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COURAUDISGUEST OF RAINBOW VTS French General and Pershing i Receive Enthusiastic Wel- i { come in Indianapolis. By the Assoctated Press. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., July 13.—In- dianapolis, with the flags of the allles decorating the downtown district, today became host to the Rainbow Division, Veterans' Assoclation, and its honor guest, Gen. Henrl Gouraud, the “one-arm lion of the Cham- vagne,” and Gen. John J. Pershing, chief of the United States Army. Members of the assoclation, who | arriving vesterday, were ex- | to be on hand from every State in the Union when the first slon of the fifth annual reunion s called to order this afternoon by Col. Willjawm J. (Wild Bill) Donovan ited States district attorney fo: the western district of New York, and_president of the veterans of- sanization Given Officinl Welcome. rren T. ray of Indiana I States Senator S. M. Ral- ston headed the reception committee Which officially welcomed Gen. Gou- raud, commander of the 4th Army, of which the Rainbow or 42nd Division was @ part in the last great offensive ©f the Germans. The French gen- cral is to make an address at the opening session of the reunion. Aside from the business sion, the feature of the reunion will be & parade of the v ans to be held to- morrow. while y. the closing . wiil b iven to memo- al’ servie omrades who rall overseas of the civil war have been invited to participate i all the meetings and the parade. Free Shows for Guests, So far as the world war veterans are concerned, the elty is ovpen.” That is, theaters, movies, tomobiles, etc.. have their doors open ~wide an out charge. A number «f athletic events also have been ar- vanged for the Rainbow men, includ- ing a boxing show tonight at the American Assoclation base ball park and races at the Indianapolis motor speedway The political with the arriva Go: and U pot started to boil of the first handful f veterans and already two names, ol. J. M. Johnson of South Carolina tand Col. Noble B. Judah of Chicago, editor of the Revellle, the associa- tion’s magazine, are being mentioned for the office’ of president. The election of officers will be held at the business meeting tomorrow. Poker Portraits. FRIDAY THE ACES uP? You Win GEORGE . KIMGS UP HERE THREE BULLETS, DOC. THAT 60007 THE EVENING RAKE 1T 1N, GEORGE . A FLUSH BEATS My ACE HIGH STRAIGHT No oNE CALL? Look THESE ovER! QNE PAIR OF, TREYS * HTHREW down JACKS UP . iT's YOuR NIGHT To HowL GEORGE ' °Z 7 et 7. % GEORGE |15 SNEAK IN.SO | WON'T KNOW HOow STAR, —By WEBSTER. NOTHING BUT, A PAIR OF QUEERS HERE'S YA CHECK FoR #75,60: FRIOAY THE 13TH DOESN'T MEAM B ANYTHIMG 1M YOUR THAT YoU TRYING To LATE You GOT HoME P YOuU' VE BEE ™ PLAYIMG POKER AND DON'TTRY To LIE OLT OF \T I'M GETTING SICK AMD TIRED OF HAVIMG YOU STAY OUT ALL NIGHT GAMBLING WATH A LOT OF ROUGHNECKS ! | Won'T PUT UP WITHTT{ Do You HEAR 7 (eTc.€Tc. MAYORS AND COUNTY OFFICIALS WARNED Ohio Governor Tells Them to En-: force Law or Resign Posts. By the Associated Press COLUMBUS. OHIO, July 13, —Mayors of six Ohio citles and villages and sheriffs of four countles were ordered Yy Gov. Donohey late yesterday to =top vi fons of the anti-gambling end prohibition laws or “get off the, Job.” | The orders went out from the ex- ufive office in the form of letters,| ‘e based on complaints that filed with the governor by | The complaints ranged from | charges of punch board and slot ma- | Chine gambling to the illegal sale of liquor. In several instances the governor ramed persons charged with violating the law and in others described places in which alleged violations have been permitted. Mayors who were warned today by +he governor to stop Violations of the Jaw in their gommunities are: Samuel orr of Newark, F. A. Koppe of Logan, W.'V. Koons of Chauncey, Thomas B. Alexander of . W ¥Bridges of Has! 1le Wycoff of Chagrin Fall Sheriffs who received Bob” of Auglaize former base ball Ired M. Charles and W, County CANNIBALISM GUIDE IN NEW GLAND TEST Chicago Scientist Sails to Get Mon- key for Experiment With Fluid. letters are: Ewing county Cincinnati Vogelm: M. Moore of W. Scheidegger of V By the Associated Press NEW YORK, July 13.—Cannibals be correct in their theory that 1 gain their enemies’ strength by eating them, according to Dr. Willlam Held of Chicago, who salled for Ger- many on the Westphalia to obtain « chimpanzee upon which to con- duct rejuvenation experiments. ‘Perhaps these ancient and primi- tive people hit upon a great scientific truth,” declared Dr. Held. “For in- stance, take the adrenalin glands, vhich are the’glands of courage. We re now using this fluld from sheep #s a heart stimulant, and in_some tances babies and human beings vitality has been suspended have been brought back to life.” Dr. Held has experimented ex- tensively with cholin splitter. He feeds a monk.fl' the glands of a hog or steer and’then takes blood from o monkey and mixes it with serum from the patient's own body—a serum in which cholin, or the poison that re- sults in the destruction of tissues, ts split. The cholin splitter then 8 administered to cause rejuvenation Ly restoring glandular tissue. “One of my clients in Chicago,” sald Dr. Held, “a wealthy attorney and politician, who has been taking the <landular injections and whose hair was white, has a head of halr that since has darkened. His blood pres- sure has come down from 180 to 148, hut as soon as he got to be feeling vigorous he made the mistake of trying to be a youth again.” MURPHY TO FRENCH LICK. Tammany Chieftain Will See Tag- gart About Smith’s Chances, NEW YORK, July 13.—Charles F. Murphy, chieftain of Tammany Hall, has left for French Lick Springs, Ind. It was stated today he would confer with “Tom” Taggart, boss of Indiana, and George E. Brennan, the Chicago leader, on Gov. Smith's chances for the nomination for Presldent, With the revelation of Murphy's irip came also the disclosure that a meeting of New York state demo- cratic leaders would be held fp Al- bany next Monday, The meeting s expected te con- sider the advisability of adopting a declaration of principles in hope of off setting any danger to the govern- or's chances for the presidential nomi- nation which might have been caused by his recent signing of the state pro- hibition law repealer, —————, wings of an fnsect which lllons of years ago and was ossible forerunner of the cock- Fossil lived the. o es of today have been found in{Hell- Gate. Theo COPR. 1333 (N. Y. WORLD), PRESS FUR. on. Arctic Trio Slide to Safety ! As Vast Iceberg Crumbles \MacMillan Tells of Close Call for Mem- | * bers of Party During Stop for Rare Photographs’ BY CAPT. DONALD MACMILLAN. Editor's Note.—The following message from the arctic achooner Bowdoin, Capt Donald B. Macmillan, was copled direct from the schoomer. how nearing Battle Harbor, fn the north arctic, by R. B. Bourne, operator of radlo station Inana, at Chathamport, radio station W. N. P. SCHOONER BOWDOIN, Henley Harbor, Labrador, July 10.—Three of my men had a close call while we were anchored at Greenly Island, Lab- rador, Thursday. Just aft the Bow doin was a very large flat-topped ice- berg which particularly attracted the attention of the new members of the expedition. Desiring to climb aboard it, to get some photographs at close range, they rowed out to the berg. By cutting footholds in the sides with a hatchet, after slipping and sliding around, they reached the top. After they had finished their picture taking, they slid down a rope from the top to the boat. As the last man got in there was a terrific re- port and hundreds of tons of ice from one end of the berg crashed down into the sea. Only a few min- utes befors the boys, Jaynes, Mix and Fairbanks, had been standing on that point of ice. After viewing the amount of ice that went floating away from the berg the boys lost some of their enthusiasm for iceberg explor- ing. Bergs Unusually Numerous, We have passed an unusual number of bergs up to this point, with hundreds continuously_visible. Their beauty and o0dd shapes have proved a sufficient at- traction to drag men who were off watch from their warm forecastle to the deck One berg, the men declared, presented a_ perfect image of old Tutankhamen. The menace of these bergs in the thick fog at night, however, has caused us to put into harbor at Greenly Island, Red and Henley Harbor in as many | . This has proved interesting for the men and has given Richard Geddard of the Carnegie Institution an oppor- tunity for magnetic observations. This work at Red Bay ehould prove val- uable to mariners, for charts of this ACCUSED ACQUITTED IN MISSOURI LYNCHING Freed on Charge of Tying Repe About Neck of Negro Victim. By the Assoctated Press, COLUMBIA, Mo., July 13.—With the acquittal here in circuit court yes- terday of George Barkwell, charged with murder in connection with the lynching April 29 of James T. Scott, negro, accused of an attempted as- sault upon a fourteen-year-eld white girl, and with the dismissal of an- other case arising from the lynching and continuance of three ~others, prosecutions wore at a standstill to- day, Barkwell was alleged by the state .to have tied a rope around Scott's neck and to have pushed him over a rail on a bridge here, Ruby N. Huelen, prosecuting attor- ney, expressed belief that the prose- cution might prove a warning against transgression of the law, The case against H. H. Rowland, one of the four men charged with ob- structing justice in connection with the lynching, was dismissed on Huelen's motion, The cases against Estllle Davis, Marvin Jacobs and El- mer Woods, charged with the same offense, Were continued until the QOctober term of the circuit court ere, —_—— DIES IN RESCUE EFFORT. NEW YORK, july 13.—A young woman, unidentified, leaped from the East river retalning wall at Carl Schurs Park early today, and, when her arms about their necks, pulling one of them, John Dunn, down' to death with'har. . The bodies are believed to®@ave swept away by the swift current AN in Labrador. } ns that there are disturbances there. Resl there have had two bad fishing ered small boats headed for th coming from all directions. From the occupants came requests for everything | { from clothing to mayonnaise dressing. | In return they wished to sell us skins at double Ame prices and also to sell us cigars. Where th latter came from is a_mystery, unless they are off the British warship Raleigh wreck at Point Armour, which we passed en route here. Parroquet Island Viewed. | We were offered a remarkable spec- | tacle at Parrdguet Island, thousands of { pufiins, or parakeets, filled the air when |E. F. MacDonald, the Chicago radio manufacturer, and 1 went ashore. We found the island literally covered with | nests. | From this island we noted a tent on the mainland and guessed that it w some sclentist studying this bird 11 Later we discovered that it was the abode of a warden appointed by the| government to guard the island. The | government merely had failed to pro- vide him with a boat in which to get there. Static is bothering our radlo work, but we have enjoyed several excelient concerts and have picked up amateur stations in Waterloo, Iowa; Belton, Tex.; Wilmington, N. Bor- deaux, France, and many other places | throughout the eastern and middle | | western parts of the United States. | Our_transmission has been successful | | 80 far, except that Bill Lewlis, our cook, is losing a little sleep because | of the gencrator hum. Bill asserts| that he has been ‘shipmates with many strange things, but this is the first time he has been shipmates with such a contraption. After arriving Sunday we went ashore and climbed a high cliff, from which we saw the yacht Cossack as she cautlously nosed through the Ice and anchored | nearby. ‘This fifty-footer is owned by L. O. Crane ot Boston, who is here on a fishing trip. She will probably ac- company us tomorrow to Battle Har- | bor unless we are both prevented by | ice and fog. | (Copyright, 1823, n United States and Great | "' Britain by Nofth American Newspaper Alll- ance. All rights reserved.) FALLON SURRENDERS - IN JURY BRIBE CASE| Charges “Dirty Trick” by Dis- charged Employe, He Is Held in $5,000 Bail. By the Associated Press, | NEW YORK, July 13—Willlam J, | Fallon, preminent criminal lawyer, whe has appeared as counsel in the | Arnstein, Fuller, Ward "and other | famous cases, strode into Federal | Judge Fitshenry's chambers, in the Woolworth puilding, and pleaded not guilty to charges of having bribed & juror and conspired to obstruct| justice, | He was held in §$5,000 bail and given until a week from Monday to enter a demurrer or change his plea, Then from the office of *his counsel he issued a statement, de- claring that he had been the victim of a vindictive newspaper campaign and that his indictment, with the juror alleged to have been bribed and five stock brokers, was the re- sult of a frame-up and “a dirty trick” involving an employe he had discharged, ACTOR TO FACE JURY, Gaston €Hass Held on Charge Grow- ing From Raid, L0§ ANGELES, july 33.—Gaston Glass, a motion picture actor, will face a jury September 13 on a charge growing out of a raid on a residence in_the Hollywood. district June 2. A fury in police court was discharged ast night after being unable to agToe on ‘evidence submitted in the be tried jointly with Louls J. Gasnier, a motion Dpicture dire fiss -Alma . Rhoades and <he FOR Two HOURS ) CHLORINE MAY PREVENT FLU, TESTS INDICATE Experiments in Arkansas Cut Sick List From 133 to 44 a Thousand. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 13.—Tests cating that chlorine is a successful preventive of influenza have been made at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark., the American Chemical Society announces. Nine hundred tests were made on 300 stu- dents and faculty members who for five minutes daily inhaled air con- taining- a small quantity of chlorine A decrease in the influenza cases from 133 a thousand to 44 a thousand was the result, it was stated. The investigators suggested that experi- ments be made on the possibility of the of chlorine and other gases in the treatment of similar disea; indi- WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, REPUBLICAN HEADS MAP UT STRATEGY Conferences on Coming Cam- paign Planned in Centers of Population. By the Assoclated Pres: | CHICAGO, July 13—National com- mitteemen, state chairmen. and prom- inent republicans from seven states, meeting here yesterday in the first of a serles of gatherings in the grand divisions of the country, absorbed plans for the next national campaign | which they are hastening home to outline to state party organizations.! Presided over by John T. Adams of Towa, the national chalrman, the ! conference was composed of leaders | from Illinois, Nebraska, Kansas, Michigan, Missouri, lowa and Okla- | homa. 1 Regional conferences will be held in the fall and winter in Minneapolis, | Denver, on the Pacific coast and in the south, with the next one prob- ably within two weeks in Washin ton, according to Chairman Adams. Factional, group and bloc act! ities within the party will cause one of the principal battles of the next campalgn, according to George W. Lockwood, national secretary. Radi- calism and radicals were called by speakers the common foe of both democr: and republicans. The scene of the 1924 national con- ventlon probably will be Chicago, Fred W. Upham, national treasurer, who lives here asks the national committee to send it here, according to the politicians at the conference Mrs. Harrlet Upton Tyler, vi chairman of the national organiza tion, made a plea for wider repre- sentation of women. The conference outlined programs of the language committee’s work | among the foreign born and the pub- lcity and state affairs committee. Chairman Adams reported the party’'s financlal affairs in better con- dition than at any time In the past two years. WIDOW OF RICH MAN HELD AS HIS SLAYER Arrested Year After Shooting of Milwaukee Manu- facturer. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELE July 13.—A definite | | charge is expected to be placed against | Mrs. Walburga Oesterreich, taken into |custody late yesterday on suspiclon | {of murdering her husband, Fred| | Oesterreich, wealthy apron manu- | | facturer of Milwaukee, Wis., and Los ! Angeles, at their home here about &\k i | year ago. | At the time of the slaying Mrs. | | Oesterreich sald she had been locked | |in a closet upstairs while her hus. |band was shot to death downstairs, and the police advanced the theory that burglars had committed the crime. ’ Captaln of Detectives George Home | arrested Mrs. Oesterreich after he | |said he had been informed she had | |disposed of two automatic pistols of | the same caliber as that with which | 'her husband was killed. When arrest-. ed she denied all knowledge of the| slaying. { | In Oesterreich’s will he bequeathed | valued at $242,000, to his | '-?f%ronv‘/w AVENUE o NINTH®| Open until 2 Tomorrow! (_]learance Sale of Men’s Finest Suits Practically our entire stock of men’s medium- weight suits for business and sport wear included in this semi-annual clearance. Price revisions as follows: $35 to $40 Suits, now $45 to $55 Suits, now ........ $60 to $75 Suits, now . Three and f suits of English and American fa{)rics, mixtures for business, and blue serges all sizes from 33 to 50 and in all styles, Atthese suit offered is a good investment, The Avenue at Ninth Open Saturday until 2 P.M, our plece sport are included, in new prices every JULY, 13, 1923, 5-Pound Sack.. ... .45c 10-Pound Sack. ... .88c “SUNSET GOLD” P ound 44 C Pride of Washington 5-pound Sack . 23c 12-pound Sack . 52c 24-pound Sack . 95¢ Flour, Pillsbury’s Bes FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES ‘Canteloupes, each, 9 Fresh Beets, per bunch, 5¢ Watermelons, each, Extra Large and Fine Georgias Peaches, Del Monte Sliced, No.1can . 16¢ Peaches, Golden Scene Yellow Cling Halves, ks 17 Fruit Salad, Del Monte, No. 1 can, 25 Pineapple, Sliced, No. 2 can, Lady Alice, 26¢ Tomatoes, No.2can . . . . . 10c Corn,ParagonBrand,No.2can . 10c P EAS, Colonial Brand Extra Sifted, No. 2 can, 16¢ Salmon, Medium Red,tallcan . . 17¢ Sardines,inoil,can . . . . .. 4%c Milk, pertallcan . . . . . . 10%¢c Sunset Gold, small can . . . . . 5¢ Ginger Ale canada Dry, the Champagne of Ales, bottle, 1 9¢ Ginger Ale Becchunt, bottle, 123¢; case, 24 bottles, $2.75 Budweiser, bottle, 16¢; Case 12 bottles, $1.75 Hires Root Beer Extract, bottle . . 18¢ Pickles, Del Monte, Sweet or Sour, can, 22¢ Cakes, Jersey Ripples, Assorted, pound, 15¢ Cake Flour, Swansdown, large pkg., 29¢ Oats, Quaker, package . . . . 10c Rice, Puffed, package . . . . . 15¢ Wheat, Puffed, package . . . . 11c Matches, large box Sunlight . . . 5 Bacon, Kingan’s, sliced 1-pound box . 37c These Prices Good at All Piggly Wiggly Stores Saturday and Menday