Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 290, 19 September 1919 — Page 13
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM FRIDAY, SEPT. 19, 1919.
PAGE THIRTEEN
PRINTERS' iminii I
Hill I UIIU UI11UII HEADS DENOUNCE MOVE TO STRIKE
(By Associated Press) NEW YORK. Sept. 19. Delegates from local printing trades unions and representatives of employing printers were invited to attend a conference today to discuss the union's demands for increased pay and a 44 hour -week. Head3 of the four international printing trades unions, sitting as a board for governors yesterday, urged that the differences between the book and job printers be settled by arbitration and declared that if a strike is called Oct 1. in the commercial printing offices here the international organizations will treat the local unions as rebels. The International joint conference council is expected to meet on Saturday to discuss the situation In an effort to prevent a strike. The council is made up of representatives of both employers and the International printing trades union. The recent press room strike at the Publishers Printing company plant was cited in the statement issued by the board of governors as due to "irresponsible leadership." This strike and the union's demands led to a threat by 152 New York periodical publishers to suspend publication or remove their plants to western cities where there is less labor radicalism. Pepper-box manufacturers last night issued a statement making a similar threat.
SILK SHIRT GRAZE
FOLLOWS HIGH PAY
(St. Paul Pioneer Press). The development of a nation-wide
craze for luxuries Is reflected in the phenomenal demand for silk shirts that has Bwept through the country
this summer. Merchants and manu
facturers declare it is typical of the desire for spending money that has seized the people of the United States, especially the laboring classes. This
new craze is not confined to any par
ticular locality, but i3 general throughout the United States. Men who have never before worn silk shirts are buying them this season, not only one, or two at time, but in half dozen lots and the cousumption has been so great that the local market Is almost bare of stocks. Discussing the new craze, I Brack, representing a large silk company of New York, that manufactures extensive lines of silk shirting, said: Workmen Make Money. "This sudden craze for silk shirts is duo to the fact that workingmen are making vastly more money than ever before. Wartime wages has filled their pockets and they have been enabled to reallzo some of their long cherished desires, one of which was to wear silk shirts. "Men who a few years ago complained because they could not get a cotton shirt for less than a dollar are now buying three and four silk shirts a season and paying from $10 to $14 apiece for them. "Even the farm laborer Is wearing silk, Dealers from ut of town tell me of calls for silk shirts from men on the farms, and say it is the first time since they have been in business this has occurred. "Naturally, this tremendous demand has had its effect on supply, with the resulting decrease in prices. "And the demand does not seem to be just a seasonable ono. Already we are besieged with inquiries for goods to be delivered in the spring. Prices then will be higher than ihey are now.
MITCHELL GETS PATENT William F. Mitchell, of Richmond, is listed amongst the Indianians who have received patents on inventions from the United States Patent Office at Washington. Mitchell's invention is a small attachment for a lawn mower.
JUST A SIMPLE EASY-TO-M AKE AND EASY-TO-WEAR APRON 2672 Oood for seersucker, gingham, drill, lawn, percale, sateen and alpaca. There is nothing cumbersome or uncomfortable about this style. The pattern is cut in 4 sizes: Small, 32-34; medium, 44 and 46 inches bust measure. Size medium requires 4 yards of 36-inch material. A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cent3 In silver or stamps. Nam Address ............................ City Six Address Pattern Oepsrtment. Palladium.
TORONTO HAS FIRST AIRPLANE FUNERAL IN AMERICA
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MARJORIE KINDER, 14, WONDER-CHILD OF RIFLE WORLD
Placing the casket in the airplane at the first airplane funeral ever held in America.
When Mr. and Mrs. Martin Allen of Toronto, Canada, consented to having an airplane funeral for their little four-months-old son they established a record in America and perhaps in the world. It is the first funeral of its kind, it is claimed. The photograph shows the little casket being placed in
the plane to be carried three miles short journey to the to Mount Pleasant cemetery. The made without mishap.
BARBARIC DANCES WELCOME INDIANS FROM WAR TRAIL
(Kansas City Star) The following account of what took place when the young "braves" came back to Oklahoma from overseas serv
ice a few days ago to met by lheiricred in tne memory of almost all Inditribal chiefs, heroes of other conflicts, an storjes
blending of the primitive and the modern was maintained. An oldtime tepee reared itself beside the latest and most approved type of outing tent. Yet between the two was strung the jerked beef that would furnish the piece de resistance of the next meal. Indian women strolled around the ground sometimes carrying their papoose on the papoose frames their mothers used. Yet they probably rode out to the grounds in a six-cylinder motor car. The dance, too. show
ed the passing of the peace pipe, sa
(St. Louis Post-Dispatch) Marjorie Forsytha Kinder is the child wonder of rifledom. Marjorie Is a chubby, blue eyed, freckled faced kiddie with a wavy string of yellow hair. She is 14 years old, stands four feet ten inches In height and weighs ninety-seven pounds. Last February she won the ladies'
match at the Quinnipiac Rifle and Revolver club, a national shoot. She
won the expert Riflewoman Medal making 500 perfect shots for a score of 2,500. She won the National Junior championship laBt spring, making sixty perfect shots for a score of 300, beating a field of 4S5 junior sharpshooters of the United States. These records were made indoors. Recently at the outdoor camp of the Navy Rifle Range at Caldwell, N. J., where the national matches are being held, Marjorie added a crowning achievement in the ladies' sweepstakes. Using a smooth bore .22-caliber rifle, almost as tall as herself, the remarkable child split the bull's eye with every shot, doing a 100 "possible" at fifty yards. Marjorie can only be tied in this but not beaten. Competing against Marjorie were older boys who are suffering the ignominy of being defeated by a child of the weaker sex, and at their own game of firearms. Is a Connecticut Girl. -Marjorie comes from Bridgeport, Conn., chaperonefi by her doting father. R. F. Kinder, who takes pardonable pride in his "baby's" marvelous skill. She is unspoiled by the great attention she is attracting and is not a bit
nt RvUlvh P-..IL,a'Precociou3- Sne is quiet and bashful, or British Ketrencnment ,vithout a trace of .nerves... but he;
grave was
Premier Starting Work
form, having been Instructed by her
father In the game.
Funeral of Mrs. King to be Held Sunday CENTER VI LLE, Sept. 19. Mrs. Ollie L. King, 69 years old, widow of the late Joseph L. King, died at her home near Olive Hill, Thursday morning, of asthma. She was born in Centerville and has lived In this community all her life. She was married to Joseph King in 1870. He died about a year ago. She is survived by three daughters.
Mrs. Lizzie Thompson, of Webster, Mrs. Mary Barton of Centerville. and Mrs. Nora Harris, of Williamsburg. Funeral services will be held from the home Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock. The Rev. O'Connor of Centerville Methodist church will officiate and burial will be in Earlham cemetery.
PIERIAN TO BE STARTED An early start on Pierian, the senior annual, is being planned by the class of '20. The English department will shortly make nominations, from which the seniors win select the annual staff.
CATARRH For head or throat catarrh try th
vapor treatment
VICRS VAP0R1
UBL
is by a stall correspondent for the
Star: Prom the group of six old men gathered about the big tribal drum there
lifted suddenly a chant, slow and meas
The Indian of today smokes cigarettes. Even Louis Bayhylie a ranking chief 'of the Pewnees, and old Dog
! Chid:', one of the Pawnee scouts who i f.! r,..l l-nn (lrmrn Sitting "Hill 1 Pfllm-
ured of cadence, poignant wtih a wild , puffed at popular Drand3 o ciga. sadness. At the same time began a i reUeB betwepn the dances. Dog Chief drum beat, slow and measured as the fnr n tho H,vnitv nf his eihtv vears
and his string of precious bear claws,
evidently enjoying his smoke as much as any of the recent "rookie" warriors
Social Bureau Head
chant, a weirdly unchanging tum-tum, tum-tum, tum-tum. Out of the midst of the brightly ac-
tuuiereu warriurs eiieii cuiik iue uauuo ; Qj jjg tribe pole arose the tall figure of the over-! 1. 1 D ijjj . . V- , . I .
umet, gnuuig out lino me ufiui, ins rII f I J steps stately yet incredibly light, his .Dili IS Ke-eleCted
bulky form splendidly erect. An instant later Indian after Indian arose silentlv and swims into the rv-
thm of the dance, their feet scarce j Officers of the social service bureau
seeming to touch the gorund. Yet so j for the coming year were elected Dy measured were the steps of the dance j the new board of directors, appointed that the jingle of each dancer were i at the annual meeting last. Monday time din a perfect unison with them- i night, at a meeting in the social serselves and with the drum beat, an un-1 vice rooms, Thursday afteroon, as folvarying jing-jing, jing-jing, jing-jing. ilows: Blaze of Color ' Howard A. Dill, re-elected presiThen the chant fell way in a strange! dent; Leslie K. Hart, re-elected treasshifting of minor strains. The drumjurer; Mrs. John H. Johnson, vicebeat quickened and the steps of the ; president, and Mrs. Paul Ross, secdancers became enlivened. The circle ( retary. about the pole was a vividly changeful Committees for the coming year will blaze of color, for every Indian was in not be announced until a later date, it ancient costume headdress of eagle; was stated at Thursday's meeting. feathers, brightly beaded and fringed i jerkins and leggings with the band of j fJnfjnnn J nthpYflTt Plan bells about the knee, moccasins on .H"OnOI LUZneranS r ian their feet and in the hands of most j F Of European Relief were carried the head and back and tail feathers of the eagle, a tribal tals-j NEW YORK, Sept. 19. A special man. Some of the Indians wore sur- l,led mreting of thft executive comcoats of exquisite texture and picture- j mittee of the Kational Lutheran Counesque and colorful design The faces . cU he,d &t the Republican Ciub New of a few were daubed with vermililon , Yorki today completed an organization and ocher. J for immediate relief work among the
It was tne aance or tne society or ; Lutherans of Finland, Esthonia, Poland
and other Eastern European countries.
(By Associated Press) LONDON, Sept. 19 Premier Lloyd George on his return to London from Paris is reported forthwith to have plunged into problems of retrenchment. The premier presided today at a council of all the available ministers to discuss the situation and afterwards received reports from the heads of all the spending departments. The financial difficulties and the consequent disturbance to commerce and trade arising from the continued depreciation of European currency is beginning to cause alarm in all the European capitals, the newspapers of which are discussing the urgency for some system' of co-operation anions
the allies aiming at the stabilizing of!
exenange.
bright, squinty blue eyes twinkle with childish delight with every bull's eye, and she smiles from ear to ear on being congratulated. Marjorie naturally shoots In perfect
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CONDENSED STATEMENT OF
THE UNION NATIONAL BANK TO COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY, SEPT. 12, 1919 RESOURCES Loans and Discounts $ 590,859.01 U. S. Government Securities owned 424,588.33 Other Bonds and Federal Reserve stock , 304,380.00 Banking House and Fixtures . . . . . . . ....... .-. 36,500.00 Other Real Estate ...... .3 550.00 Cash and Exchange .i 222,078.77,
Russia's annual production exceeds 2,100,000 tons.
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$1,578,956.11' LIABILITIES Capital Stock ...$ 150,000.00 Siimlns and Profits 158.053.04
&riSl Circulation 140,000.00
j deposits l.UVU.VU.U
Due Federal Reserve Bank 4U.UUU.0U
Safe Milk
$1,578,956.11
lining
the Erusca, one of the oldest of all the Indian dances as well as one of the most solemn and impressive, in other times, long gone, when the Pawnees j ruled the prairies of Kansas and Ne
braska, it was danced on the return
Dr. J. A. Moorhead, chairman of the European commission, has just completed a personal survey of the situation in Poland. He has cabled that unless immediate and substantial help
of the warirors from battle with their,is given thousands win die during the
ancient enemies uie iney euuea anu
the Sioux. But now it was being danced to honor the return of the Pawnee warriors from victory over a new foe, the Germans. In commemoration of the successful end of the war and return of the young men from battle, the Pawnees gave a three-day dance
and celebration near Pewnee, Okla
a few davs ago. It was one of
greatest Indian dances in years, the Pawnees having invited the Otoes, Osages and Poncas, their neighbor tribes, to participate. Past and Present The celebration was a quer blending of the primitive and the modern. At the head of the parade of Indian warriors, some garbed in khaki, some in their older war finery, rode a white man wearing the Croix de Guere, Major Charles Y. Johnson, of the 46th division. And at the head of the mounted warriors -was borne, instead of a string of scalps, the service flag of the Pawnees with its fifty stars. For the Pawnees are proud of their showing in the war. And well they might be, for out of a tribe that now numbers only about 800, they gave fifty fighting men to Uncle Sam. Back of the lines of mounted warriors came a still longer line of motor cars, for the Indian and the motor cars ara inseparable today. At the camping ground where the dances were held, that incongruous
coming winter.
REGISTER TO APPEAR The first issue of The Register, the newspaper organ of the local high school, will appear next Thursday, Harry Ross, head of the journalism and printing departments, has an-
' n nun noil
the ! "
DIZZY WRECKED HIS AUTOMOBILE "Two years ago my stomach trouble got so bad that I was almost constantly filled with gas. This made me very dizzy at times. Last fall I was almost overcome by one of these dizzy spells while driving my car,
i and ran it into a telephone pole, badly
wrecking the car. A friend recommended Mayr's wonderful Remedy for my trouble. Since taking the first dose I have steadily improved, and I feel better now than ever in my life." It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the iflammation which causes practically all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. One dose will convince or money refunded. Clem Thistlethwaite's six drug stores, A. G. Luken & Co., and druggists everywhere. Adv.
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STATEMENT OF CONDITION OF
kkinson Trust Compan AT CLOSE OF BUSINESS SEPTEMBER 12, 1919 AS REPORTED TO AUDITOR OF STATE
Resources Mortgage loans $ 542,543.73 Loans and discounts .. 1,405,269.94 Stocks and bonds 663,652.27 Advances to estates 31,278.97 Cash and due from banks. 365.5S9.31 Real estate 100,000.00
Liabilities Capital stock $ 200,000.00 Surplus fund , 125,000.00 Undivided profits 51,717.94 Deposits 2,731,616.28 $3,108,334.22
$3,108,334,
99
Deposits, September 12, 1919 - $2,731,616.28 Deposits, September 12, 1918 --$2,050,299,41 Net Gain in Year $ 681,316,87 We point with real, genuine pride to the above statement which so clearly reflects the sound financial condition of this STRONG COMPANY, as well as the splendid growth In our deposits during the past year. The success of our business is built of Integrity, Strength and Service on our part and confidence on the part of our friends and thousands of customers.
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If Safety for Your Funds and Courteous Treatment Appeal to You, Give Us Your Business
MEMBER OF FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
ickinson Trust Company
'The Oldest, Largest and Strongest Trust Company in Eastern Indiana
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