Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 236, 15 August 1921 — Page 14
PAGE FOURTEEN
i THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, AUGUST 15, 1921.
UP FOR CHAUTAUQUA SEASON THIS YEAR
ChauUuqua headquarters were moved to the Chautauqua grounds Monday morning. Persons desiring to reserve lota -will be required to make their reservations at the ground the remainder of the week.
A large number ot campers have signed up for lots to date and a record breaking year is expected. Following is the list of campers signed to date: - Tent number 1. Ray Mather; 2, Dr. A B. Price; 3. F. C. Bell; 4. O. P. Ward; 5. Lenora Cook; 6. R. W. Phillips; 7. H. S. Sinex; S. Lillian Stackes, 9. A. H. Bartel; 10, Jesse Wlechman; 11, Mrs. Jennie R. Gause; 12, Eben Louck. ,, Tent number 13, Lawrence Handley; 14, F. W. Wilson; 15. Louis Cockrill; is! County Teachers; 17. J.. W. Noakes; 20. R. B. Jones; 21, E. H. Hill; 22, W. F. Bond; 23. G. A. Dwiggins; 24. G. C. Healy; 25, J. V. Hughes; 26, Ora Brady. Tent, number 27. Dr. L. W. Roller; "8 W T. Steers: 30. Mrs. L. L. HinRh'aw; 31. Dr. F. W. Krueger; 32, Mrs. Ida McCoy; 33. Russell Phares.
Tent number 35. F. B. Jenkinson;
?.fi. C. O. Williams; 40. Miss L. F,
Drifemever: 41 O. L. Loofburrow; 42,
Mrs. A. C. Underbill; 43, Gladys Bai
Tent number 44. Carl Lundy: 43, L Brooks: 47. Z. Thomas; 50. Mary J.
Alexander; 53, Essie Weyl; 54, W. O.
Morrison. , Tent number 55, O. C. Weyl: 5fi
n,tth Writers: 57. E. Cain: 58, J. E
Kollinrsworth; 59, U M. Elliott; 7 Mable Benson. Tent number 74. Nellie Colvin; 7
Harrison Scott; 77. Richard Sedgwick;
7. Clen Jennines: 79. Mrs. Martha
Scute; 80, Daphine Vore. Tmt number 81. Helen Roller; 8
Arthur Thomas;-83, William Brake; Si, J. O. Robinson; 85, Edwin Ross; 86. Robert Shlsler. Tent number 87. O. M. Deardorf; fiS. J. D. Mendenhall; 89, Mrs. P. L. Beard; 90, Cora Hebbler; 91, Charles Swaford; 92. Fern Benham. Tent number 93, Orville Justice: 94, Edna Ross; 95. Hazel Hinshaw; 96. R. E. Stetler; 100. Mrs. John Taylor;
1M..W. B. Fulpbura.
Working on World's Highest Dam; 1 00,000 Acres To Be Reclaimed
I
I
A '
xN OJ
.JSSV
of water to discharge, which is thre3 times that of any spillway in the world. The gates to be used on the dam are- the same pattern as' those which equip the Elephant Butte and Arrowrock dams so effectively. Land as far as 50 miles south will receive water from this basin, and crops to the value of millions can be produced once the water is released. This dam is simply a storage plant for the Tieton" project finished five years ago, and in addition will water the Moxee valley. 40,000 acres; , the Rosa, 40,000 acres, and the Kennewick, ao.000 acres. The Tieton project, but five years old, and only 35,0o0 acres,
annually produces crops to the valuo I of more than $12,000,000.
! FOUR IN CROWD SHOT AT
NEW YORKDEATH CORNER"
NEW YORK, Aug. 15. Four per
sons were wounded by pistol bullets as they mingled with throngs at Grand
and Christie streets, where 18 murders have been committed in the last few months as a result, police believe, of a bootlegging f5ud.
VANDERLIP MEETS
GERMAN MINISTER
T CBy Associated Press) LONDON, Aug. 15. Frank Vanderlip, the American financier, who has been in this city for some time", expected to meet Dr. Walter Rathenau, minister of reconstruction in the German cabinet, today. He had also planned to confer with other members of the cabinet, and with financiers and heads of industrial firms in Berlin. Mr. Vanderlip denied yesterday that he was arranging credits, stating that
his trip to Germany was devoted to an investigation of economic questions. As an instance, he said he was making
an inquiry as to how Germany would
be able to invade neutral maraeu ana underbid even American exporter. :
Italy will require 48,501,200 pounds of wool during the present year, according to estimates made by the government. '
GULBRANSEN PLAYERS
I 9
V"
I
I Opp. Port Office Phone 1655 liHiwHnirTWttiimuiMtinmu(mtaittfrauiiuuinnimmitiiumiM
i-, tVt &e; -;
Elmer Alexander, a farmer on the Bethel pike, says: "A CaioriC Pipeless Furnace has been installed in my 7-room house for two winters. We only use 7 tons of coal to heat the entire house. We are pleased from every point of view." See the CaioriC on display at 7 South 7th.
Above: General view of the Rimrock camp, looking down river from a point Just above the dam site, where work on the dam is under way. Below: John Russell homestead, which will be in center of lake that will result from completion of dam.
mile, while the crest will stretch across between the inclosing bills.
A channel to divert the river so the
foundation can be laid is being drilled
through solid andesite for a distance
Tent number 102, Ed O. Marian; 103, W. H. Luring: 104 Mrs. N. T. Comer; 105, Mrs. E. Reid; 106. Fred Elliott; 107. A. While; 108 G. H. Miller. Tent number 109, Cora Carmen; 110, W. H.' Cox; 111. George Guyer; 112, J. F. Hornaday; 113. Lillian Roberts. Tent number 114 and 115, George Pille; 116, Mrs. F. J. Allen; 118. Edna Campbell: 125. B. Beeson; 128, L. E. Stanley; 132, Nellie Hawkins. Tent number 134. Edgar Fouts; 200, H. W. Kramer; 202, E. H. Turner; 203, E. K. Shera; 204, J. W. Ferguson; 205, Mrs. W. E. Wilson. Tent number 207. E. B. Markey; 208, Mrs. Edna Heiser; 209, L. W. Rowe; 210, H.- J. Barkstetter; 211. C. R. Earhart; 212, Orville Price; 214. Zella Rust. Tent number 223, George H. Miller; 225. Nora Anderson; 300. E. R. Krickeval; 301, Frank Tilson; 303.
Virgil Winkler; 304, E. A. Bond; 305, D. F. Weber. Tent number 306, Ed. Thlstlethwaite; 307. Elizabeth Smelser; 308, J. A- Busbv; 310, Mark Heltbrink; 312, Mrs. W. W. Kendall; 313, O. E. Weist; 314, Alice Goodwin. Tent number 815. Ben Rost; 316. A. J. Hamilton: 317. Pauline Maher; 329. Fred Pickett; 330, J. A. Jordan; 401, F. R. McFaill; 402, Lon Morrison. Tent number 404. Mrs. Ben Wickett; 407. Helen Ligon; 409, James Lacey; 410, T. E. Kenworthy; 412, Elizabeth Donohue; 414. Marlow Aikin: 416, Edgar Hawekotte. Tent number 417, C. K. Thomas; 418, Vernon Hess; 420, Cecil Swisher; 422, Merwin Castle; 423, J. O.
Parshali; 424. Harry F. Dalbey; 426,
C. E. Chappel. Tent number 438, Merle Cully; 440, Zelma Blade: 503, J. V. Kimmel; 516, Mrs. N. L. Green; 529, James F. Kittie: 901, E. W. Allen; 902, Mrs. W. E. Eikenberry. Tent number 903. Cora Hazeltine; 904. W. E. Eldridge; 905. Mrs. Mary Henning; 906. Clara Kramer: 907, C. H. Kramer; 90S, D. W. Roberts. Tent number 910. H. H. Toler; 911, Charles Murray; 912, Joseph Phennis; 913. Lon Kennedy: 914, Charles Roland; 915, Leona Weaver; 916, Harry Townsend: 917, F. F. Riggs; 918, G. W. Mansfield.
The United States reclamation ser-, vice has laid the foundation of what
I will be the highest dam in the world
near Yakima, Wash. Hidden among nature's gorgeous setting of mountain and forest, divided by canyons and streams. 46 miles north of here, in Tieton canyon, men and machinery are changing the landscape for the benefit of mankind. Water for Irrigation. Rimrock, where the great Tieton
I dam is to grow into . an enormous
I-urse, impounding. 202,500 acre-feet of
water to irrigate 100,000 acres of dry, arid land, rises a sheer rock against
the skyline, an apt name to the h cality. Here are machine shops, ware
houses, postoffice, recreation and din
ing halls and a hospital where one c
uncie bams surgeons is aiways ou
the watch to relieve accidents. -The dam, when it is finished, will
rise 430 feet above the present level of the river water, making a lake ten miles long and from one to three miles
wide. It is estimated it will take four
years to complete it at a cost of over
4. 000, 000. The Tieton dam, when completed
will be known as an earth and rock fill type. It will have a five-foot-thiclc
concrete core pinned Into bedrock. It will require 35,000 cubic yards of concrete to make the core and more than 2,000,000 cubic yards of earth and rock
to complete the fill. The base will ex.
tend up and down the canyon a. half
CEDAR OIL Full Quart 45
of 2,100 feet and a diameter of 21 feet. This will later be used as a spillway, being operated by two fjve-foot needle valves controlled from the top or the works. It will allow 30,000 second-feel
Mm
m
Newer Wedding Rings
keeping with the latest vogue in
Engagement Rings, Wedding Rings
have become more and more ornate.
The popular wedding token of today is of carved design in gold or platinum or a diamond set circlet of fancy pattern. ALL STYLES Shown Here. Our assortment of Wedding Rings is always a delight to the prospective bride and groom. Seamless, hand-made rings of the purest metal are shown in various weights and sizes. Happy couples come miles to purchase this important ring here.
CHARLES H. HANER Jeweler
fain St. Glasses Fitted
IZ3I
IK--ViQ-.; j 810 Main St. Glasses Fitted f fit l VV If:! 111
iggwqggq y-: : j
1?!
Thistlethvaite's
The Original Cut-Rate E VERY-DAY PRICES In Effect at All 7 Stores MiJes' Nervine QQ special Ot jC Wine of Cardui ALL SCRAP TOBACCO. OCT 3 for ZOC
At Feltman's
Here Is a Big Value!
Patent Kid Pump
Turned soles and covered Louis Heels
$395
.Feltman's Shoe Store. - The World's Largest Shoe Dealers 35 Store 724 Main Street
Tomorrow, Tuesday, Begins Our I August Silk I Event i
Frank Holland's Golf Poem
is Reproduced in Magazine Frank Holland's golf poem. "Bugs," which was printed in the Palladium at the time of the golf tourney at the Country club, Is reproduced in the current issue of the Vaudeville News the- official magazine of the national vaudeville business. This magazine is distributed weekly to the 1.000 vaudeville theatres in North America and to individual art ists throughout the world.
0
The Place for Fountain Drinks
At our fountain you secure the most delectable and satisfying Ice Cream dishes and refreshing drinks. We dispense only the purest of drinks and frozen delicacies. You are served without delay. Try cne of our homemade sandwiches with a rich malted milk for, your afternoon luncheon. Meet your friend3 at Price's
SI'
Luxurious fiirs
at
Economy races
HUGE coats, magnificent capes and shawl collars, smart coatees, chic chokers and a wonderful array of miscellaneous smaller pieces of unsurpassed beauty and luxuriousness. Dozens of distinctive designs representing the latest creations of the Fur Garment world are now offered at prices far below what we will have to ask later in the season. i One glance at our wonderful display will quickly convince, the most skeptical of the unusual opportunity offered in Our August Fur Sale Never before have conditions equalled the present. Every Fur trading center reports a scarcity of skins, while an increasing demand makes the situation still more complex.
' Such acute conditions are what make rigid economy tally important with all of us. An appreciation of these
facts is the chief reason for the present unusual offer of our entire line of Fur Garments at Pre-Season prices. ' The saving we realize on overhead costs is passed along to you in sharp price reductions you cannot afford to overlook. ' - : " I SaIe Ends Saturday, Sept. 3rd.
in which is given the opportunity to purchase new Fall Silks at a considerable saving an introductory sale to the new Fall merchandise. Prices, you will find, are considerably lower than usual, and we do not hesitate in urging you to BUY NOW.
BLACK CHIFFON TAFFETA Black only, excellent quality that sells QQ regularly at $2; special p XOeJ
ALL-SILK PONGEE Excellent for draperies, skirts, waists, etc., at
49c
JAPANESE PONGEE 12-momme weight, natural pongee color, Qff unusually smooth cloth tO C
$1.75 SILK CREPE POPLINS In rose, navy, green, red, purple, grey 1 1Q and black; special XXt7
CANTON CREPE
40 inches wide, shown in a good line of colors, new
fall shades, such as browns, blues
and blacks ."
!..S1.98
SILK TRICOLETTE Yard-wide, lock stitch, ravel-proof, in a full line of colors, including black and navy; (T rQ special. at tpXUt
WHITE SILK SKIRTINGS This lot includes plain baronettes and neat check effects in baronettes and
corded silks. Special, per yard
liWliVO dill $2.98
CHIFFON TAFFETAS
Yard wide, in a good assortment of col
ors and in a good wearing quality
$1.69
SPECIAL LOT of SILK POPHNS Yard wide, in good assortment QQA of Fall colors 0ls
SILK FOULARDS Neat patterns, including many wanted check patterns and rTA stripes ....... PJL I U
SILK SHIRTINGS
In popular pin stripes. All Silk Broad
cloth Shirtings included in
this group at only
$1.79
SATINS and CHARMEUSE 40 inches wide; assortment of crepe
oack satins and charmeuse in blue, brown, black, navy
$2.98
Many other SPECIAL VALUES to be found upon a visit to the Silk Department West aisle, first floor. LEE B. NUSBAUM COMPANY NUSBAUM BUILDING v
lliflliflllilfiP
