Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 145, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 October 1921 — Page 7
STATE NORMAL WILL OBSERVE ARMISTICE DAY Students Who Served in World War to Be Honored. FEW INTERESTING NOTES TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Oct. 28— President Linnaeus X. Hines of the Normal School was in Mnncie yesterday, attending a meeting of the board of trustees. The Normal School will participate) In Armistice day celebration. Tentative plans provide for forenoon ceremonies in Normal Hall. Normal orchestra will play. There will be a program of patriotic songs and an address by MaJ. Arthur R. Robinson, Judge of Superior Court, Indiana’ oils, who served overseas. It is expected that studests who served it? the World War and veterans of other wars will take seats on the platform. In the afternoon the school as a whole will participate In the para* planned by the local post of the American Legion. The committee of the faculty. Professor Mcßrlen, chairman, appointed to confer on proposed extension courses, has had several meetings and has perfected plans which are now to be submitted to tbe faculty and to the board of trustees for approval. Very soon the school ’hopes to have a specific answer to make to the many students who have made inquiry concerning extension work. Dr. R. J. Acher, professor of psycholog} , was elected president of the psychology section of the State Teachers Association. Formal inauguration ceremonies by which President Hines will be Inducted Into office are set .for Jan. 6, 1922, Foundation day. The fiay will be given over to the ceremonies. Governor McCray and State Superintendent Burris, as well as educators of distinction of Indiana and from adjoining States, will be present. Further announcements will be made as plans develop. James R. Crawley, Normal, ’O4, Is county superintendent of Decatur County, with headquarters at Greensburg. A. L. Logan, Normal, 'l4, Is director of Industrial work at Columbuk, Ind. Mr. Logan was graduated A. B. from Franklin College in 1921. Associated with him Is Mr. Walter H. Rice, Normal, 1912. Athletic Association officers have been elected as follows: President, Hubert Little, North Manchester, Ind.; vice president, Ruth Briggs, 1900, North Eighth street, Terre Haute, Ind.; secretary, Olive Spencer, 1634 North Ninth street. Terre Haute, Ind.; treasurer, Sheri Winters, Pershing, Ind.; basket-ball manager, Richard Shriner, Huntington, Ind.; baseball manager, Doyle Manhart, 403 Swan street, Terre Haute, Ind.; track manager, Harry Dowell, 832 North Fifth street, Terre Haute, Ind.; tennis manager, Helen Woody, 2432 North Seventh street, Terre Haute, Ind. / Dean Bogardus has received notice of his appointment as a member of a committee on institutions of higher learning. This committee is a part of the organization known as the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. MUNCIE DIVISION SHOWS INCREASE MUNCIE, Ind., Oct. 28.—More than one hundred per cent Increase In attendance at the Eastern Division of the State Normal School has been accompanied by a proportionate Increase In school spirit. The various classes and societies of the school have been organized for the year and a schedule of basket-ball games Is being arranged. As the eastern division of the State, Normal Is beginning its fourth year, the class of 1922 is the first in which most of the members have done all of their academic work In the Institution. A challenge Issued by the freshman baeket-ball team was Immediately accept-
-* v ™ c UNlVt,l * At **• A Sound lnvesttnent WHERE can you spend $355 in motor transportation where your dollar will go as far as in the purchase of a Ford Touring car ? The initial outlay and the after expense are so small that your Ford Touring car will pay for itself many times over whether used as a family car for pit asure, for business purposes, or both. The. sooner you place your order, the sooner you will be enjoying your Ford ca r * Terms can be arranged. Authorized Marion County Ford Dealers Barber-Warnock Cos. The Frank Hatfield Cos. 823 E. Wash. St. - 623 Nt Capitol Ave. A. W. Bowen Olin Sales Cos. 941 Ft. Wayne Ave. 515 N . Mer , dian S t. Carr Auto Sales Cos. . Osborn & Harvey 5436 E. Wash. St 828 E. 63rd St. J Fouts Car and Tractor Sales, Inc. Smith & Moore 2549 W. Michigan St Mg s. Meridian St Wangelin-Sharp Qo. 443 Virginia Ave.
ed by the upper classmen. Tbe game will be played in a few days. Prof. O. E. Sink Is acting athletic adviser for the freshmen, while Prof. Frank V. Graham serves In a similar capacity for the upper classes. Dean T. J. Breitwieser has organized an extension class In Hartford City. The class will meet for recitation each week on Tuesday evening at 7:15 o'clock and will be taught by Professor Breeze. The subject studied will be the geography o; Europe. This la the eleventh extension class organized this fall ly the eastern division. More than one hundred sixty-flw students are now doing work In the extension division of tbe eastern division.
DALLAS, TEXAS, RANKS HIGH IN VARIOUS WAYS (Continued From Fare One.) $100,000,000 a year, their principal product being cotton gins, saddlery, harness, leather stuffs, cotton seed cake meal and oil, cement, food stuffs, Iron and sheet metal, flour, candy, paints, tencs and awnings, drugs, chemicals, etc. TERRITORIAL CONDITIONS MIXED. No general statement will apply to the whole territory served by Dallas. Conditions are too mixed. This may be appreciated from the remarks of a leading financier, who says that while the advance has been of great benefit, he expects 'some county banks to go to the wall. There are some farmers, he explains, who were not benefited and could not be benefited by the rise In cotton for they made no crop. It Is difficult for an outsider to realize the situation. In the same county you will find some farmers with fair crops and others having a total failure. It has been abnormally dry. Many farmers, either through shortage of funds or other cases, did not buy poisons to fight the weevil. They have nothing. If they owe the bank, the bank Is helpless. It will take the most rigid economy and hard work for these farmers to recover. It will take two crops to get some of them out. And et the same time they are In the same county with farmers who have done fairly well. They have fought drought, weevil, and low prices. Theyxhave their reward In the enhancement of cotton values. SHORT CROPS IN SOME LOCALITIES.
We have a monster corn crop and never was the Southwest in better shape for foodstuffs. We may, as I have explained, see some more small banks close where crops have been particularly bad, but that does not mean anything. We are in a much improved state and hare every reason for confidence. But we will have to eliminate waste. Persistent and consiatent economy must be maintained. Oil men aay there Is marked Improvement In their line. * The clearing house people sngr there has been pronounced liquidation and there will be more conditions they class as normal. Savings deposits are Increasing. Individual deposits have held up remarkably well. Commercial deposits have not They report bitter complaint about railroad rates being too high, making It difficult If not Impossible to move various commodities. Wholesale dry goods men report September as having been the largest month this year. Retail clothing men gay there Is more discrimination In buying as In other cities it appears the number of sales Is larger than last year and the money total smaller and tbe merchant Is having trouble In reducing overhead. CLOSE TIME FOR HARDWARE DEALERS. Hardware dealers say they have had s hard time because the Southwestern farmer has been down and out. In 1920 they had opportunity to sell, but couldn't get the goods. This year has been bad. but there are signs of Improvement today. The hardware trade Is less than 40 per cent normal. Saddlery and harness people had banner years In 1919-1920 and are not complaining particularly now, because times are dull with them and domestic business is dull, but they say there is a good healthy Increase In exports to LatlnAmerlca. Lumber would be active but for high
freight rates. Thare is great need of it 1 and demand is limited only by the ability ! of the purchaser to pay promptly. So,; too, with cement. Texas Is consuming j only one-half barrel per capita per au- j nnm. It requires as much as lowa, which , consumes 1% barrels per capita. TEXANS LIVE AT . HOME THIS YEAR. James Z. George, president of the Chamber of Commerce, says the best sign > oday in Texas, is that Texans are living more at home. There never was o much feed stuff and live stock as this year and the rise in cotton had developed a confidence and god feeling that would be of very great worth. With 20-cent cotton, Texas would be the first State to come back. This year's crop bag beeq made on less money than any other in a score of years, and while It had not Increased the wealth of tbe farmer particularly. It had established economies that would be permanent. Other gentlemen declared Texas farmers had given study to the better marketing of crops and they predicted a system would he established within three or four years fully as scientific and successful as that of the California Fruit Growers. Adversity had taught the Texan agriculturist a lot. Labor conditions are fair. Wages are higher than the average. There has been a great amount of construction, particularly commercial and residential. One giant building for the Magnolia Oil people, now dominates the sky line of the city. Dallasites say It ranks fifteenth or sixteenth among the world's skyscrapers. ESTIMATE OF THIS YEAR’S CROPS. Frank P. Holland estimates that the cotton crop of this year, with its seed, will ! ring $304,500,000 to the state. He
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Petersons Ointment Best for Eczema Flrat Application Btops Itching of Eczema, Salt Rheum and Piles. Ends Chafing Distress in Ftve Minutes. “Live and let live Is my motto,” saya Peterson of Buffalo. “Druggiata all over America sell PETKRSON'B OINTMENT for 55 cents a large box and I say to these druggists, if anyone buys mv ointment for any of the diseases or ailments for which I recommend It and are not benefited, give them their money back "l ve got a safe full of thankful letters testifying to the mighty healing power of Peterson's Ointment for old and running sores, eczema, salt rheum, ulcera, sore nipples, broken breast, itching scalp chafing and blind, itching and bleeding piles ' r John Scott, 283 Virginia street, Buffalo, writes. ‘'Peterson's Ointment la simply wonderful. It cured me of eczema and also piles, and It did It so quickly that I was astonished." Mail orders filled by Peterson's Ointment Cos., Inc., Buffalo, N. Y.—Advertisement.
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1921.
puts the other crops as follows: Wheat, 19,585,000 bushels; corn, 174,070,000 bushels; oats, 44,458,000 bushels; barley, 228,000 bushels; rice, 5,245,000 bushels; peanuts, 5,221,000 bushels; gruln, sorghums, 59.0C T 000 bushels; Irish potatoes, 2,457,000 bushels; sweet potatoes, 9,170,000 bushels; peaches, 1,590,000 Impels; pears, 244,000 bushels; hay, 1.300.000 tons; broomeorn, 5,100 tons; onions, 4,023
We Invite Inspection of Our Mattresses — Any interested person is invited to inspect any of the hundreds of mattresses in our store and warehouse. We have sold tens of thousands <*>f mattresses in the past, EVERY ONE OF WHICH WAS MADE OF NEW MATERIAL. Every mattress in our stock bears an official statement saying that it is made of NEW MATERIAL, and that it conforms with the sanitary bedding laws of every state in the Union. Every mattress we sell is made of 100 % new, clean, sanitary cotton.
This 50-Lb. AH Layer Felt Mattress "8.75 Today’s Actual Value, $12.75; Price One Year Ago Today, SIB.OO Th— . mt], ol IM, No Mail, Phone or 00. D. Orders Zl.--' 1 ~
The Drama of the Morning’s Milk Yesterday morning while the city slumbered on for hours hundreds of country men and women awakened to anew day of service. The most important of all foods must be drawn from thousands of cows and ready by 7 o'clock for the Polk country trucks which call for it. By 8:30 many thousand gallons of milk are unloaded at the seven country plants of the Polk Sanitary Milk Company. In a few minutes the milk is weighed and running in a thin film over a device which allows the air to purify it, adding remarkably to the flavor. It is then cooled by ice making .machinery to almost freezing and by 10:30 is on big trucks en route to the city. , By l o'clock it is being clarified, standardized, pasteurized, refrigerated and bottled, then passed into the big cold storage rooms at the Sunlight Plant. Along in the wee hours this morning, regardless of weather, 75 wagons started from the Sunlight Plant with your milk, and you received this carefully guarded and scientifically controlled food in time for breakfast. That is the story of this morning’s milk—and Polk Service. ALL the plant open to ALL the public ALL the time ‘JFood JFov TAouqr7L& ” Phone RAndolph 0852. Auto. 23-331. BEST OLK S MILK ' FOLK SANITARY MILK CO. 'Samuel O. Dungan, Pres. Ralph B. Polk, Vice-Pres. J, Duane Dungan, Sec.-Treas.
nlonds; tomatoes. 2,500 carloads; watermelons, 10,093 carloads; cantaloupes, 301 carloads; pecans, 6,000,000 pounds. 1,000 000 ATTEND STATE FAIR. The Texas State fair was teing held while your representative was In Dallas. It is the biggest thing in State fairs in the world. It usually records 1,000,000 admission. Colonel Holland expects this
The Taylor Carpet Coj
year’s total will be 800 000. Any one who attends that wonderful exhibition will be full on Texas. The show of vegetable and animal products Is the great est In America, and, by the way, there an exhibit of Mexican products that will change a person’s ideas about the industrial capabilities of the Mexican people. It is remarkably fine. Agricultural implement concerns have so large' a dls-
play at the fair that It led to an inquiry as to sales. The reply was In essence as follows: Texas Is the brightest spot In Amer- ; lea today for the agricultural Implement man. Our sales this year are 67 per cent of normal In this State. In lowa they are less than 20 per cent. Don’t tell me 1 conditions are not good In Texas.—CopyI right, 1921, by Public Ledger Company.
Wash. St. & Satisfaction Guaranteed (Trade-Mark Registered)
Wise Shoppers Watch This Ad IN DIANNA ~DR"Y~~G00bI~8-‘ ODeT
-LOOKExtra Special For SATURDAY ' First 500 customers making a purchase of 25c or over can buy WILSON’S MILK (Tall cans) 3~25c Limit 3 cans to each customer. No phone orders. None delivered.
-LOOKBEST GRANULATED SUGAR 4c Lb. with Other Goods ' With purchases made here on any one day, hereafter, amounting to £5 or over, you .re entitled to five pounds for 20c. 10 pound, with $lO purchases. 18 pound, with sls purchase*. 20 pound, with S2O purchases. 28 pound, with S2B purchases. With each additional purchase of $5 you can get five pounds more. Present your .ales' checks In department 10 for this sugar. Effective until further notice.
-LOOKExtra Special Fc-r SATURDAY A Sensational SALE of fine imported Ladies’ TVo-Clasn KID GUNES at a price you haven’t heard of In several years. SALE STARTS PROMPTLY AT 3 O’CLOCK and continues while 500 pairs hold out. Black gad various colors, 3 rows of embroidered stitching on back. Popular 2-dasp style. You’ll be surprised when you see such excellent gloves for only $1 pair. We bought thousands of pairs for our chain of stores enabling us to present to you such a low prlco offer. It will be necessary to get here early as there is going to be a rush for these. No wonder at such a price.
-LOOKExtra Special For SATURDAY All Prices On Ladies’ Suits Smashed! Up to Up to $25 Values, S4O Values, s ll s 2l All this MUira'i newest .tylee and big assortment to chon., from. Don’t ml*, this big Saving Chance. Ton can’t find the equal of this offer In the city.
"The Economy Spot of Indianapolis” INDIANA DRY GOODS STORE 306 E Washington St.
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