Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 16, 1920, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, AUGUST "16, 1920.
THINK CRASH OF
PONZI DEALINGS
NOW COMPLETE
No . Further Bank Closings
Looked for, Commissioner
Says Officials Still
s Held in Jail.
Boston, Aug. IS Assurance that
no farther bank closings are likely
to result from the collapse of the
financial dealings of Charles Ponzi
was given last night byjoseph C.
Alltn, state bank commissioner.
"1 again state that the Hanover
Trust company and the Polish In
dustrial association are the only
banking institutions in New Eng
land known to be affected by the
Tonzi failure, he said.
The Polish Industrial association,
conducting a private bank, steam
ship agency and other accommoda
tions for immigrants, was taken over
by the commissioner today. Henry
H. C'lmif linski, its president, is also
president of the Hanover Trust
company, closed earlier.
Mr. Allen said affairs of the in
stitutions were "hopelessly interwo
cn;" that the Polish association had
exhausted virtually all its cash and
that its loans were either bad or
doubtful.
Ponzi Still in Jail.
Ponzi and the three officers of
the Old Colony Foreign Exchange
company, the "100-per-cent-in-six-months"
concern, arrested yester
day, are still in jail. The three of
ficers are Charles M. Brightwell,
Raymond Meyers and Fred Meyers,
ivimuel corn, an agent ot the ror
cif4n Exchange company, was re,
le:sed on $2,000 bond.
Definite clarification of Ponzi's af
fairs is looked for if petitions for
receivers for his Securities Exchange
company are granted by the federal
court. A hearing will be held Tues
day. .
Bankruptcy petitions were filed
jaagainst the Old Colony foreign lix
n change company today. Branch of
Ifices in several New England cities
were closed. t ,
Many Demand Money.
The offices of Attorney General
J. AV. Allen were crowded today
v ith note holders of the Securities
Exchange cefmpany and the Old
Colony Foreign Exchange company.
Manv visitors void angry demands
for the return of their money.
Presentation of notes already has
disclosed liabilities on Ponzi's com
pany of $2,000,000; Many notes
sent ,by mail have not been exam
ined.
Possibility of a shakeup in the po
lice department as a result of the
bursting of the Ponzi financial bub
ble was seen in a statement issued
bv Police Commissioner Edwin U.
Curtis. He said it had been called
to the attention of . officials that
members of the department had in
vested with Ponzi and that it was
renorted some had acted as agents
and received commissions. Members
foand to have broken the rules re
garding engaging in .outside busi-
ncsses or accepting rewards or gifts
without permission .would be "dealt
with 1:1 the usual manner, he said.
Bluffs Boy Kidnaped by
Father, Mother Declares
Mrs. Effie Smith, 72S Seventh av
enue. Council Bluffs, Saturday night
?sked the assistance of the Bluffs
police in , locating her 10-year-old
son, Bobbv, who disappeared about
9:30, while he was playing with chil
dren in the t neighborhood. Mrs.
Smith said that Bobby rode away in
an automobile. She told police that
Joel Smith, from whom she was di
vorced last February, had threat
cned to kidnap Bobby, her 'favorite
of three sons. Smith lives at Ham
burg, la., she said. ,
Farm Hand Dies From Heart
Failure in Local Hotel
Frank J. Kolar, 35 years old, liv
ing in Harlan, la., dropped dead in
the wash room in the Merchants'
hotel 10 o'clock Sunday morning.
Dr. Glenn Miller, who was called,
announced that death was due to
heart failure. ,
Kolar " was recently discharged
from a hospital for heart trouble,
police say. He was a farm hand.
Heafey & Heatey took charge ot the
body.
Indian Pays Death Penalty
For Murder of Arkansas Man
Little Rock, Aug. IS. Vac Tobay,
full-blood Choctaw Indian and a na
tive of Oklahoma, was electrocuted
for the murder of C. C. Smith near
Sunnsrdale. Ark., test May. Tobay
waj convicted of murder in the first
degree'last June in the Washington
county circuit court. While he was
receiving the sentence he winked
and smiled at the judge. Robbery
wavjgiven as the motive.
Increased Use of Raisins
Sends Imports Skyward
Washington, D. C, Aug.. IS. In
creased consumption of raisins in
the United States since prohibition
is believed to account for the 1,400
per cent increase in raisin imports
trom Spain during the , first six
months of 1920. Nearly 8,000,000
pounds were exported from Malaga
up to June 30. exceeding the total
export!? from that port from 1913
1919. inclusive.
When Folks
Quit Coffee
because of cost to
health or purse, they
naturally drink
feTAJJf
1J., ;f '
"There's a Season
UP TO GERMANY
TO HELP SELVES,
AMERICA CANT
Chicago Business Man on Tour
Sees Signs of Unlimited
Profiteering.
Br International Jiwi Service.
Berlin, Aug. 15. "Germany must
help herself," says Henry P. Runkel,
Chicago business man and politician
who has Uist completed a tour of
Germany on behalf of leading German-Americans
of the middle west.
"America cannot save Germany,
and can do but little to help her.
Germany must be her own salvation.
Conditions in general, and especially
food conditions, are improving com
pared with what I found when I ar
rived here in March.
"There is unlimited profiteering.
Merchants are charging as if they
believe the mark is still 100 to the
dollar. Italian oranges cost 2 marks
in Munich three months ago. Al
though they are being imported for
one-third the former price, the retail
price hasn t dropped a pfennig.
"This situation will not change un
til the German newspapers educate
the people to protect themselves
from the profiteers. A 48-hour boy
cott of fruit dealers tn Munich cut
the price of cherries in half, and yet
the merchants were selling at a
profit. But the newspapers are gen
erally so intent on party political
propaganda that they have but little
time or thought for educating the
people'to protect themselves against
the profiteers.
Reds Launch Big Attack
On Warsaw; .Repulsed
(ra timed From Fafe Om.)
sheviki, he was saved from execution
by his wife. In the summer of 1918
with the growth of the volunteer
anti-bolshevik army, he was given
command of a brigade under General
Erdeli. Succeeding to the command
as the result of the illness of his
chief, Wrangel with other volunteers
routed the bolsheviki and liberated
the Kuban, later entered Stavrapol
and attained, in February, 1919, the
liberation of all of North Caucasus
and the Terek state. He was pro
moted to lieutenant general and
placed in command of the Caucasian
army
Stricken with Typhoid.
Stricken with typhus fever it was
not until Aoril. when the volunteer
army had suffered reverses, that he
could resume command and Decause
of the necessity of reforming the
scattered elements of the forces of
General Denikine he was designated
military adviser to General Shilling.
With the evacuation of Odessa and
the reduction of Shilling's . respon
sibilities. Wranarel proceeded to Sev-
astapol, where he was informed by
the British admiral there that pn
account of previous difficulties with
General Denikine, that omcer re
quested that he leave Russia.
He retired to Novorossisk. where
he prepared evacuation of the
wounded and then left for the
Crimea.
"Vrvnnsnes of the trOODS." the
report declared, "resulting from the
news of his retirement, forced him
in leave Russia, but on. April 4, 1920,
public opinion, caused General Deni
kine.. then head of the volunteer
army, to resign and a council of Rus
sian generals to elect Wrangel.''
Marriages in Kansas
Break All Former Records
Topeka, Kan., Aug. IS. The "high
cost of living," or is it "loving floes
not seem to worry Kansas young
people who want to get married. The
first six months of ; 1920 brought
more marriages than any six months
since the state began to record mar
riage licenses issued. More babies
also were born during xne nrsi bia
months ot tnis year.
ti ...... 11 ifto n,9rri3c from
January 1 to June 30, 1920. compared
with 8,457 in 1919 and 9,569 in 1917.
Men's Suits Will Be 'Fuller.
Hats to Dwindle in Size
rv,imkiic (V Ouff. 15. "Rev
olution" is the cry of the gentlemen
tailors. .
Announcement is made that new
styles in wearing apparel for men
r.. . 11 l -1
will be cnanges 10 me naiuri.
Designers will produce suits pre
senting the appearance of "fullness."
But men are Deginning to quaite
with fear alreadv thev hesitate
about looking in the mirror because
hats are to be "smaller. '
Many German Goods Sent
Into Mexico During May
Washington, D. C, Aug- 15. Ger
man goods .shipped into Mazatlan,
Mex., stood second in value only to
shipment from the United States in
May. Consul Chapman reported. Of
$210,286 worth of commodities im
ported at Mazatlan, the United
States sent $143,083 worth and Ger
many $64,041. This is the first rec
ord of the arrival of goods from
Germany since the war, the consul
said.
He Was Loved and Honored
By All Members of Ministry
Southold, England, Aug. 15.
Thomas S. Denny has died without
becoming a Rockefeller. He started
right. His claim to fame is as fol
lows: As a church warden he found too
many "three-penny bits" in the col
lection box. He cogitated. Then he
cornered the "three-penny bit" sup
ply of the town. Worshippers, being
ashamed to give coppers, were forced
to drop sixpences in the basket
Farmer-Laborites Make ,
Designations for Ticket
' Denver, Aug. 15. Farmer-labor-J
ttes, in state convention, made desig
nations for a third party ticket for
the autumn elections at an assembly
held at a hotel here. Earlier in the
day petitions had been filed placing
several of the candidates in the pri
mary to contest democratic nomina
tions. Recognize Bolivia.
Valparaiso Chile. Aug. 15. Ad
vices from LaPaz, Bolivia, say Great
Britain has recognized the new Bo
livian government-.
Bee Want Ads Bring Results.
TrltT ONtN THING KNOW ABOUT FARMING1
IS That farmers have chin
WHISKERS Amp $M
Esthonia Food Is Cheap
IF "iS
A tourist examining a giant loaf of bread in the public market at
Reval, Esthonia. The loaf, which weighs 25 pounds, is sold whole or in
part. Despite the fact that the new republic of Esthonia is situated on
the border, of soviet Russia and has been -overrun several times by
warring troops, food on the whole is plentiful and cheap. Eggs in the
Reval market sell for 20 cents a dozen and the choicest cuts of meat
can be had at prices as low as in pre-war times in the United States.
BOY SAVED FROM
LIFE OF CRIME
BY OPERATION
Considered Incorrigible, Boy
Sjiows Moral Improvement
After Rart of Typhoid
Gland Is Removed.
v (By International KenV Service.)
Denverug. 15. Believed to have
been sav from a life ol crime by
the removal of part of an enlarged
thyroid gland in his throat, Maurice
Alterson, Denver's 10-year-old "ruu
away," is. speedily recovering his
physical strength and, it is con
fidently hoped by juvenile court ot
fifers, the mental poise ordinarily de
veloped in youths of his age.
Maurice has been considered in
corrigible, and his many escapades
led Juvenile Court Judge Ben Linu
sey to direct an examination into his
mentality in the belief that the boy's
habit of running away was due to
some psychopathic cause rather than
any inherent "badness."
Had Brains of Man.
Mental experts declared that
Maurice had the brain of a man
past his majority, despite his 10
years.,
Maurice, the incorrigible, fell
asleep at St. Joseph's hospital amid
the dazzling expanse of , strange
white tables and the mystifying
fumes of ether. When he awoke sev
eral hours later his norm of men
tality had been reduced 11 years and
the world has been relieved of a
potential master criminal, according
to the medical experts.
Previous to the operation Maur
ice's 21-year-old mentality, co
ordinated by the judgment and will
power of a boy 10 years, resulted
in his getting into all sorts of
trouble. The mischief that he per
petrated, guided by the clever-man-mind,
was more effective than any
that could be devised by an ordinary
boy.
Young Alterson is motherless. His
father, a New York Hebrew, came to
Denver seeking health. He placed
Maurice in a home as the only means
of having him cared for and having
his wild tendencies curbed.
Ran Away Repeatedly.
Running away was Maurice's chief
accomplishment, and he effected his
escapes in every case with a finesse
and intricicy of detail that made his
apprehension almost impossible and
which showed him to be a calculat
ing and extremely accurate thinker.
Several weeks ago Maurice at
tracted much attention when, after
one of his numerous escapes from
the detention home, he was caught
in Texas and brought back to Den
ver. This was his sixth escape in as
many months. When captured,
Maurice was found to have made a
map of his proposed travels, in
cluding rontes from Denver to Fort
Worth and El Paso. Tex., and to
Los Angeles, Cal., and various sec
tions of Montana. After a taste of
the "wild -and' woolly" Maurice
planned to go to New York City.
Several veteran railroad men pro
nounced this map one. of the finest
route maps they ever saw, declaring
than an experienced railroad man,
traveling the same route, could
hardly improve upon ' Maurice's
work. The map was made entirely
from knowledge found in railroad
time tables.
It was this map that prompted
GASOLINE ALLEY-LOOKING OVER THE CROPS
1 r : 1 1 I
A if WHAT'S THAT L. " OITXDNT KNOW A ( WHEN wc ;i jo movihh
rZ I lr,nn l,a.t? . V vptow l r-v C SWILL W?- S
Judge Lindsey in having an, ex
amination of the boy made by med-
ical experts, who later declared that
he had a mentality 11 years in
advance of his physical age. Follow
ing the operation for tlie removal
of a part of the entarged gland, it
was announced that the over-development
of this gland was .-
sponsible for the boy's mentality
maturng but of all proportion 'to his
moral and physical being. It is said
that the operation was entirely suc
cessful, and it is expected -that in
the future Maurice will be just an
ordinary youngster with a young
ster's capacity' for mischief, without
the desire to be a "runaway."
PRICE OF HATS DUE
FOR A SLUMP, SAY
RETAIL MILLINERS
Women's Hats Will Be
Cheaper This Fall Than
For Several Years.
New York, Aug. 15 Here's good
news for the women who haven't
had any such tidings about prices
in many a long day. At the fashion
show of the Ketail Millinery Asso
ciation of America it was said that
hats are going fo be cheaper this
fall than for several years. Dealers
from every part of the country at
tended the show, and they were
generally jubilant over the prospects
for lower prices for the hats which
ordinarily are quite beyond the reach
of the average purse.
The gowns and hats worn by the
models at the show made the slim
ones look pleasingly plump and the
fat ones look delightfully svelte.
Then there were other models who
were neither too slight nor too fat,
but who looked absolutely all right
in the fall fashions. The association
is conducting a national educational
campaign among. women to show
them that any figure, dressed care
fully may be made to look attractive.
There were some hats from Paris,
but those designed in this city were
said by experts to be just as wonder
ful as the foreign creations. Most
of the hats were designed by three
young men who, it was said official
ly, draw salaries of $40,000, $60,000
and $100,000 a year, and who lived
in small towns in Missouri, Indiana
and Ohio as late as three years ago.
Nine Are Arrested, Beer
Grabbed, in Roadhouse Raid
A roadhouse beer party was
broken up at 11 Saturday night when
deputies operating under Sheriff
Mike Clark swooped down upon a
house about a quarter of a mile west
of the peony farm and arrested nine
men, one of whom, J. II. Murphy,
was charged with operating a dis
orderly house. Raiding officers said
that a number of men and women
escaped.
Three cases of,iced beer, domestic
variety, were seized:
All of those arrested furnished
bond. They gave the following
names: P. Thuren, Henry Senn,
Jim Mead, J. Callahan, Ernest Nord
gen, Art Kendall, H. Edwards and
P. A. Sullivan.
Say Expelled Socialist
Distributed Propaganda
New York, Aug. 15. August
Claessens. one of the five socialist
members expelled by the New York
assembly last" spring, was arraigned
charged with violation of a
city ordinance in distributing so
cialist propoganda at a street rally
last night.- He was acquitted '
IN THAT V ! J Jf ,"7 V- OF KVKBC.
KAISER IS MAD,
SPA RESIDENTS
ARE CONVINCED
Townsmen Tell of Strange An
tics of Former German War
Lord Before His
Abdication.
London, Aug. 15. G. Ward Price
telegraphs from Spa to the Daily
Mail:
That the ex-kaiser is mad, and has
been so for years, is the sincere be
lief of the good people of Spa, whose
unwelcome townsman he was for
many months before the day he
signed his abdication on the very
table so they, say in the Hotel
Britannique at which the heads of
the British peace delegation later
took their meals.
There was a butcher in the main
street of Spa who was walking
through the woods one Sunday aft
ernoon in the summer of 1918, and
came suddenly upon a fleshy, elderly
man in. his shirt sleeves, with bare
arms, and a pick in his hand, who.
in company with others similarly
dressed and equipped, was occupied
in turning a little stream from its
course with all the eagerness of a
child making sand castles on the
beach.
The butcher stared in surprise at
these elderly mudlarks, for it never
occurred to him that one of them was
the German emperor and two of the
others were a famous general and
Prince Mctternich. Suddenly he was
addressed with an imbecile affecta
tion of dignity by one of the grubby
diggers.
Emperor of World.
"Boujour, monsieur. Take off your
hat. You are in the presence of the
emperor of the world. And now,"
added the kaiser, as the startled
butcher sheepishly complied, "go and
forget forever-what you have seen."
As another hobby , of his Stay at
Spa, when the German communiques
Were constantly assuring' the troops
that their supreme war lord was per
sonally present at their battles, the
kaiser used to stuff his pockets with
leaves or with pebbles, whicn he
would throw into the air as he
walked.
He sent for a German woman
friend to join him in Spa. Quarters
were provided for her in the Villa
Pompeia. Shewas tall, handsome,
nnl hptween 30 and 35 years of age.
"The Emperor's Spy," was the nick
name the townspeople gave her.
Entertained Woman.
She would disappear whenever
the empress came to visit her hus
band at Spa, but at other times the
kaiser would go out riding with her
in the woods that surround the
town. One of his orders was that the
branches overhanging the paths
through the woods should be
lopped off so that he should not
need to. bow his head as he cantered
along. And far and wide every day
thel forests round Spa were searched
by secret service men to ensure his
safety.
Though allied airplanes never
bombed German headquarters here,
the great dread of the kaiser's life
was air raids. He had three villas
reserved for himself at Spa, and was
continually changing from one to
the other. At the Villa Neubois,
where Marshal Foch and M. Mil
Irrand stayed recently, the kaiser's
dug-out, with its steel strong-room
door, made to open in two parts in
case a fall of earth jammed it, is
the principal sight of the house.
When the imperial nerves were very
bad the kaiser lived in his train,
which- had an engine attached at
each end, with steam always up.
Mayor In Secret Service.
Baron Joseph de Crawhez, the
present mayor of Spa, 1 held the
same position all through the war,
though imprisoned and threatened
with execution. He was one of he
leaders of a Belgian secret service
organization which often succeeded
in getting early knowledge of the
plans of the German general statt.
Baron de Crawhez has all sorts
of souvenirs of the German occupa
tion of his town. One of them is a
map with which the German soldiers
quartered on him were provided,
representing how the German gov
ernment would re-make the map of
Europe when victory was won. He
gave the British premier a copy of
it the other day. It shows a Gross
Deutchland stretching from Petro
grad to the Pyrenees, with Great
Britian marked as a German colony
and Ireland as an Austro-Hungarian
colony.
Illinois School Board
Buys Homes for Teachers
Evanston, 111.. Aug. 15. The
board of education announced that it
had purchased two large houses near
the Evanston schools to be rented
teachers at the lowest prices pos
sible. The ground floors are to be
used as reception parlors and class
rooms. Seize English Mail.
Dublin, Aug. 15. Another daring
seizure of mails from England was
carried out in a thoroughfare here
by armed men. Civilian letters were
untouched. s
Erect Monument to
Wrights In France
Commemorating the famous flight
made by the Wright brothers at Le
Mans, France, in 1908,. a huge shaft
in honor of the American inventors
of the . airplane was recently un
veiled in the French city.- The mon
ument was presented to the city of
Le Man by Commodore L. D.
Beaumont, of Dayton, Ohio. The
shaft is forty feet high and is sur
mounted by a figure symbolic of the
early struggles of the Wright broth
ers for mastery of the air.
Man Shot by Brother-in-Law
, Dies in Hot Springs Hospital
Hot Springs, Ark., Aug. 15. Will-'
iam Bost, shot by his brother-in-law,
Neal Irvin died in a hos
pital, although his assailant gave
more than a pint of blood in an etfort
to save his victim's life.
Veteran With 22 Wounds Is
Killed by Lightning Bolt
f Pate rson,- N. J., Aug. 15. Rich
ard J. toran, who survived the
world war with 22 wounds while a
member of the 309th Machine Gun
battalion, was killed by lightning.
GrapeNuiLt
For Breakfast
That's the VoM
A ready-to-eat food seet
and nut-like in flavor
economical no waste
full of tHe nourishment of
wheat and malted iarley
baked twenty hours never
spoils in its wax-wrapped
package
Order from your grocer
Youll eat Grape-Nuts
again and again!
Made by Postum Cereal Co., Inc. Battle Creek. Mich.
TELEPHONING
ACROSS OCEAN
POSSIBLE SOON
Experiments in Wireless Tele
phony to Vastly Enlarge
Communicating Radius of
Vessels and Seaports.
By THOMAS WRIGLEY.
New York, Aug. 15. Wireless op
erators are keenly watching the
progress of the experiments in wire
less telephony by which, it is pre
dicted, it will soon be possible to
talk across the ocean; but not all are
eager for the day to arrive when it
will be "Hello, Mabel! How's things
in London This is Charley talking
in New York!"
In the big wireless offices in this
city, where the radio operators gatn
er while their ships are in port,
wireless telephony is one of the chief
topics of conversation.
Operators Discuss Wireless.
"For the love of Mike," one op
erator and yesterday, "all we'll be
pretty soon is 'hello girls' connect
ing up the passengers in their state
rooms with their friends at home."
The remark came after his friend,
just arrived in port, said he heard
singing, and victrola music all the
way from Denmark while he was on
a ship not far from the Atlantic
coast.
They are a strange "set," these
young men, most of them scarcely
out of their teens, who handle the
wireless on board the big JineiA.
There are Britons., and Scots a.d
Americans, and sharp-eyed Italians
from every port of importance and
as they gather in the wireless offices
they talk of strange things in the
most commonplace manner. To
them distance is only retkoned by
the strength of their wireless ap
paratus, and they tell of snatches of
conversation with their friends, who
are hundreds of miles away, even a
thousand or more, as a mere noth
ing, which, in truth, it is to them.
And there are other stories they tell,
too, which are not so pleasant, of
flashes across the watery wastes
from a friend they know on. board a
ship which is in distress shaijp sig
nals calling for assistance, repeated
over and over again. '
Tell Romantic Stories.
Many of the operators now in
charge of the wireless on board the
trans-Atlantic liners were in the ser
vice during the war, most of them
under the British flag, and they can
tell tales of many of their comrades
whose calls they sicked up while
feeling their way across the sub-infested
zones, telling of a torpedoing
and of a ship going down, but ask-
REDS AND ISLAM
UNITED FOR WAR
AGAINST ALLIES
Turk Leader Issues Appeal
Couched in Fiery Language .
Addresses People as
Communist Comrades.
Constantinople, Aug. 15. Musta
pha Kemal has issued his first hoi
shevist proclamation to his follow
ers in Anatolia, addressing them as
"Brothers of Islam and communist
comrades." It. is a long document,
couched in fiery language, dated
Angora, July 8.
"Unscrupulous statesmen," de
clares Mustapha Kemal, "being de
termined to destroy Turkey, have
thrown against her the most hated
of her enemies after disarming the
Turks and ignoring the armistice
which ensured fair treatment to an
honorable foe.
President Wilson Betrayed.
"They have betrayed President
Wilson s 12th principle, which guar
antees the right pi existence, doom
ing us to live in the clutch of our
traditional enemy. Communist com
rades, an abominable crime is about
to be perpetrated! The great pow
ers have decided to exterminate a
J fresh victim, whose blood will be
sucked by the capitalists of Europe.
"Our peasants are dying, weapon
in hand. They can be sure that the
days arc near at hand when Islam,
the ally of communism, will avenge
them."
The anger of the nationalists on
account of the defeat of- their forces
by the Greeks was vented against
Mustapha Kemal at a recent stormy
session of the parliament at Angora,
when he was summoned to explain
the unlocked for Greek advance
from Smyrna. According to the ac
count which reached me tonight, he
maintained his lofty attitude and
said:
An Impregnable Position.
"This is not the time for futile re
crimination. We must face the fu
ture confidently. It was natural
that the Greeks should obtain an
initial success. They went forward
covered by the guns f the 'British
fleet against poorly equipped and
badly organized troops holding an
outpost line. We have withdrawn
our main forces to a prepared line
of defense, which our general staff
declares to be impregnable."
The announcement that the Greeks
will remain in their present posi
tions has been received with dismay
by the belligerent supporters of
Mustapha Kemal here, who were
banking on their being lured into
the hills, where they would be at the
mercy of the guerrilla tactics of the
Kemalists.
Carry Profiteering Case
To Highest Tribunals
Washington, Aug. 15. The gov
ernment fiied appeals-in the supreme
court from federal court decrees
quaihing .ndictments returned in
New York against the American
Woolen company charging viola
tions of the Lever food control act.
In dismis?ine the indictments the
low er cpurt sustained the company's
contentions that the regulation pro
vided for in the act did not apply to
cloth before it became clothing.
There is a hot point jn each end
of a new double-ended electric flat
iron so a user can iron with both
backward and forward movements.
ing for no assistance, for no aid
could be given them.
It is far different now, with little
to disturb their daily routine of
sending and receiving despatches,
and the new era of wireless tele
phony will only enlarge the scope
of their work and prove a benefit,
as all'new discoveries do.