Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 266, 19 September 1921 — Page 9

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, SEPT. 19, 1921.

PAGE NINE

fEWER AGRICULTURAL STUDENTS IN OHIO SHOWSDRIFTTOCITY (By Associated Press) COLUMBUS. 0., Sept. 19. With the prospect of a eharpt decrease In he enrollment of the college of agriculture at Ohio State university announced by Dean Alfred Vivian, agricultral experts here are wondering whether the3 !s a definite trend away

from the farm because of the present

period of depression.

They say there is no doubt but that

ine present; crop season nas been a difficult one for Ohio farmers, but the effect cf these difficulties on any movement away from the farm has not

become clearly apparent, although the

decrease in the number of agricul

tural students at the 6tate university

is regarcea as a serious situation.

Although not attempting to assign an exact cause for the prospective lessening of the number of those studying agriculture at the university, the

agricultural dean believes that "a disposition to regard the present finano

ial depression as a stated and regular

thing" has a great deal to do with it Farming Unprofitable.

"It is true that farming hasn't paid this year." Dean Vivian says. "Indeed, many farmers have operated at a loss. But there are other years in which it has paid, and there are years

to come in which it will pay."

In the face of a decrease in the

number of persor-, studying scientific agriculture, he points out, there is an Increasing demand for graduates of the college. The output in Ohio has

been insufficient to supply the de

mands of the state, he says, and hands

have been s etched out to other states . for the importation of agricultural experts. All of the graduates of the 1921 class of agriculturalists at the university have been placed in good positions, the dean declares. About 55 percent of them returned to farms and almost

all of the remaining ones took up employment in kindred lines, and still there is demand for more college trained men in these lines. The desirability and importance of getting an agricultural education are greater now than at any other time, Vivian points out, In requesting that agricultural organizations and agencies of the state .emphasize the possibilities which are opened up through such an education.

MILLINERY MODES THAT REFLECT SPIRIT OF FALL SEASON

FORCE OF EXAMPLE -POWERFUL ARGUMENT, DECLARES REV. RAE "The life that you live is the life that you are recommending for some

other person to live in this world," , said Rev. J. J. Rae to his congregation Sunday morning. "If you are not living the kind of life t you would have some other, man or woman live, then

speed up and live that kind of life," he stated.

People when young lay the founda

tion of their lives and these founda

tions should be of the very best. This

Is possibly the best way to a clean and moral as well as a successful life,' he said. , . " -.

People in this day and age do the thing first that they think most im

portant. Many times this event that

they do first in the least Important, he said.

"There is only one straight line in the ways between you and I and that is the way of the Lord. "The way of the Lord is always the shortest way between any two points," said Rsv. Rae. . ... -

rP A IrrJf.'n A Wyoming, will be provided by the ' toy" A.Ch?eS . American Lgion. but the veterans are

next Saturday tor Winter

Feathers in many different forms and styles are featured by some of the most exclusive millinery designers this season and here are three very stunning hats which show this tendency to use feathers as well as the variety of ways in

which they may be used. At the left is a fuschia silk velvet hat which 'turns up abruptly from the face with a very high brim. A shower of silvered glycerine ostrich is the only trimming. In the center is a smart black plush hat with an upturned brim

and a huge paradise ornament forming graceful wings and lending breadth to the hat. Still another kind of feather trims the hat at the right. Black Lyons velvet with an envelop brim effect is finished off with bronzed coque feathers.

Post C. Travelers' Protective association, at Its meeting next Saturday night, will outline its activities for the winter season. President Neiwoeh. ner and Secretary Hastings are making a special effort to have a large representation of the membership present on Saturday night and there will be much of interest to take place.

Post C, which is one of the oldest in the state and one that has showed consistent growth since its organization, gives promise of further increasing its roster during the next year, ,

HAMUTON MAN HELD BY EATON SHERIFF;

STOLEN GAR CHARGE

tion, and all the stock is subscribed, the officials say. The object of the company is to protect its members from theft cf their automobiles, although the company does not insure against loss or does not offer any "insurance feature of any character. Pleasant Is Installed. Rev. D. G. Pleasant was formally installed Sunday as pastor- of the Christian church at Campbellstown.

The Rev. A. M. Kerr, D. D. preached the installation sermon. The installaticn prayer was by Rev. A. W.

Hirby, as was also the charge to thd congregation. The charge to the pastor was by the Rev. Hiley Baker. The installation of Rev. Pleasant was attended by all day services. Dinner was served at noon in the church dining hall. Knights Meet Wednesday. Members of Waverly lodge. Knights of Pythias, will observe "hobby night" in a meeting Wednesday evening in Pythian temple. In three-minute talks, members will tell of their pet "hobby."' A luncheon will feature the meeting.

GIVES UP TEACHING TO GUIDE TOURISTS THROUGH FAR EAST

EATON. O., Sept. 19. Rather an odd circumstance developed from the attack of a would-be burglar upon Miss Mary Mitchell in her home last Wednesday evening, in that a Ford coupe believed to have figured in the affair is alleged" to have been stolen in Eaton last April. Glenn Lackey, of Hamilton, was arrested Saturday in Hamilton and Saturday afternoon he was arraigned here before Squire L. T. Stephen nd held to the grand jury under $1,000 bond, charged with stealing the car. The car was identified beyond doubt by

Frank Markey, local mail carrier, as his property, police say. Clifford Morningstar, of Hamilton, was arraigned here Saturday afternoon before Mayor Harry L. Risineer and held to the grand jury under $5,000 bond on two charges. He is held as an accomplice of Albert Rister, of Mid-

dletown, alleged assailant of Miss Mitchell. Rister waived examination Friday and is in jail in default of $2,500 bond. Both he and Morningstar are charged with "breaking and entering into an inhabited dwelling house in the night seasons with intent to commit a felony." The other charge against Morningstar 13 driving an automobile in Preble county without consent of the owner. On this charge his bond was fixed at $1,000. On the other charge the bond is $4,000. It is said the arrest of Lackey was the result of Morningstar "peaching" upon him. Lackey is said to have told police that Morningstar borrowed a car from him to go to Middletown the day of the evening Mis3 Mitchell was attacked. Organization of the Interstate Automobile Protective company at Eaton, Ohio, which, it is expected, will be

nation-wide in scope, has been ef

fected by electing Dr. W. H. Bucke

of Eaton, president: C. G. Ogden, of

Dayton, vice-president; Marks W. Deem, of Eaton, secretary and treasurer. S. E. Trisler, Dayton; Dr. Edgar C. Buck, Cincinnati; Willard Armstrong. Eaton, and the officers constitute the board of directors. Organize New Company Main offices of the company will be located in Eaton. These are now ; being equipped. Soliciting of memberships in Preble county is under way and many members have already been procured, according to the officers. Work of establishing branch organizations in Indiana, Kentucky, Virginia, North Carolina and Pennsylvania is under way, officers of the coniDanv state.

The company Is chartered under the Ohio laws, with $50,000 capitaliza-l

WIRELESS IN SEARCH FOR BALLOON RACERS

(By Associated Press)

PARIS, Sept. 19. Thp Eiffel tower

wireless station sent out a request at noon today to all steamers in the eastern Atlantic, the English Channel and the Bay of Biscay to keep a sharp look out for the balloons which started yesterday from Brussells in the James Gordon Bennett international

race. The ministry . of marine also instructed all lighthouse keepers on the Atlantic seaboard from Dunkirk to the Spanish border to be on the watch and report, but thus far none of the

balloons has been seen or has lr.nded in France.

MISS IDA K.

GREENLEE.

The Theatres

Springer Named Special Judge in Jefferis Case Judge Raymond S. Springer, of

Connersville, has been appointed special judge in the divorce action of Cora Jefferis against Clarence Jefferis, which will be tried in Wayne circuit court in the near future. Mr. Jefferis, the defendant in the action, is now confined in the state reformatory having pleaded guilty to a grand larceny charge in connection with the theft of several automobiles.

Complete Airplane Trip Once Made in Baggy Tiy Associated Press) GARNER, la., Sept. 19. Just 16 years ago Mr. and Mrs. Lon Schneider arrived in Garner from Lisbon. N. D., in a horse and rig, after a 10-day trip through rain and over muddy Iowa roads. They made the same tip this week in eight hours in an airplane with their son, Kenneth, as pilot. The plane travelled 400 miles at an altitude of 3,000 feet.

Miss Ida K. Greenlee of Seattle

Washington, entered upon an unusual adventure for, a lone woman some 14

years ago and she is still doing her work and making ,it pay and still

working alone. After having been a teacher for more than 20 years, Miss Greenlee decided that there ara many ways of teaching other than in the school room. She therefore began looking into some of the "other" ways. She. first investigated the advantages of travel in the Orient. She took her first trip in 1907 for the purpose of securing first-hand information concerning the possibilities of traveling comfortably

through the far east. Two years later Miss Greenlee had

outlined ner route so tnat sne was able to conduct a party with such success that she decided to continue the business. She has since planned all her own routes and looked after the comforts of her travelers. She has had the same native guide for Japan ever since she took the first trip. Going through China she depends for her guides upon the Chinese student body with whom she came in close contact while she was a member of the faculty of the State University of Washington. She speaks the Chinese dialect enough to be able to assist her party in making their purchases.

MURRETTE. Some of the most amusing scenes In

Charles Ray's "A Midnight Bell " a

First National attraction which can be

seen for three days at theIurrette Theatre, take place in a small country store, where Ray gives some excellent examples of salesmanship. The manner in which he forces the old proprietor to give him a job, by witnessing his

method of selling a woman a bolt of cloth she did not want, is one of the best comedy touches Mr. Ray has

given on the screen.

On seeing the trial run of the film

in the studio, Mr. Ray's father, who was visiting him, remarked:

Well, Charles, you need not worry;

if you ever have to quit acting ycfli

can make a comfortable living tending

store." MURRAY. Gerald Pring plays three different parts in the new Goldwyn picture, "Milestnoes,"' which comes to the Murray theatre, for three days. In the first episode in 1860, he is young Ned Pym. In the secnod, 18S5, he is Lord Monkhurst and in the last, 1910, he. is cat as the young Lord Monkhurst. Pring, already having had two roles, Director Scardon at first tried to get another young man for the young Lord Monkhurst. Several wpip tried, but none of them caught the English manner, so it was necessary to send in a hurry call for Pring to come and triple for himself.

Pring was born in England, knows just the correct droop of a mustache, how to put in a monocle and all the mannerisms of a son of John Bull.

SHORT CIRCUIT PUTS OUT LIGHTS OF CITY

A short circuit on the Liberty high tension line caused all the lights in Richmond to go out Saturday night, according to a communication given the board of works by J. P. Dillon, su

perintendent of the light plant, Monday. Mr. Dillon stated that the shortage

which came in over the Liberty line

was so great it caused the low voltage releases on the house motors to throw out, which in turn put the turbines out of commission. He stated that the occurence was unavoidable and was caused primarily from the storm Saturday morning.

American Legion

j Charging that bodies of returned soldiers dead at the army piers at Hoboken are handled with less respect

than are boxes of merchandise, thej American Legion department of New Jersey has urged the governor and adjutant general of the state to place officers permanently on duty at the base to demand proper treatment of the bodies. Removal of the dead has become fatigue duty for soldiers, in practice if not by order, investigation has disclosed. Unkempt men jostle the flag covered caskets into disreputable looking trucks and drivers bounce their precious loads over rough streets at a

high rate of speed, it is charged, with

no military suards accompanying the remains.

Three distinguished war leaders will return to the Missouri homeh as a result of the American Legion national convention in Kansas City this fall. A home-coming celebration will be held by General John J. Pershing, Major General Enoch H. Crowder and Rear Admiral R. E. Coontz, chief of naval operations, all native Missourians. General Pershing was born in Laclede, Mo., General Crowder in Edinburg, and Rear Admiral Coontz in Hannibal.

asked to bring their own blankets. President Harding will be asked to join members of the Hood River. Ore., post of the American Legion in their annual climb of Mount -Hood next

summer, ine mvuauon wiu oe extended by Senator McNary, of Oregon. The national commander of the Legion and other officials also will be asked to make the climb. A state-wide suspension of businessand a funeral oration by the governor of the state, marked the funeral at Carson City, Nevada, of a farmer boy who went to war and made the supreme sacrifice. The honored hero was Lawrence Peter Foged. One of his daily tasks before he went to war was to deliver milk at the executive mansion. The funeral was conducted

by the American Legion and a. G. Scrugham, national rice-commander of that organization attended.

John Jones', 80 Years Old,

Dies; Funeral Wednesday

John Jones, 80 years old, died Sunday at his home, 72 Grant street. Funeral services will be held Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock, at the Bethel A. M. E. church, Rev. Wallace will officiate and burial will be in the Earlham cemetery. Friends may call at any time.

PALACE TODAY WM. S; HART In "The Cradle of Courage" And a Big Comedy

RICHMOND TODAY HAROLD LLOYD ' in "NOW OR NEVER" And Also - "The Blood Barrier"

Sergt. Alvin C. York, "greatest hero

of the war," has refused to consider an ! offer of $6,000 for a twenty-week j theatrical tour on which he would be

required to appear SO minutes a day. He announced following a "heart to'

heart talk on conscience" at a religious gathering at Cleveland, Ohio, that although he needed the money to pay off a mortgage on his Tennessee farm, his conscience would not let him exploit patriotism. Billets for ex-service men who attend the land drawing at Powell,

ASPIRIN

r&me ! 'Bayer" ' on Genuine

Native fishermen of the Aleutian inlands declare that recently they have seen specimens of the Arctic sea cow, which was believed to have been extinct for 40 years.

SEIZE SPANISH NEWSPAPER BARCELONA, Sept. 19 The Barcelona police have discovered the secret printing office of the terrorist newspaper, Solidaridad Obrera. They seized the plant and. arrested a number of syndicalists connected with it.

Mwrette Theatre "Where the Stars Twinkle First" Theatre Beautiful TODAY and TOMORROW

HELP! Charlie Ray's caught

five Ghosts

Warning! Unless you see the name

"Bayer" on package or on tablets you I are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for twenty-one;

years and proved safe by millions. Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer package for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin i3 the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. Advertisement.

y

ARTHUR S. KANE PRESENTS

MURRAY

."BETTER Pi?e Organ

COME EARLY" Concert Orchestra

CHARLES RAY in the famous Charles Hovt play "A Midnight Bell" A midnight mystery a gallivant with ghosts a hurricane of humor and enough thrills to last a year.

RAY MADE IT! RAY PLAYED IT

A FIRST NATIONAL ATTRACTION

ADDED FEATURES 2-Reel Christie Comedy, "IN FOR LIFE" Fox News and Newsettes COMING WEDNESDAY CONWAY TEARLE in "BUCKING THE TIGER"

A CLASSY BILL

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday

6 --Carnival of Venice-6 SIX PEOPLE Two ladies and four men, featuring ROSA DOMATELLO, Italian Harpist. An instrumental, singing and dancing presentation with special scenery. An act of the highest standard direct from the Keith circuit. An offering de luxe. Newport and Stirk Assisted by Mrs. SUE PARKER in "A PAIR OF JACKS". Special settings. A comedy act of merit and refinement. This act also bears the Keith stamp of approval.Fisher and Lloyd "Two Shades of Burnt Cork" Comedy and Exclusive Songs

Dancing Lab arbes Late features of Eddie Cantor's "Midnight Rounders" Co., from the New York Century Roof. French Novelty Dancers and Pantomimists.

Correan Kirkham A former Richmond girl In "MILESTONES" A five-reel Goldwyn feature I Coming Thursday KHAYM, the India Man of Mystery; Frank and Gracie DeMont; Lester and .Company; Jack and Jessie Gibson. Neil O'Brien's Minstrels, Wednesday, Sept. 28, matinee and evening. Seats Saturday morning.

See our Complete Showing of the New Felt Hats for Men LICHTENFELS 1010 Main Street

Grace M. E. Church Community Night TUESDAY, SEPT. 20, 7:30 P. M. A Paramount Picture Charles Ray 'HIS MOTHER'S BOY' An Old-Fashioned Love Story ADMISSION, 15 CENTS Followed by an Hour's Directed Play We Show the Pictures Advertised in The Saturday Evening Post.

. f - - - - - - i- : fEv ?r'':'r?'' r j 5rL- 1

A X w; Air r i

l?.r-v,.- zj&tx-i ..,y - LLLkl

CO.

Right"

JACK BESSEY STOCK t In Permanent Stock Opening Monday Night Sept. 19 th Opening Play

"Turn to the

A play with a heart story, moral and plenty cf comedy. Written by Winchell Smith, author of "LIGHTNING," "DEAR ME" and "THREE WISE FOOLS." Matinees Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday TO THE PUBLIC: The management of the Wsahington Theatre believes the people of Richmond want a change of amusement, so he has secured the Jack Bessey Stock Company for an indefinite engagement without a doubt the best stock company in the middlewest. Satisfy yourself Monday night. Popular StockPrices 40c and 55c, War Tax Included