South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 317, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 13 November 1921 — Page 3
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 13. 192!
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
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ICE MAN'S HEAD BARES WEIRD MYSTERY Skull With Two Bullet Holes in It Unearthed in Michigan Warehouse. fUlANI) ItAl'IDS. Mich.. Nov. 12. The h'-ad cj a man., with two bulI t hoka in tho forehead, was found by workmen hej tolay In a j i'.tlf of wawte pappr at the warehouse of a local storage company. With th5 head were found a Mrody shirt and 4 bank book showing drpolu of more than J3.000 In a bank at Ivifayette, Ind. Cancelled chr:ks in the bank book, signed by O. I Ilasor for the "11. and It. W. company" were drawn on the Tippecanoe Iyan and Trust company of Lnfayetto. lectors who examined the head expressed the belief that the man bad t-en dead about a year. The head wa.i scorched presumably in it fire in th war.houe August. The taper bale in which the head w.'ih found was snt to the warehouse several months aeo by the American I'.ox Hoard company of (ir.iri'l U pid.. Workman were :i;...ut to pla e the parer in the reO i a!'ns' machim wh n Ihuy made 1'iir discovery. not iiAr.wirrn: boy. L.UWYKTTi:. Ind.. Nov. 12. I.rri'd I-Boy Keasr. Purdue -raduite, who-:- head was supposed t hiv- be.n found in a bale of w;it- paper at (irand K.ipids. Mich. i il 2: -'!rd t.. N-w York ';. according: to hU brother. II. t2. U'-a.4-:)!-, a f-tuI-nt at Purdue university. ÜKisor and O. L. (Red) Hart nd Harry (I. Wilson formed a company while in school known a.s the H. and R. W. company and shipped potatoes and apples into Lafayette and hjM them. The company was tli.--s.-dv-d some time au-o. How the bank 'x K and cancelled checks c ime to b- with the head could not be accounted for by the brother. DEMAND 5 ROAD HOUSES BE SHUT Complaints Filed Against Several Places Near Terre Haute, Indiana. INDIANAPOLIS. Nov. 12. Complaints were filed in the federal court here today by U. S. District Attorney Frederick VanNuys. askQlng injunctions closing live road houses near ' Terre Haute, which were charged a having been operated for several month in flagrant violation of the Volstead prohibition enforcement law. ARRAIGN HANK iri:.I. VINCBNNIvS. Nov. 12. Arthur Jenkins, former vice president of th Wabash bank here, who was arrested at Indianapolis a few days ago. was arraigned in justice of the ' peace court here today, charged with 1 forgery. Jenkins is alleged to have ; used money beloncsng to the banK to inwst In a motion picture corporation. Jenkins waived examination, and, in default of $10,000 bond, was taken to jail. MAIIi KOHHKIt SH.Ti:Ci:i). IMMANAFOMS, N'ov. 12 Hoy II. Wheeler, of Indianapolis, found guilty of disposing f irojerty stolen from the malls, today was sentenced l.y .ludffe A. Ii. Anderson in U. S. district court to serve IS months In a federal prison. Duane Sanborn. .f Indianapolis, who pleaded bullty to st en Uns a lMslan kingdom bond of $l.f-)f from the malls, also was sotitenced to pris?i for IS months. WOMAN IDLICi: IIi;.D l ITS. INDIA.VArOIlS. Nov. 1J. Clara l;;irnfide, vhi'-f of th wnmcn'.i r o1 department of Indianapolis and s,0,.r(tary of tho 1 nt rnational Asso- . Mtion of Polio..' women, today re-rtnr-d from tlx Indianapolis dt---.i t men!. 50c DINNER 1 1 A. I. to M I'. M. WASHINGTON !Li:.STAt"lL.VT A. CAriTTKUIA Sa rHHL and AfttT-TlK'ater Tartlet 11 SiHxdalty a School Children Can not be taught too early the absolute necessity of a perfect and antiseptic mouth wash for the preservation of sood teeth, a sweet breath and perfect health. At All Drug Stores LIQUID ANTISEPTIC CAR SALE xor Daiance owing finance company. Fords, Dodges. Buicks. Nash, etc., in good condition. 744 S. MAIN ST. Liberal Terms r 1 1 r
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j byterlan home and foreign mission- j ary s-ocieties and the board of tustenation of the Presbyterian church I'er.eui ny provisions coniainea in the will of the late Mrs. Viola A. Hooke, of Winona lake. The will has been Hied for probate here. It la May IlilMs. of Altoona. Ix.. a Ister of the testator, and Hattle I Knox, Lafayette. Ind.. a eister, one $500 Liberty bond each. Zihah N". Linglo, Cherokee, la., one SSOO ; Warsaw and Winona Lake Hallway Co. bond. The husband of the tes-! tator, Robert H. Hooke, 13 to re-j ceive the interest from the bonds ; during his life. W. Brooke Knox, a brother, and Zillah N. Lingle share alike bonds of the Winona Interurban Itailway Co. In the name of the testator. The Woman'.! Iioard of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian church, 11,000. Tho board of eustenation of the Presbyterian church $1,000. FOUR INJURED AS TRAIN HITS AUTO achine Hurled Into Canal I Ly Freight Train at Connersville, Ind. CONNFRSVILLi;. Nov. 12. persons Were injured early FOU! today 1 when an automobile was struck by a Big Four railroad freitrht train at First street and Grand avenue here. ..... ana huriti Into the canal. The three occupants of the machine were rescued by Sherman Pyfrin, who cut a hole in the top of the car. Mrs. William MeQuhstion, Mrs. Augusta Sims and K. l. Michaels, occupant of the automobile, suffered cubs about tho face and head by broken glas. from the windshield. P. J. Bradley, of Cincinnati, a brake-
man, who was riding the first of Hstrn to lne pro-League suggestions four cars- being push-td ahead of theof yec.v of State Hughes and Sec'y engine, was caught between the car!of commerce Hoover, or how far the and the automobile and seriously in- president would be able to persuade
Jured. It is believed ho suffered a broken leg. Persons- In the machine were en route to their homes In this county after a visit at tho home of Mrs. Joseph Boehner, where a death had occurred. hi:rri;rt iioovkr invitkh. INDIANAPOLIS. Nov. 12. Her bert Hoover, secretary of commerce i has been invited to attend as a gueet : of honor the CCth annual conven-j tion of the national Brick Manu-j far.turers' association to be held in ! Indianapolis Jan. 23 to 23, 1922, It j was announced today. fiiu: IIAZI-N clubiiousi:. Srli:LBVTLLE, Ind., Nov. 12. ! The Blue River Country club'3 club-! hou.se, two miles north of Shelby-,' ville, was destroyed by fire early to- I day. ' The lo.ss wai estimated at $12,000. Live coals dropping from an open fireplace are believed to have started the fire. France in normal tim-e.s makes about 26.000.OCO pairs of gloves a year. fie nnlne. "X letrolas rur ALL Record 5 vä A Say It With Music f, .sUEET L.1V h 'Whltcrtvan' Orch. jfi
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GHOST AT PARLEY Senate rrceoncilahles' Fear Nations Will Bring Up Idea Again. WASHINGTON. Nov. 12. Senate "irreconcilabU-s" are convinced that the League of Nations will prove the Banrjuo's ghost at tho armament limitations conference. Their fears and alarms have been increased by confidential advices 1 'they have received from overseas that the British. French and Italian delegates to the conference have 1 come fully prepared to discuss changes in the League covenant ! which would make it fit In with Pres't Harding's idea of an "associi ation of nations." I Senator Borah (R.). of Idaho, chief spokesman of the senate eleI ment whose watchword is "No en tangling foreign alliances," Is of the opinion that, economically and financially, the United Suites is being slowly and secretly eased into the League. It is known at the capito! that it was chiefly under British and French pressure that the recent GeIneva convention of the League care fully sidestepped the moot question of world disarmament. It was decided to await developments at the Washington conference. This, in Borah's judgment, was in line with the avowed policy of the British and French governments to nave trie League wm on me wasnington conference before attempting ito dispose of the major world prob I Irnic rtA.ifrnntlnc Vi frtriAf lems confronting the former, It is no new thing for the British und French to be anxious to make concessions to the American government if the United States were willing to be drawn into a league modified in accordance with American ideas. Will President Listen? The nub of the situation is, of course, how far the president would the senate to agree to 'League covenant. a modified Another determining factor of the situation is the historic fact that for'i'AKZAW at the ürpheum Mon., Tues. and Wed. COAL KELLER. RAMSEY COAL CO. Main 477 Lincoln 1349
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mer Pres't Wilson promised much t the Versailles conference, but was able to perform nothing when he returned home and found the senate standing in the way of the ntry of the United States into the League. Rut Mr. Wilson's rarty was In the minority In the senate. Pres't Harding's party Is not. although It does
inot command the two-third's vote 'essential to the ratification of a treaty or an international agree ment. Pres't Harding's influence with most republican senators is an open question where foreign relations are Involved. He was, however, .able to win nearly all of them and even some of those "Irrec-on-cilably" opposed to the League, like Johnson of California, and Brandegee, of Connecticut over to ratifica tion of the German, Austrian and Hungarian treaties. They split on the Borah proposal for free tolls for American coastwise vessels using the Panama canal, although warned by Sen. Lodge that there were "compelling reasons" why the administration did not favor It on the eve of the armament limitation conference. Underwood Favored Treaties. Sen. Underwood, of Alabama, the senate minority leader, supported the German, Austrian and Hungarian treaties, but he was unable to line up many democratic senators for them. How far hl3 sympathies would lend themselves to whatever i suggestions for an "association of nations" the conference In which he is to participate may evolve is problematical. The recent treaty j fight In the senate indicated that Underwood's Influence with a number of his democratic: colleagues is negative when pitted against tho element In the democratic party represented by Mr. Wilson. But ratification of the treaties demonstrated beyond peradventure that enough democratic senators are no longer susceptible to the Wilson influence to permit an almost solid republican majority to carry out the administration's foreign policies. Sen. Underwood and the democratic senators who usually share his view of the foreign questions in reality
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International pact the president and the state department may negotiate Is Impossible, but the 'lrreconcllables," like Borah, of Idaho, and LaFollette, of Wicor-sln, are now so few on the republican side as to be almost negligible, and comparatively few democratic votes are therefore necessary to insure ratification. Senate Different Now. The senate situation is accordingly obviously different so far as the present administration is concerned with foreign affairs than It was when Mm. Wilson presided at the white house and directed the activities of the state department and replaced one secretary of state with another whenever he failed to grasp the Wi'sonlan purpose and viewpoint. And it is knowledge of this changed situation which Is believed to have rekindled the hopes and desires of Great Britain, France and Italy for participation in the League of Nations not . a Wihon-L 1 o y d George-Clemenceau league, but a Harding - Hughes - Hoover - Lodge league by the United States as a sequel to, or perhaps the direct outcome of, the armament limitation conference. Guitar tvas flntroduced to Europe by the Spaniards, who copied It from the Moors. MA IS CURABLE Write rae today and 1 will send you a free trial of my mild, soothing, guaranteed treatment that will prove it. Stops the itching and heals permanently. Send no money Just write me that Is all you have to do. Address Dr. Cannaday, 2050 Park Square, Srdalla, Mo. urplu 70Net i Victor Records Tit ALL Machine
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110 wxi ni:edi:d at notke damk Vale has a Bowl with a seating capaclty of people. N'otro Dame's largest crowd has never ex- 1 ceeded 20,000. We've got. without!
a doubt, the greatest football team In America and we ought to hous J them In a real bowl. Help this 1 Kndowment Fund and you help build a bowL 317tf Turkey r?d coloring matter Is ob- ; talned fron the roots of tho mad-1 der plant. BL.OEADS GO QUICK BY THIS SIMPLE METHOD ftlaekheada tig ones or little OLe soft ones or hard one? on any part of the body, po quick by a pimple method that Juft dissolves them. To do this pet about two ounces of colenite powder ! frora your druggist srrlnkle a little a ! a tot, wet ppon'e rub over tbe black- ! heads briskly for a few seconds and j wash off. You'll wonder where tbe black- ; beads hare gone. The calonlte powder . and tbe bot water have Jnt dissolved them. Pinching and squeezing black- i heads only opens the pores of tbe fkin ! and leave them open and unsightly and ; unifs ids oiacKneauB are Dig ana eon tliey will not come out, while the simple application of calonlte powder and water dissolves them right out, leaving the skin poft and the pores In their natural condition. You can get calonlte powder at any drug store and If you are troubled with these unsljrhtly blemishes you should certainly try this simple method. Adv. fr" MONEY Lozjied those out of EMPLOYMENT to buy COAL and Winter Needi Leant made on Furnitur, Plane Vtrtrola and A a to. At Lowest Interest Kate Fixed by tbe State, J INDIANA FINANCE CO. I Boom 209 J. M. 8. Bldr. Corner Main and Washington. Take Elevator
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