Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 157, 13 May 1921 — Page 10
PAGE TEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, INI)., FRIDAY, MAY 13, 1921.
WHIRLWIND CAMPAIGN OF ONE DAY PLANNED FOR SALVATION -ARMY One -day of intensive soliciting for funds for the Salvation Army and the work is done, according to plans of the local committee. That day will be next Thursday, May 19. Each county of the state, headed by its Salvation Army tdvisoiy board, will rai&e its quota in 24 hours. Richmond has been divided into six districts and two wards, each under a chairman. "These chairmen are now trying to get together' workers for their districts. An , especially appeal is being made to ex-service men, that they volunteer at least several hours on the day set, for active solicitation. The great work of the Salvation Army during the recent war, and the bond of friendship between all ex-service men and the Salvation Army, is expected to draw many ex-?ervice men to the support of the army. All who can assist in canvassing are to report to their district chairman. May Give Contributions. Persons who wish to contribute to the Buport of the army campaign, may do so without waiting upon a solicitor. They may take or mail their contributions to Ernest Calvert, treasurer of the campaign, at the First Naional bank. A plan is now progressing where a number of local persons with large financial means may pledge to give one cent for every dollar raised during the one day of canvassing. This would provide a gift of $10 from each person so pledging, for every $1,000 raised. If 10 persons were pledging by this plan, it would mean a gift of ?10O for each $1,000 raised. How Money is Used. "Where does our money ro?" may be -the query of a giver. The following figures answers that question: In one -year the Salvation Army in the United States cared for 1,991 nameless"1 children in maternity homes: admitted 2,314 girls to these hospitals and rescue homes: assisted 5.843 prisoners in securing release from prisons; gave 4,977 mothers a summer 'outing; gave 33.366 children a summer outing; cared for 11.494 children in children's homes; sheltered 47,982 children in slum posts and nurseries; gave 3.699.767 meals to perons in need; provided 371.334 meals to persons at cost; supplied 1.181.517 beds free; gave temporary relief to 709,31 not mentioned in above figures; p.nd preached the gospel in open air meetings to 18,000,000 who do not attend church. Following are the names of chairmen for the campaign, and the districts in which they. will work: Westcott Har.es is chairman of the first district. This district comprises First to Fourth streets. Each district is north and south. Second district Fifth to Seventh .'streets. Earl Bonn, chairman. j i Third district Eight to Tenth streets. Lawrence Jessup, chairman. i Fourth district Eleventh to Thirteenth streets, Phillip Robbins, chairjiTian. Fifth district Fourteenth to Sixteenth streets, Dr. Charles Duffin, chairman. Sixth district Seventeenth to Nineteenth street. Everett Ackerman, ' chairman. Seventh ward Everett Fox, chairman. Eighth ward Cleo Lamb, chairman. Clem McConaha, Paul James. Charles Twigg and Emmet Bartel will lead the workers along Main street.
TARIFF FOES
(Continued from Pare One) f urgents. There is abundant advance that in the country, as well as in the senate and house, there are now elements opposed to a prohibitive tariff that never existed before. For the
first time the big manufacturer and the big banker have to a degree parted company. Fears High Tariff. The big banker and biff taxpayer is now to a large degree in foreign trade. He is interested selling goods abroad and he can only sell goods abroad by taking payments in other gcods. He is interested in making foreign loans, in becoming an exporter of capital. He is interested in collecting the interest and principal on the huge amounts of public and private loans we have already made abroad. He knows that a prohibitive tariff will interfere with the collection of the principal and interest of those debts. All those parts of the East which were formerly the backbone of Republican protective tariff sentiment are now tainted with these convictions about foreign lending to get a pro-
"GLORIFIED CLUB" PLANNED TO INCLUDE WOMEN OF NATION
If " V km& VJp jjj
City Lodges
iday night. Millers orchestra will fur'r.ish the mutlc.
Left to right, above: Mrs. Charles Dana Gibson, Mrs. C C. Calhoun and Mrs. William K. VanderbilU Below: Mrs. Oliver Harrintan and Mrs. Vincent Astor, prime moverB in the plan.
At a recent meeting held in New York, many wealthy and distinguished women laid before a group representative of many national organizations the most dazzling scheme ever launched for the mobilization of the entire woman force of the United States. It aims to bring into one body not only all women's associations, urban or rural, throughout
the country, which can be induced to affiliate with it, but to open its membership to every individual woman of good standing in her community, and offers a headquarters' in Washington of splendid scope and advantages. The "Glorified Clubhouse," which is the center of the idea, is a $3,000,000 prospect. Mrs. Clarence Crittenden Cal-'
houn, on whose initiative and in whose residence in Washington the National Civic Foundation was formed, is the central figure in the movement. The foundation is non-partisan, non-sectional and non-sectarian. Other women interested in the project are Mrs. Gibson, Mrs. Vanderbilt, Mrs. Harriman and Mrs. Astor, who wiil open her home for the next meeting.
Cemmandery. While many members of the Richmond ComraandeTy returned Wednes
day from attending the 67th annuals conclave held in Indianapolis Wednesday, the remaining groups arrived j home Thursday night. Aproximatcly ! 40 Richmond people were present at j the conclave,-'- j In the ele$m of officers. Eugene i Vatet of MqncJe commandery No. IS
was elected, grand commander, succeeding Harry? C. Moore of Marion commandery. J. 21. Other officers elected were-' George A. Newhouse. New Albany No. 5, deputy grand commander; Gaylerd M. Leslie, Fort Wayne No. 4. grand generalissimo; Albert D. Ogbcun, Newcastle No. 4 4, grand captain general: Dirrelle Chancy. Sullivan No. 54, grand senior warden; Edward J Scoonover, Raper Xo. 1, Indianapolis '.grand junior warden; John C. Parett, Hammond No. 41,, grand prelate; Vestal W. Woodward,' Raper No. 1, Indianapolis, grand treasurer; William H. Swintz, South Bend No. 3, grand recorder; George F. Hitchcock, Plymouth No. 26, grand standard bnare; William M. Sparks, Rushville No. 49, grand sword bearer: Clarence A. Snoke, South Bend No. 49, grand warder: Jacob Rubin, Raper No. 1, Indianapolis, grand captain of ihe guard. , k. of p. The regular , weeklv meeting was
jheld Thursday night. Members of the
lodge are furnishinff a better equipped club rooms, arid members are urged to attend all meetings. "Eagles. No business of special importance was considered " at ihe last meeting. Enthusiasm as 4 interest of the club is centered about Uhe baseball activities of the season ? . Red Men. A smoker will be held by the Red Men Friday night. All members are urged to attend Olid! Fellows. Four candidates are to be initiated Friday night, 6eorge Matthews and Lawrence Handley are to attend the grand lodge convention to be held in Indianapolis Wednesday and Thursday of next week.;, . iBen Hur. Ben Hurs wil' give a dance Satur-
t
COTTON CONVENTION WILL HEAR HARDING BY PHONE WASHINGTON, May 13. President Harding accepted Thursday an Invitation, conveyed by Senator Hoke Smith of Georgia, to open a convention of cotton men to be held in New York on May 30. The president will speak to the convention over the telephone and his voice will be made audible over the hall by means of amplifiers. Delegates to the International coiton convention to be held at London this summer, will be the special guests of t&e cotton men meeting at New York. VENIRE OF 62 EXHAUSTED WITH JURY INCOMPLETE WARSAW. Ind.. May 13.-Work of se ecting a jury to try Peter Fox, Krt Silbert. John R. Burns and Joseph Biers, alleged robbers of the Culver l.xchange bank and charged with the murder of J. Russell Saine. Culver business man. was temporarily nahed late Thursday afternonn -!,,
list of 62 veniremen was exhausted.
Low Cotton Price Means Less Acreage in Mexico (By Associated Press MEXICO CITY. May 13. Less than one-third of the acreage of the Laguna district in the state of Coahuila, where most of Mexico's cotton crop is grown, has been planted.and the entire region is in dire ztraits financially, according to statements printed here quoting travelers. Cotton prices were 6o low during the past year that the growers have sold their product at a loss and are not inclined to risk a poor harvest again.
DAUGHERTY WILL WRITE DEBS RECOMMENDATION WASHINGTON. May 13. Attorney General Daugherty said today that he would write personally the recommendations to President Harding on the question of a pardon for Eugene v. Debs, serving a 10-year sentence in the Atlanta penitentiary for violation of the espionage laws. He said it would be some time before the recommendations would be completed.
INDIANAPOLIS
Sunday, May 15. 22, 29
Round Trip War Tax Included
Round Trip $2.43 War Tax Included
tective tariff of the old kind through congress this summer will take the most artful kind of steering. And the truth is, the Republican are not well equipped for artful steering. Their leadership is not very forceful at best. (Copyright, 1921, by the New York Evening Post, Inc.)
The Home Garden j
Professor Davis, of Purdue university, says that oyster shell scale is a more serious and dangerous pest in Indiana than the San Jose scale that farmers have been so often warned against and which they have now learned to control. The oyster shell scale is more difficult to control, and is very abundant in Indiana. Not only does it infest fruit trees but it attacks shade trees and shrubs. This scale resembles an elongate curved oyster shell of a brownish or dull grayish color. During the winter the tiny white eggs are to be found beneath the old scale and the young hatch from these and crawl out to attach themselves to the branches about the middle of May in northern Indiana and probably as early as the last of April in the southern part of the state. The young crawl about for a few hours after hatching, then settle down on the bark, insert their beak3 and secrete a protective covering. The dormant lime sulphur spray is effective but this will injure foliage so during the summer months, the material to use is strong whale oil soap
solution, or better, whale oil soap, one pound dissolved in four gallons of waer to which has been added an ounce of 40 per cent nicotine sulphate. The spraying should be done thoiuoghly and within a week after the first young are observed. A second application should be made about a week later. To effectively control this insect it will be necessary to spray not only fruit trees but also shade trees and shrubs that are infested. The United States is richer in helium than any other country.
I APRIL POSTAL RECEIPTS i SHOW DECREASE FROM 1920 WASHINGTON, May 13. Postal rejceipts for April, at SO of the largest j of fiees in the service, totaled $20,- , .VJ2.611, a decrease of $1,848,708, or i 8.24 percent from the same month last I year. In making this announcement today the postoffice department said railroad and express strikes in April a year ago had forced merchants and
others to send many shipments by majl which normally would go by freight or express. The 50 offices represent 54 percent of the country's , jostal business. 1
Clem Thistlethwaite's. Richmond. Ind.
PESKY BED - BUGS P. D. Q.
Try lost once P. D. Q. .Pesky Devils Quietus as a preventive or to rid Bed Bugs, Roaches, Fleas and Ants. Every family
' sbouid use r. u. (J. bouse cleaning time to guard fainst the Pesky Devils and to
prevent moths. - P. D. O. is not
an insect powder, but is a new chemical that kills Insects and their eggs. Each package contains free a patent spout to enable you to get to the hard-to-get-at places and saves the juice. A 35 cent package makes one quart, enough to kill a million insects and tbeir eggs. Your drugsist has it or get it for you.
Golden Rule n "yTj' g a Service Our f&rl I M Service Ideal I U) ILfr (STORAGE BATTE RY g
y Our repairs do differ
Our repairs do differ from other repairs EVERY USL battery owner builds around him a circle of good will. We enlarge this good will every time we come in contact with him. " The maintenance of this good will depends on extremely good Service the USL Golden Rule kind which we supply to all makes of batteries. Our battery repairs are made and guaranteed under an 8 months' adjustment plan. Every repair, no matter how small, is a first-class mechanical job. We sell a new battery only when it is more economical than repairing an old one.
-RICHMOND BATTERY & RADIATOR CO. 12TH & MAIN ST, TELEPHONE 1365, RICHMOND, INDIANA Open Evenlngs Until 8 O'clock
If you want good clean coal to burn next winter order now. ADMIRALTY POCAHONTAS That Good Coal Richmond Coal Co. Phones 3165-3379
BREAD the food that keeps them happiest through a long day of play. It's so delicious so nourishing and saves you lots and lots of money, pesides. Nell Bread Ack Your Grocer
Frank Jacobs
625 North 12th St.
via
Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern Traction Co. Good going on all trains leaving Richmond up to and including train leaving at 12:10 p. ra. on the above dates. Good returningon all trains on date of sale. For further information call the local ticket agent.
SATURDAY
Choice Beef Roasts, lb 14c-16c Prime Rib Roast, lb 16C Boiling Beef, lb iqc Hamburger, lb 121.4 c Pork Sausage, lb qc Pork Shoulders, lb i5C Veal Roast, lb 17c Veal Stew, lb 10c SUGAR CURED SMOKED MEAT Breakfast Bacon, sides, lb 20c Smoked Shoulders, lb " .15C Bean Bacon, lb 12'c Creamery Butter, lb 35c Buehler Bros. 715 Main Street
is.
A Wish Come True Once upon a time a small boy wished, in a "wishing game," that he might eat all the ice cream he wanted and GET PAID FOR IT. Now that was not a vain wish. The very act of eating ice cream makes the wish come true. Dieticians agree that ice cream is a food as well as a delicacy a wholesome, nourishing food. When we eat ice cream, therefore, we contribute to the welfare of our bodies. In this way we DO get paid for eating ice cream and w get paid handsomely. Delicious and Wholesome, Enjoyable and Profitable Why Not Have Some of Telling's Today? Telling's Velvet Ice Cream For Sale by DAFLER DRUG CO.
Corner 9th and Main Sts.
Phone 1901
DRESS
SPECIA
at the
BETWEEN 675?
616 MAIN ST.
Gingham, Voiles and Organdies
42s
A Candy Special That Can't Be Beat
ft
CHOCOLATES
VEIUTE 1921 Assortment A full pound package of the famous Candy, a $1.25 1Q value. Special, lb. C
Serving You With the Best at Our New Fountain Always ready with your favorite drink and a variety of fresh frnltflavored Ice Cream dished. Step in You'll Like Quigley's Service Quigley's Drug Store
The San-Tox Store 3 Big Store
