charge of contributing to the dehnquency or uertruae Miner, n, wnu lives with the Szabos, bu escaped enroute to jail, before authorities learned of the murder of his wife. Police declared a blody hammer found in the room with Mrs. Szabo's body was the instrument with which she was beaten to death. 7i 7 Z' : k " X?'' t 4, , rrti; ..i vQ an the murder. Police said he was ani imbecile and probably would be of little help in solving the crime. Chicago Museum Has Fossil Of North American Camel (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Jan. 8 The fossil skeleton of a North American camel is nart of the permanent collection of fossils exhibited by the Field Muse-J

urn. It was tounu ai uxibK, vv j oming, j the United States late last night, that by the museum expedition of l?0.tne home seCretary had promised to and is seven feet high. Camels of ltd j consider k postponement of the exegenus, Oxydactylus, were abundant In .,iT1 nf -tain farts

the miocene period in .North America, estimated at least 10,000,000 years ago. Their remains are found in soft sandstone strata of Wyoming, Colorado, Kansas and Nebraska. (By United Press) FORT WAYNE. A note pinned to Mrs. Matilda .Cook's dressing table which said, "I didn't get what I was after, but I return," was the only evidence the house had been entered while the family was at a show. LOGANSPORT An ordinance to prohibit anyone on the streets masked or disguised is to be presented to the city council here by Mayor Guthrie to forestall an announced Ku Klux Klan parade. ROCKPORT. While seated In a chair sewing a patch on his trousers. Rev. Richard T. Arnold, 72, Holy Roller minister, died of heart disease. CLINTON. According to retiring Prosecutor R. E. Guinn and his deputy, they have secured more than 1,000 convictions in criminal cases in Vermillion county during the past two years. LOGANSPORT. Nearly $500 worth of merchandise, part of that stolen from the Clymers and Burrows store, here, last week, was found in a maple grove near Twelve Mile, northwest of here. PLYMOUTH. Each Tuesday is to be banking day in Plymouth public schools, a savings system having been adopted for the pupils in all grades. LAPORTE. Alleging that her marriage to John Ashley, 48, on Dec. 29. was brought about by force and coercion, Correne Ashley, 16, has filed suit to have her marriage annulled. ROOSEVELT IN PEKING (By Associated Press) PEKING, Jan. 8. Kermit Roosevelt and party, who are touring the Far East arrived here today from Manchurieia. .

I All Over Indiana 1

RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

REV. WORK OFFERED PITTSBURGH PULPIT AT LARGER SALARY Rev. W. McLean Work, pastor of Reid Memorial United Presbyterian church, has been given the opportunity to accept the pastorate of the Third Presbyterian church in Pittsburgh, it was learned Monday. Although Rev. Work has not been extended a definite call it is known that the pastorate is open and that the eastern church is angling for his acceptance. It also is understood that another church has made overtures to Rev. Work. It is understood that he has been offered a salary of about $5,000. His salary here is $3,000. Rev. Work was out of town Monday and it could not be learned whether the will accept either of the offers. He is preaching at a revival in Hamilton, Ohio, this week. Came in 1921. Rev. Work came to the pastorate of the Reid Memorial church in May, 1921. Members of the local congregation would be very loath to see Rev. Work leave, Dr. W. L. Misener, chairman of the board of trustees, said Monday. "Reid Memorial church has grown under the' leadership of Dr. Work,' said Dr. Misener," and we are going to do everything in our power to keep him here. There have been about 110 accessions to the church during his stay and the church has prospered in every way." No formal carls have been received by Rev. Work, it is understood, hence the board of trustees has not received any official notice as to Rev Work's action. ST. JOHN'S BENEVOLENT OFFERING IS $3,182.60 Benevolences in the amount of $3,lh5.bfln JJllJ Lutheran church during the year, according to the annual report of the pastor, Rev. A. L. Nicklas, made before his congregation, Sunday morning. Among the recipients of the church benevolences, the largest single assignment of funds went to the Million Dollar offering -which received $787 from the local church. The benevolences and the amounts given are as follows : Institutions of the church, $644.62; home missions, $437.66; foreign missions, $104.73; native teacher in India, $o0; negro missions, $160.87; Australian missions. $8.94; missionary worker in Brazil, $17.87; mssionary worker in Mexico, $8.94; missionary church building fund, $42.35: Reformation Jubilee fund, $35; Million Dollar offering, $787; western district treasurer, $24.78; beneficiary fund, $29.76; board of aids, $44; European relief to Germany and Russia. $389.06; relief in the near east. $50; Wernle home trucks, $198.55; old synodical debt, $88.07; for an invalid pastor, $23. The report also states that during the year the pastor perfomed nine baptisms, gave 16 confirmations, married two couples and ' preached 150 sermons and officiated at 11 funerals. Holy communion was celebrated five times at which 808 persons attended. LONDON NOT TO STAY . WOMAN'S EXECUTION (By Associated Press LONDON, Jan. 8. The home office informed the Associated Press this afternoon that it had issued no statement regarding the appeal for a stay of execution in the case of Mrs. Thompson, sentenced to be hanged tomorrow for the murder of her hus band, Percy Thompson, and that it had nothing further to say. Mrs. Thompson was refused a re prieve by the Home office last. Fri day. The Daily Express of London this morniner carried the statement. accordjng to a despatch received in , submitted to him" by her lawyer. Frederick Bywaters, who actually killed Thompson, also is under sentence to be hanged tomorrow. Mary S. Ernst, 70, Dies at Home Here Mary S. Ernst, 70 years old, died Sunday morning at her home on South Fifth streett, of complications developed from a fall substained six weeks ago while on an errand of mercy. She had partially recovered from the effects of the fall when other compli cations set in and her death came as a sudden shock to all her friends. She had been a resident of this city for about 53 years. She was born in Mt. Morris, New York. Mrs. Ernst was an ideal Christian mother, doing everything that could possibly be done that would benefit her family. She was always willing to give a helping hand. She is survived by her husband, John Ernst, two sons, Charles and Frank Ernest; four daughters, Mrs. Josie Satchwell, Mrs. Gertrude Clements, Mrs. Clara Wright and Miss Elizabeth Ernst; one brother, A. A. Theobold, of Whittier, Calif, two sisters, Mrs. Gertrude Waltermann of this city and Mrs. Josie Goodrich, of Vero, Fla. Funeral services will be held Wednesday morning at 9 o'clock from the St. Andrew's Catholic church. A solemn requiem high mass will be held. Reverends Frank A. Roell and Clement Zepf will officiate. Burial will be in St. Andrew's cemetery. Friends may call at anytime. Closed League to Play Regular Games Tonight Regularly, scheduled games will be played Tuesday night by teams of the Closed league of the Community Service at the- Dennis gym. The Indianapolis Glove team withdrew from the league recently, but another team known as the Gloves has been entered. This team is composed of former Indianapolis . Glove team players and players from other Glove factories of the city. The schedule follows: 7:15 Veterans vs. Gloves. 8:00 DeMolay vs. American Legion. 8:45 Teachers V3. K..of C. . . i

SUN - TELEGRAM, RICHMOND,

Squadron Holds Service At Chester M. E. Church (Special to The Palladium) Flying Squadron, . .o. 2, of the Billy Sunday club of Richmond, of which Dr. G. C. Wilcoxen is chairman, held evangelistic services at the Chester M. E. church Sunday morning following the Sunday school services. Music was directed by Edgar L. Mote and short talks were given by all members of the squad. Everett Hunt called attention to the diverse professions rep resented by the visitors, who also in cluded, besides those mentioned, J. L. Hutchins, Oscar Crane, Arthur Smith and E. A. Daggy. EMPLOYES OF HOUSE ENDORSED MONDAY (By Associated Stress) INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 8. The pat ronage committee of which Represent ative Duffy is chairman, introduced a resolution endorsing the following per sons as employes of the house: Cal Ferris, of Muncie, for full term as minute clerk; E. M. McCaffery, ot Cambridge City, file clerk; C Batric Evans, Green castle, register clerk; Rudalph Cox, Blainfield, roll clerk; Lola, Sholty, Indianapolis, engrossing clerk; Ella M. Groninger, Indianapolis, journal clerk; Clara Gilbert, Kendallville, calendar clerk; W. T. Lytel, Logansport, reading cerk; Cary Smallwood. Wabash postmaster; Agnes Carroll, Decatur, stenographer, and W. E. Colbert, Fountain City, assistant doorkeeper. Communist Party Forms "Committee of Action" (By Associated Press) ESSEN, Jan. 8. A permanent international "committee of action" composed of 11 members, on which France is represented, was formed by the communist party of the Ruhr district at the conclusion of its congress here yesterday. An appeal was sent to the headquarters of labor organizations in the principal countries of Europe, including France, urging that workers of all nations act together. The appeal ended as follows: "Working men, the danger which menaces is gigantic. Time is pressing. Workingmen, to work!'' Short News of City Meeting at Shops A meeting will be held Wednesday noon at the Pennsyl vania railroad shops, at which the Rev. Dr. David E. Kendall of Philadelphia, will speak. Dr. Kendall is at present conducting the evangelistic services at Grace M. E. church. Prof. Harry Box, singer with the Bulgin evangelistic party, will sing at the meeting Wednesday noon. Small Fire Loss A small blaze at 211 North Twentieth street Monday morning, resulted from paper burning around the flue cap. Little damage was done. Dancinrj Lessons Planned The Y. M. I. will give a series of dancing lessons under the direction of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp, commencing Tuesday evening, Jan. 9, and continuing for six consecutive weeks, it is announced. The class will be held at the Y. M. I. club and will be for members and their friends. Unpack Exhibit Pictures Pictures for the twenty-sixth Indiana artists' exhibit were being unpacked Monday as they arrived from out of town and were being removed to the Art gallery where they will be hung Friday. One hundred and thirty-three pictures have been sent for the exhibition. Hold Shop Meeting. An interesting shop meeting was held at noon Monday at the Pennsylvania railroad shops by Loren G. Jones, evangelist and singer, who is helping in the revival campaign at the First Methodist church. Mr. Jones spoke to the men for a few minutes, by way of introduction to a song which he sang without accompaniment. Taking this gospel hymn as a basfs for further remarks, he endeavored to show his audience the privilege of a Christian life. He concluded his bit of service with a most enthusiastic song service. The colored men there helped Mr. Jones sing some negro spirituals. About 150' men were present. Another meeting will be held Friday noon. Abandonment Allege d Abandon ment is alleged to be the cause for the suit for divorce which was filed in Wayne circuit court Monday by Nellie Harter against her. husband, Lewis A. Harter. Suit on Account A suit on account in which $350 is demanded was filed in Wayne circuit court Monday by the Jones Hardware company against William Strikeleather. jiuuiiiiHtHinmiitinHMHHH'HsmHmi'iitHnmiiHituiiHimu

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We will sell at Public Auction at 2 p. m. on 1 Wednesday, January 10th, 1923 on the premises Good five room cottage and lot located at 804 N. 14th street. Terms one-third cashone-third in six months and one-third in 12 months. American Trust & Savings Bank s Commissioner. Omer C. Plaft, Auctioneer.

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IND., MONDAY, JAN. 8, 19Z3.

ANTI-SALOON LEAGUE "BOUGHT" DRY LAW, SAYS W. 0. FOULKE WASHINGTON. Jan 8. Charges that the Anti-Saloon League has' "bought" the Volstead act " with congressional patronage and that the federal prohibition enforcement service"is corrupted from top to bottom by a set of depraved political officials appointed under tne spoils system," are in a letter written by William D. Foulke, vice president of the National Civil Service Reform League, to S. E. Nicholson, secretary of the Anti-Saloon League, made public by Mr. Foulke. Mr. Nicholson according to Mr. Foulke, recently declared that application of the civil service ystem to the prohobition enforcement service, established under the Volstead act, would have been to jeopardize the pagsage of the enforcement bill when it was before congress. In answer Mr. Foulke contended: "That means that you have bought the bill with congressional patronage and paid for it not with your own money, but far worse, with offices paid for out of taxes levied upon the people. I do not at all suppose you understood the immorality of that act, but in any reasonable system of ethics it was far more indefensible than opposing the civil service law." Ignorant If Not Crooked Referring to the prohibition enforcement service, Mr. Fouike's letter said: "The service is' corrupted from top to bottom by a set of depraved political officials appointed under the spoils system which you promoted. Even those who seem anxious to enforce the law are so ignorant and inefficient that they make illegal searches and ! arrests in violation of the fourth amendment to the constitution. President Harding himself announced in his message that they had become a national scandal and called upon the governors for help in that for which the national force, if decently administered, ought to be adequate." Singing Evangelists To Entertain Council The Virginia Asher Business Women's Council will hold its regular meetings Tuesday noon and evening at the Red Men's hall. Mr. and Mrs. Loren Jones, who are directing the singing at the First M. E. church revival, will sing at the noon and evening meetings. All members of the club who can possibly come are urged to be present. The council is invited to attend the services at the First M. E. church in a body Tuesday evening and jail are urged "to attend the council meeting and then go to the church. High Orchestra to Give Popular Program Jan. 19 A popular program will be played by the high school "A" orchestra at its next concert of the winter's series, which will be held the evening of Jan. 19 in the high school auditorium. The soloist for the concert will be announced later by Conductor Maddy. The orchestra's renditions for the concert are to include the following compositions: L'Arlesienne Suite Bizet Unfinished Symphony Schubert Air, G String Bach Valse Triste Sibbellius Salut D'Amour Elgar Sigurd and Jorsalfor suite Grieg Park Avenue Church Has Musical Vespers (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Jan. 8. A vesper service consisting entirely of music without a sermon or a prayer, was conducted yesterday at the Park avenue Baptist church, of which John D. Rockefeller is a member. The service, termed "the ministry of music," was said to have been approved by Mr. Rockefeller, but he was prevented by illness from being among the congregation. The Rev. Dr. Cornelius Woelfkin, pastor, sat in the choir, but the service was conducted by Dr. Harold V. Milligan, organist, and Livio Mannucci, cellist. The lights were dimmed at times to reflect the moods expressed by the music. Similar vesper servives will be conducted for the coming three Sundays. INVENTS NEW HORN BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Jan. 8. Dr. A. L. Foley has invented a horn which he says will liberate the sound much more easily than those In ordinary use now. Dr. Foley said the horns of today retain most of the sound in the small ends. EAL

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Legion Officers Will Be Elected Wednesday Election and installation of officers for the Harry Ray Post, No. 65, American Legion, will be held in the post rooms Wednesday night, according to an announcement Monday by C. RUmpleby. adjutant. Besides the elec

tion and installation ceremonies, there 1 is other business of importance to be transacted and each member of the local post is urged to be present. CHAUTAUQUA DEFICIT WILL BE DISCUSSED RICHMOND Chautauqua guarantors are asked to meet at the Y. M. C. A. Monday evening, Jan. 15, at 7:30 o'clock to consider meeting a deficit suffered fro mthe last assembly, according to a letter sent to 1922 guarantors, by O. F. Ward, president, and F. F. Rigs, secretary of the association. The letter says that for the first time in its history, the Richmond Chautauqua has had a serious deficit which has nearly used up the surplus fund of the organization. The possibility of an assessment against 1922 guarantors is suggested. A de cision will be reached as to whether

the Chautauqua as an institution shallf witnesses wa3 made by Seems

be continued or abandoned. RICH BUSINESS MAN BELIEVED KIDNAPPED (By United Press) CHICAGO, Jan. 8. A nation-wide search for Hugo Schlesinger, 63, wealthy Milwaukee business man who mysteriously disappeared after ehecking out of a hotel nere naay was . n . . was kidnapped. ! Schlesinger was an uncle of Arman and Harry Schlesinger, millionaire owners of "the Goodrich Tire and Rubber company. Authorities in Chicago and Milwaukee have searched hotels and hospitals since Friday in an unavailing effort to locate the missing man. The kidnapping theory was strengthened by a mysterious call to the Milwaukee police last night from some one in Chicago demanding the telephone number of Louis Schlesinger, a brother. Police believed this was the first step toward a demand for ransom. Friday Schlesinger paid his bill at the LaSalle hotel and has not been seen since. Prof. Herman Schlesinger of the University of Chicago another nephew of the missing man told police his j uncle had been in failing health re cently and was childish. Iron Ore Shipments From Lake Superior Ports See Increase (By Associated Press) ASHLAND, Wis., Jan. 8. There was shipped from the five ore shipping ports of Lake Superior Superior, Duluth. Two Harbors, Ashland and Marquette and Escanaba, Mich., a total of 42,613,134 tons of iron ore during the season of 1922 according to reports tabulated here. The figures constitute the bulk of the output of the Lake Superior iron i mines, the Mesaba ranee in Minesota, ; tVia (loov,hir in Mirhizan and Wisronsin and the Vermillion, Marquette and Minenomee ranges in the Michigan peninsula. She Lake Superior mines produce 80 per cent of the entire supply of the country. Ore production has increased enormously. It is twice that of 1900 and 20 times greater than that of I860. Have Second Confession In Louisville Slaying (By United Press) LOUISVILLE, Ky., Jan. 8. Police claimed to have a eecond confession today in the "hammer murder" of Gus Noffsinger, wealthy Southland Coal company official, in his back yard at Henderson, last week. Ollie Gibbons, brought here for safe keeping after his arrest, on the strength of an alleged confession by Noffsinger's widow, that she and Gibbons plotted to kill Noffsinger, collect hit insurance and eet married, has himself confessed to the slaying, authorities declared today. Gibbons at first denied any connection with the! crime. Mrs. Noffsinger was to testify j before a grand jury at Henderson to-1 Hot- ClTta V f ff i r t i r-' t hndv l 9 c fnimd ! viuj. v. 11. ' . . ' ' ' ' . . -vat the door of his garage in Henderson the morning of Dec. 31. His skull had been battered in with a miner's hammer. or

ESTATE

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12 MEN HELD UP BY , MOB TO TAKE STAND IN LOUISIANA TRIAL

(By Associated Press) BASTROP, La., Jan. 8. Twelve wit nesses, men who were held up by tlu same black hooded gang which kidnap ped Watt Daniels and Thomas RIch ard8 others who found the bodies of the two men floating in Lake La Fourche, and several others, the nature of whose testimony could not be ascertained, will be called as witnesses at tomorrow's session of the open hear ing in the inrestigation of masked band depredations in Morehouse parish. Two of the witnesses to be heard when the hearing is resumed at 1C o'clock tomorrow are Sidney White and "Nip" Echol, who were in the same automobile as Daniels, when they were stopped on the road between Bastrop and Mer Rouge and five of the party seized by the hooded raiders and taken into the woods. J. L. Daniels, father of Watt, was on the witness stand when the hear ing was adjourned Saturday, and is expected to be the first witness "called tomorrow. Announcement of the list Walmsley, assistant to Attorney General Coco, designated by Mr. Coco to act as spokesman for the corps of state legal representatives conducting the inquiry. Famous Hebrew Scholar. To Be Buried Tomorrow (By United Press) CHICAGO, Jan. 8. Funeral services for Dr. Emil Custave Hirsh, one olf ( 11 n iiiubl 11117111111 riii. i i 1 1 1 r- w wt iiuidia & . :n v v-u v . S row. Hirsh died at his home here from pneumonia after a short illness. As pastor of the Sini3l congregation for 43 years, Hirsh was in great demand as a pulpit orator In all parts of the country. He was 71 years old and is survived by his widow and three daughters. AN UP-TO-DATE DRESS FOR THE GROWING GIRL ?S7 4187. This makes a splendid school rial, or in checked or plaid woolen with arimmine of braid or a finish of now so popular side closing. The sleeve may be finished in wrist or elbow length. The Pattern is cut in 4 Sizes: 6, 8, 10, and 12 years. A 10 year size requires 2ai yards of 44 inch material. Name Address City Size A pattern of this illustration mailer to any address on receipt of 12 cen: i silver or 6tamps. Addre Patwn nn3.... Address PtternDepartmervt patterns will be mailed to your ad A 1. ui C23 witillil Vile W fccil Send 12c In silver or stampji foour UP-TO-DATE FALL and WINTEI 1922-1923 BOOK of 'FASHIONS. saie ypm.uum