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The Journal News from Hamilton, Ohio • Page 1

Publication:
The Journal Newsi
Location:
Hamilton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FOREMOST IN THE PEOPLED 1 THE HAMILTON DAILY NEWS WBATBEB SHOWERS Detailed I.Celt. ESTABLISHED 1879. (Associated Press) HAMILTON, OHIO. SATURDAY, MAY 10, 1924. 16 PAGES TODAY Price IVelve Per Single Copy Tiro Onti Mothers Girls' Week, andSweetHome Pelebrttions That Appeal To Best'Sentiments Of Human Life And Joyful Memories.

Tomorrow is Mothers' Day and the ioroing week is to be celebrated in various orders exercises as the Week of Mothers and daughters. Governor Donahey has made a special appeal for the observance of the thrqughout Ohio, commencing tomorrow and the governors of other have Issued similar proclamations. When' it 'cornea to a week or a day or an hour or even a ijioment of appreciative consideration of Mothers and Daughters, the thought comprehends everything that relates to home, sweet home. Preparatory to the observance of Mothers' Day, some children were being catechized to home life when a. little boy beat all of Webster's by SCORES OVERCOME BY GAS FUMES AUTO BANDITS STEAL 330,000 Registered Mail Pouches At East-Chicago, Taken-Money Sent For Payroll-One Shipment Contained $20,000 Detroit Lovers Not Only Laugh at Locksmiths But Measles Quarantine, Elope and Are Wed He might-be out trailing along with his mother through the market place or elsewhere, but to that youngster neither the house nor the hearthstone, nor the table nor the cradle was home without Mother.

"Inherent in the heart of man is tho love for home. The homo is the unit of civilization. About this shrine clusters all the virtues, all the memories, all the inspirations which make the race worthy of its progressive, glorious destiny. Whatever it may be, palace, stately a Kion, modern comfortable dwelling, cabin, cot or tent in the wilderness or on the sands.o{ the desert, the place where man' sets up his lares and penates is home, the one dear and sacred spot to which his affections cling, throughout life. It is there that love comes to work her enchanting spells, there where the patter of little feet is heard, there where service and sacrifice most embodied, there where tho etrength and virtues of states and em- CHICAGO, May automobile bandits who held up tho East Chicago, Indiana, posteffice, escaped with between $25,000 and $30,000, ac- cojding to estimates of postoffice inspectors here.

The money was being shipped by pires germinate geon to the end and grow and bur- that the world may become a happier and better world." "She Did Not Work for Pay" Under the above.heading in the "Goose Quill," B. K. Hanafourde; of Savannah wrote: "She never "earned" any money. She lives on a Georgia farm, but she lives on almost every other farm. She is somebody's mother, maybe your own.

She has earned nothing. No, tout in her thirty years has served 432,083 meals; she has made garments, 32,000 loaves of 75132 pies, 1,500 gallons of lard; the grown 1,432 bushels and 1,550 quarts of all kinds of fruits, and haa raised 7,660 chickens, churned 6,430 pounds of butter, put up jars of preserves, scrubbed 177,725 pieces of laundry; And she has put in 25,839 hours -sweeping and washing and scrubbing. At accented prices for this work it 'worth $115,486.50. She can't retire on her earnings--she has to keep on. Not earning! No.

do you define the ordinary AmeTican wo- jnan's contribution to her family?" "I read this somewhere in the past. It should be printed in every newspaper in the land. It is a story of millions of women. It Is a tale that; is not often told. Captains of industry are given pages.

Military chieftains are pictured and portrayed. Prize fighters are worked upon by feature writers and camera photographers. Hundreds of newspapers and thousands of writers place in cold type the fistic glories of the champion maulers of the world and the promoters of the game. Fair officers and directors are praised for their public spirit and fair managers are cussed and discussed. Woman is the maker of the home as well as its jaistress.

She is the one superb and never-dying institution of the -race. She makes the sacrifices; sb.e toils from dawn until dark; her work is never ended until her eyelids are kissed down 'on the bed death. She is the wealth-maker of the world, Jbut man may not believe it; she Is the angel of mercy of the world (Continued on Pago 7) LANGLEY CASE TO REACH JURY LATESATURDAY Conviction Carries Fine Of $10,000 And 2 Years In Jail registered mail from the Federal Re-! serve Bank here to the United States National Bank of Indiana Harbor at I East Chicago. The money is to have been intended to meet at) least one payroll as one shipment consisted of $20,000. The i-obbers selected four registered pouches Miss Helen Knmman, eighteen'ycars among 15 sacks of mail dispatched I old, was quarantined in her home by from Chicago-and escaped.

the illness of her younger sister. The robbers lied with the currency clair Boike. her fiance was im- an automobile in which they patient. With notes pasted on the followed a car from the glass panels of the French doors, he COVINGTON, May testimony remains to be given in the case of Congressman John W. Langley, Kentucky, and two co-defendants, being triad in Federal court hero on two counts of an indictment charging conspiracy to sell and transport whisky from the Belle of Anderson distillery near Lawrenccburg, in 1921.

Conviction carries a sentence of two years in the penitentiary and $10,000 fine on each of the two counts for each defendant. Milton Lipschutz, son of a Philadelphia wholesale liquor dealer, and Albert F. Slater, former clerk in the office of the.Federal prohibition director at Philadelphia, are defendants with Langley. RECEIVE BIDS ON ROAD BONDS Commissioners Get $45 More In Sale For Paving Three Miles. IABE MABJINj I Mra.

Mln Nuccnt Mill llfln' with her hiubaad, aa an orphan. How fcrcott A revised bid of $715.40, par and accrued interest offered by Stranahan, Harris and Oatis, Toledo, was high bid for $83,000 rond improvement bonds when bids were opened by the county commissioners Friday. The company hod submitted an earlier bid of par, accrued m- tercst and $660.40 premium. Proceeds of the bonds are to be used for the improvement of the Cincinnati-Columbus pike the Hsniilton-Butler County line to the Butler-Warren county line, through Union township, about three miles long. It is an unimproved stretch between two paved portions of the highway.

Others bid par, accrued interest and the following premiums: Title Guaranty and Trust Cincinnati, A. E. Aub and Cincinnati, $105; seasongood Mayor Cincinnati, $252; Asscl, Gaetz and Moerlein, Cincinnati, $58; Provident avings Bank Trust Cincinnati, Otis nnd Cleve land, Trust $228; A. T. Bell and Toledo, N.

S. Hill and Cincinnati, $458. Stephcnson, Perry Stacey and Chicago, $330; W. L. Slayton and Toledo, Breed Elliott and Harrison, Cincinnati, Poor and Cincin- nai), Brnun Bosworth Co.

Toledo, Herrick and Cleveland bid $522.11 but the bid arrived joo late to be read with the others. Commissioners planned an early awar.l of the bond issue. Miss Clara Nagel Undergoes Operation It will be news to many Hamilton people that Miss Clara Nagel, formerly of this city, has undergone a serious operation at Miners' hospital, Raton, New Mexico. While the operation was successful in every way and Miss Nagel is recovering, yet she would be pleased to htear her many friends and acquaintances In Hamilton and vicinity. Pennsylvania Railroad Station at Indiana mail had just )een discharged from an eastbound train.

After reaching the postoffice the jandits held up five poAtal employes nd quickly sorted the tfour registered pouches from the other mail. A squad of Chicago detectives were rushed to the Southeastern sec- of the city to patrol the roads eading htre from Indiana while other cities and towns in Northern Indiana kept watch of all roads. conveyed to his sweetheart his inten- TRAFFIC JAM IN TUNNELS CAUSE Exhaust From Autos Fills Space-Many Carried To Open Air-Carmen's Strike In Pittsburgh Causes Tieup tion of eloping. Miss Kamman pastec a note on her. side of the glass door agreeing to his plans.

Ignoring the Board of Health quarantine, the girl left the house 'and now the couple are receiving the congratulations of friends after obtaining family forgiveness. POSTPONE RURAL SCHOOLS MEET Officials Find Fairgrounds Track Is Virtual Swamp. The track and field meet to have been hold by th erural schools of Builer county al tho fairgrounds Saturday was postponed because of a wet track. Tho date for running off the meet has not been set. Joseph M.

Fichter superintendent of the county schools, will meet with the principals trtie rural schools and decide a new date for the meet. The tract nt the fair-grounds' was a virtual swamp when viewed by.of- ficials early Saturday morning. REPORT ON JAPS Conference Again Gets Exclus- sion Bill--Would End Agreement. WASHINGTON, May Japanese exclusive provision in the Immigration bill will become effective July 1, 1924, under a new agreement reached today by HOUMC and Senate conferees. WASHINGTON, May The Senate and House conferees on the Jinnngi'aticn bill were conformed again today for Ihu time, with the (ask of reaching an ngrcen--'nt on the effective date 01 the Japanese exclusion provision.

The conference report was cd by the House late yesterday 191 to 171, because of the recommendation that exclusion be made operative March 1, 1925 ami the President bo required to negotiate abrogation of the gentlemen's 'agreement with the Tokin government. A renewal of the conference -was arranged for today, shortly after the House acted. Mrs. Gath Wins In Autopsy Case The petition in error of the ican Casualty Co. was dismissed from the court of appeals by an entry filed here Friday in the suit brought by Moggie L.

Gath. She sought judgment, on an accident insurance policy. The company asked Jor authority to conduct an autopsy. This was refused when the' court determined the request ha not been made until after the body of Charles W. Gath on whom the policy had been issued, wns buried.

The company then filed petition in error in tho court of appeals. CARDINAL GOES TO 'OWNPEOPLE' FOR WELCOME Mundelein Received By New York-Welcomed By Mayor NEW YORK, May 10. George, Cardinal Mundelflin, of Chicago, who returned to his native land aboard the Berengaria last night and was greeted by a series of impressive ceremonies leaves today for his arch diocese, having expressed a desire to return as speedily as possible to 'his own popple." It was almost eleven o'clock last night when the Cardinal, after an eventful day, received tho oflidal welcome of Afayor Hylan at a banquet given in his honor by the Cfii- cago delegation of clergy and laymen In reply he said he was especially glad to be greeted in the city of his birth and the home of so many generations of his family. "Little did I think," he said, "some forty odd years ago, as a boy on the East Side of this city, that one day the Mayor of more than six million peoplo would be here to bid me welcome. I am especially glad to be welcomrd by Mayor Hy'lan, whom I knew for so many years when we both dwelt in obscurity in the neighboring borough of Brooklyn.

MRS. H. M. WORK CALLED SUDDENLY Wife Of Interior Secretary Dies When In Auto After Shopping Trip WASHINGTON, May Hubert Work, wife of the Secretary of the -died suddenly Friday when in her automobile. She hud suffered for several years from spasmodic attacks.

She wns 64 years of age. Mrs. Work had been shopping and was returning to her hotel when stricken. With her were her maid and her chauffeur. Mrs.

Work wns born at Madison, lad. She was married to Mr. Work at Greeley, in 1887. Soon afterward they went to Pueblo, where they since had resided. World Fliers Now At Atka Island CORDOVA, Three United Alaska, May army aviators encirclig the globe landed safely at Atka Island at fl o'clock last nig-ht, Pacific Coast time, after a journey of 630 miles, from Atka Island in the Aleutian Archipelago, according to a wireless message today.

PITTSBURGH, May of persons were overcome by automobile exhaust fumes in the twin liberty tunnels through the South hills hero today. Increased traffic in the tunnels a a consequence of strike of 3,200 street car motormcn and conductors, caused the tubes to. become choked with the gases. First aid crews of the United States bureau of mines and the city fire depart- 5 wero rushed'to the scene. When the rescue men reached the tubes they donned oxygen helmets and went in.

The tunnels were closed to all traffic and soon the rescuers werfc busy carrying out men and women who had collapsed. They were givon first aid-treatment a number reported in a serious Condition were sent to hospitals. Tbc tunnels from the main gateway into the city from five thickly populated suburbs. With the street cars tied up the tubes were crowded to capacity this morning, hundreds of motorists using this inlet to Pittsburgh from beyond the south hills. Shortly after 3 a.

m. a traffic jam tied up many machines in the tubes. The drivers, it is said, failed to shut off their motors and soon the tunnels were qlouded -with fumes and practically every occupant of the machines was affected. When the tunnels were thrown open to the public several months ago it wns discovered that air shafts sunk from Mount Washington, were insufficient to carry off the deadly gases. Bureau of Mine men conducted r-experiments and found that persons passing through the tubes -were affected by carbon poisoning.

The tunnels, they said, were safe as long as motoris'ts kept moving. The Allegheny county commissioners when ndvised of today's accident, ordered the tunnels closed. The Pittsburgh Railway Company will resume street car service here shuttle trains, motor buses and walk- ng in order to reach the city fof work and business. Superintendent of Police Edward J. Brophy announced that all the hn been taken to the various aarns of the Pittsburgh Railways Company between 12 and 1 o'clock this morning without the occurence of any trouble.

Preparing for emergencies, Superintendent Brophy ordered all patrolmen and detectives 12-hour shift instead of the cus. tonmry eight hours. Special details have been assigned to guard the car barns. Carmen and officials of the railway company have agreed upon ar- hitration but are deadlocked over the question of how and what to arbitrate. No statement was forthcoming from the railways' headquarters as whether or not the company, would endeavor to operate its lines with the employment of other men.

The cai-men have asked an increase of from 67 cents an hour tc 75 and 77 cents an hour. Tobacco Without Nicotine Forecast PARIS, May State Tobacco Factory Laboratory has discovered a process for removing all the nicotine from tobacco without, it is claimed, affecting its flavor. A plant now is being erected for the manufacture of. the new brand on a large scale and it is hoped to place it on sale within two months. on Monday morning, using men from other cities to replace striking inotor- and conductors, it was officially announced today.

More than 500 out- of-town men are available to man the cars, it was said, and ethers will be brought in later. The men struck at midnight, following disagreement over arbjtra- tion. They ask a wage increase from 67 to 77 cents an hour. SEKKS J100 DAMAGES AFTKR A CRASH One hundred dollars damages are sought by James Niblock, Middletown in a petition on appeal filed in common pleas court Friday against Milo Wetzel. Niblock alleges he was driving north on the Ulxie highway March 1, 1924, when Wetzel (n attempting to pasa him, crashej into' bit automobile, More Than 8,000.00 Paid to Holders of Hamilton Daily News Travel Accident and Pedestrian Insurance Policies.

Nearly every week sees the growing of the list of peoplo who have reccivorl benefits from their Travel Accident and Pedestrian Insurance Policies secured from HAMILTON DAILY NEWS. This list has grown steadily until considerably more than $8,000.00 hns been paid policy holders to "date. Numbered among this list arc several claims for $1,000.00 each for death--tile remainder is for accidental injuries received under the clauses of the policy. 'There what has just been hrond coverage paid the following claim this NEWS policy has: which shows Allen Weaver of Oxford, Ohio, was hauling baled straw with a team and wagon. The team of horses became scared and ran away throwing Mr.

Weaver and a portion of the load of straw off wagon. The result was that Mr. Weaver received IhYcc fractured ribs and a fractured collar bone. He was disabled for two weeks and received a check for $20.00 for this. Accidents like this, automobile accidents and other accidents that come within the NEWS policy are happening every day.

It is surprising to learn of the grent numbers of people who have no accident insurance protection of any kind. If they are disabled, they arc indeed out of luck as far as having some kind of an income while laid up. Remember insurance statistics show that one out of every seven people meet with accidents. You may be next. BcUer "protect yourself with the INSURANCK THAT PAYS--mid that's HAMILTON DAILY NEWS Travel Accident and Pedestrian Insurance.

It costs but S5e per year--and is a quality policy. Do not bo misled Into Inking another policy 'said to bo just as good nml issued under similar circumstances. Always ask to sec tho list of claims paid. You can sco the NEWS' list, but we doubt if you can sea the other. If interested in this NEWS 'policy--and you should be ton your own protection--phone 2080 for further information.

PITTSBURGH, May trolley service completely tied up by strike of motormcn and conductors which began at. midnight last night thousands of persons living in the outlying sections of the city and in the suburban districts this morning had to depend on railroad TWO ON WAY TO BALL GAME KILLED Two Others Injured Near Zanesville When Train Strikes Auto ZANESVILLE, 0., Mjiy Locke, 26, and Ray Barnhouse, 21, both of Marietta, were killed on a Pennsylvania grade crossing at Frazeysburg last night when the automobile in which they wc'-o riding was struck by a train. Locke was instantly killed and Barnhouse, who was badly crushed about the legs and body died in hospital here Martin Williams, 29, and Charles McFarlnnd, 20, both -of Frazeysburg, who were badly cut and bruishcd, nre not in a serious condition. All, who were employes of the Buckeye Pipe Line, were enroute to a baseball game when the accident happened. Andrews and Parrish Ask Sums On Notes John D.

Andrews and Leo N. Parrish sued Claude D. Wilson, nlso known as C. D. Wilson for $1,302.58 0:1 one count and 1,055.50 on another.

They allege Wilson and themselves were sureties for the Hamilton Motor Car Co. on two joint and several notea, one for $3,850, the other for $3,120. They say the company failed to pay the notes and thoy had to pay thorn. The suit is for Wilson's one third of the amounts. An affidavit in attachment wns filed.

PLAN BURIAL OF STATE'S TOLL One of Italians Executed Yesterday Slashed Self 27 Times. NEW ORLEANS, May Prcparations for the disposition of tHe bodies of the six men hanged at Amite yesterday for the murder oi Dalylas Calmes May 8, 1921, were under way today. The bodies of. Andrew Lamanitc. Joseph Giglio, Roy Leona and Joseph Bocchio arrived here last night and were removed from the train to an undertaking establishment.

Those of Joseph Rini and Natale Deamore were taken to Hammond the former to be sent to Chicago and the latter to be sent here. Lamantias, Giglio's and Leona's bodies late today will be sent to Brooklyn, N. Bocchio whose former home was in Chicago will be buriej here tomorrow. Lamantia stabbed himself 27 times when he attempted to commit suicida yesterday. 656,547 DO THEIR DAILY GOOD TURN Prisoners Indicted Friday To Plead Soon Persons indicted by the Junuary grand jury in ils report to Judge Walter Harlan Friday will be given opportunity to piood Thursday at 0 m.

In Judge Marian's court, It wiw announced by Prosecutor F. r. Cost Only For Scouting In America--Building The Right Men ST. LOUIS, May rapid development of scouting in America with a membership including men and boys, each with their responsibility of doing their "daily good turn" and taking part in organized service to theii community is difficult to visualize, James E. West, Chief Scout Execu.

tivo of the Boy Scouts of America, said in making bis annual report to the national council, conducting its fourteenth annual session here. In reviewing expenditures fot 1923, Mr. West said a total of $0,000,000 was expended, and added, "there is no additional recreational movement of America recognized a doing so much at so low per capita "Box and Cox" At Union Grange Union Grange No. 2342 will meet Tuesday, 13 at p. m.

standard i "Box and a comedy presented by three characters will be the main feature of tho lecture hour planned by the lecturer, Miss Johnson. The part of Box will bi portrayed by Mr. Herbert Carmen, Cox by H. L. Rhude and landlady by Miss Mario Maglo.

Much amusement is afforded by botfc Box and Cox renting the rvn. There will bo music by the tra. Tho first and second wll be conferred on a class of Weather In Detail Ohio: Generally cloudy tonight and Sunday with occasional ihowm. Moderate temperature. Today: iun at stU at.J[J8».

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Pages Available:
450,898
Years Available:
1891-2024