Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 274, 28 September 1921 — Page 3

TrJE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 28, 1921.

PAGE THREE-

ELECT BATE, CLINE; . OFFICERS OF LOCAL ART ASSOCIATION Directors of the Richmond Art as

sociation at therr first session of the

season elected Superintendent of j Schools William G. Bate, first vicepresident of the association, and E. C.i Cline, principal of the high school, secretary. Mr. Bate fills the vacancy left by J. H. Bentley -who left recently for Duluth, Minn., to reside. The resignation of Mrs. Howard A. Dill as a director of the association was accepted and Mrs. Charles Bond was elected to succeed her as a director. The board appointed Mrs. Melville F. Johnston, director of exhibits, and Miss Florence Ratliff was appointed gallery curator. The association plans to compile a catalogue of its permanent collection of art works as a souvenir of their 25th anniversary which occurs this year. John H. Johnson, W. G. Bate, and Mrs. M. F. Johnston were 'appointed a committee to consider compilation of such a catalogue. Increase Valution. . A vote was taken to increase the insurance valuation of pictures in the rmanent collection of the associa

tion to $5,000. The finance commit

tee for last year will be continued this year, it was decided. The committee is composed of T. C. Harrington. W. G. Bate, and Francis H. Ed

munds. Mr. Edmunds, who is treasurer of the association, reported pres

ent funds in the treasury to be f 350.81. Formal presentation of the group of four paintings and a vase, the gifts of the late Mrs. Helen Logan Dougan to the art association, was made and the gifts were accepted by the board. Announcement was made by Mrs. M. T .Tohnaton director of exhibits, that

the pictures for the exhibit of four Cincinnati artists,' which opens next Sunday afternoon, have arrived. They will be unpacked Thursday and hung Friday. The hanging committee Is composed of the following persons: Mrs. Maude Kaufman Eggemeyer, Francis Brown, Miss Blanche Wait, Miss Elmira Kempton and George Baker. Directors present at Wednesday's meeting were: William Dudley Foulke, W. G. Bate. Francis Brown, Miss Hettie Elliott, Mrs. J. E. Cathell, Allen D. Hole, George Eggemeyer, John H. Johnson, Francis Edmunds, Miss Florence Williams, E. C. Cline and Mrs. Melville F. Johnston. The meeting was presided over by the Hon. William Dudley Foulke, new president of the association.

Boys and Girls Enthusiastic Members of Pig Club

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The photograph above shows the 1921 pig club of Wayne county as it appeared after the judging had been completed at the Wayne county stock show at Jackson park, Sept. 15. The members of the club who exhibited were: Harold Bufg. Keith Coggeshall, Donald Davis, Mary Davis, Frank Dun, Elmer Gibson, Cardinal Harris, Clyde Hinshaw, Idris Hinshaw, Donald McKinney, Dorothy McKinney, Burlist Moyer, Byron Pike, Lucille Steers, Lucille Thornton, Delia Thurston, Emerson Thurston, Robert Watt, Sylvia Watt, Bernice Williams, Evelyn Williams, Kenneth Williams, Howard Wilson, Virginia Wilson.

Carl Adams, nard Bertsch,

Picture of 1921 Wayne County Pig Club, taken at Jackson's Park.

Lawrence Crawford, Leonard Duke, J Jury which it suffered before the show.

Ralph Duke, Marjorie Funk, Horace Harris, Lester Harris, Howard Kirlin, Horace Knote, Harold Larson, Robert Rothermel, Linville A. Baker, " Merle Baker, Earl Clevenger, Mary Martin, Charles Myers, Frank Strong, Bertie Wilson, Rollie Wilson, Ralph Bertsch. Roy Briar, Robert Ranck, Ralph McCoy, Carroll McCullough, Orrin McCullough, Linville Wissler, Verda Wissler, Anna Wissler. Margaret and Loretta Weadick and Edward Weadick were unable to exhibit their pigs on account of cholera

in their neighborhoods, and James

Robert Adrion. May- j Rogers, another member, had to keep Elizabeth Caldwell, his pig at home on account of an in

All other members displayed their pigs at the show. Prizes were awarded on the best pigs in each of the breeds and in addition Mary Davis was awarded first prize for the best boar pig. Winners in the breeds were Robert Ranck, Chester White; Frank Strong, Spotted Poland China. Winners of second and third places were: Poland China, Idris Hinshaw, Donald McKinney; Spotted Poland China, Bertie Wilson, Mary Martin; Duroc-Jersey: Horace Knote, Howard Kirlin; fourth, Robert Rothermel; fifth, Marjorie Funk. Chester White, Anna Wissler, Verda Wissler.

The Bride, the Groom, and the Falls By FREDERIC J. HASKIN

PENNSY CAMPAIGNS AGAINST CLAIM LOSS

(By Associated Press) PITTSBURGH, Sept. 28. An intensive campaign to eliminate the principal cause of claim payments on account of loss or theft of freight, is being made in the central region of the Pennsylvania railroad, officers of the company announced here today. Important features of the campaign ere: Reporting to superintendents immediately over freight, short and damaged freight, and stolen freight; employes to observe regulations regarding checking, loading, transferring, delivery, proof of ownership and application of seals to cars, and solicitation of cooperation of shippers during the campaign.

ASK POWER PLANT. (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON. Sept. 28. Application for a patent covering the power project which contemplates utilization of all remaining available power on the Mississippi river between St. Paul, and St. Cloud has been filed with the federal power commission by the Northern States power company. The

same application covered also projected developments on the St. Croix river, from a point above St. Croix falls to a point near Pine City.

NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y.. Sept 28. A question that has never been adequately answered is why so many brides and grooms see fit to follow the plunge into matrimony by inspecting the seething waters of Niagara. You can ask this question as often as you like and get a different slant on the subject every time. One plausible answer offered by a Niagara Falls native of philosophical

bent, is that a trip to the falls is the standard American pilgrimage. Once a couple are married, he explained, they settle down to prosaic domesticity and there is less chance of setting off on the purely esthetic mission of seeing Niagara. So the bride and groom land at Niagara and "do" the

falls conscientiously from as many angles as their finances and time permit. After that they board a train with a look of peace on their faces. They have seen the falls and in future conversations they can hold their own safely with any one who wants to talk travel. This explanation perhaps was based on premises a trifle old-fashioned. The modern couple rarely takes marriage to imply permanent and total domesticity. Nor is travel the formidable undertaking that it was once. A shop keeper explains the honeymooners this way: "You know the falls has' a fascination for lots of people. It's pretty well understood that when two people look at the falls they have to hold each other tightly to keep from jumping in. There's no other place that I know of that offers an opportunity like that for honeymoon couples. Why, the falls was made for them!" and the shopkeeper winked gaily and motioned toward a couple that had apparently clung to each other go desparately on the brink of the falls that they hadn't been abla to get apart. There they stood, cheek to cheek, gazing soulfully, at a rack of postcards. Tradition doubtless has had a good deal to do with the annual honeymoon stampede toward Niagara. And

the atmosphere of the falls is an ob

vious reason for the presence of bridal

parties. The entire parkway on either side of the American falls for some

distance is an unbroken series of

lover's retreats. There is plenty of room with lots of benches and shrubbery and the roar of the falls

just suitably loud enough to keen

outsiders from hearing remarks meant for two only. Doubtless Niagara cops are lenient to spooners. The Speechless Spectator. There is not, on the whole, a great deal of conversation going on around the falls. It is interesting to note that people do not stand on the brink and burst into rhapodies. For some reason, the American vocabulary does

not go far here. Almost all the language people can extract to fit the view is that it's beautiful, or wonder

ful, and occasionally, "Aint it grand?" with the swift answer from the other half of the couple, "It sure is."

The falls have always rendered people inarticulate. Seventy-five years

ago our grandmothers and grand

fathers, who pronounced it Ni-a-gay-ra Falls, with an ascent on the gav,

were standing at the edge of the same

rapids in the fall models of 1850 panniers, hoops, beaver hats, and everything using the already hoary formula: "Isn't it wonderful?'' We have been told that the fixed rule of Niagara for a honeymoon ha3 of late years become less arbitrary, other points of interest rivaling the falls in attractiveness. This may be so, but a casual count would show that about every other couple that may be seen wandering about near the falls bears all the earmarks of being just hitched. Their shoes are new, under the Niagara Falls dust. And their expressions of beatific calm likewise have the look of being new. Except for these honeymooners, who are mostly in a state of suspended animation, the chief amusements of

Americans while drinking in the falls, are chewing gum and taking snapshots. At some vantage points it may be said without too much exaggeration that the click of the cameras rivals the roar of the Falls. People who are at first glance disappointed in the size of the spectacle, sometimes get a clearer idea of the vastness of Niagara when they start to take pictures. Visitors are standing all along the shore on both the Canadian and American sides. In some places where the land juts out they are on 4he very edge of the torrent. Yet the people across the river can scarcely be seen with the naked eye. Th camera makes nothing of them. And even at closer range, the average

kodak view of the falls doesn't register the people in the scene any more than if they were flies crawling on the shore. - The town of Niagara Falls offers what American trevelers seem most to want plenty of post cards and an assortment of souvenirs that seem somehow more in keeping with the era

of what-nots, gimcracks and shutterc-J parlors tnan with this decade of so

many beautiful and useful things. The Gimcrack Business.

That there is a demand for the sou

venirs is apparent from the fact that

there are so many of the shops. A

count showed 12 souvenir stores and 10 restaurants on two blocks of Falls street, on one side of the street only. These shops, are far from cheap. The owners figure on five months active trade, but out of the five months they say there is only six weekr. rushing business. A good many uewlyweds come during June, but not many vacationists. Then after the fourth of July, the number of visitors increases steadily and rises to a peak in August, falling off again by the

end of the month. After that, as winter approaches, ' the shop keepers board up their stores, and open business in the south, or at some winter resort. There is no large, well appointed hotel in Niagara Falls, such as most popular resorts have. - The city expects to have one in a few years. In the meantime, the tourists are accommodated in small hotels of all grades, and in private rooming houses. The latter can apparently be counted only by numbering the houses in Niagara Falls, as practically every housekeeper within a mile of the falls has a sign out. The five months season is kept by these rooming houses, and many of the hotels, too, are locked up by the time of the first snow. Some day, Niagara Falls hopes to be a winter resort. The beauty of the ice-bound falls and the snow-covered evergreens on the shore is regarded by many people as a more magnificent sight than the falls in summer. Comparatively few people who work take vacations in the winter, and summer is still the popular season for marriages, but the wealthy who frequent resorts the year round may soon be sought out as patrons of Niagara in winter, with the added inducement ot

winter sports, such as skating, tobog

ganing and sleighing. At present, this plan is merely an air castle. Like other places, Niagara Falls has felt the shock of hard times this season. One restaurant keeper on Falls street says only half of last year's crowds have been here this summer. "There are more auto tourists," he

lamented, "and lots of them eat picnic lunches and hunt out cheap places to eat. Close! why two men came in

here the other day and ordered o

cents worth of breakfast between them one toast and two " coffees!" The scenes in she shops bear out the story of hard times. There are plenty of people pricing and examining goods, but not so much hasty buying. The city of Niagara Falls disclaims the idea that it exists only for the tourist. To be sure, the falls bring many visitois with their dollars into the city. It is certain that the hardened natives of Niagara Falls do not contribute largely to the fortunes of the numerous dealers in spar jewelry and- felt pennants. Yet Niagara Falls holds that as a town is is becoming really significant as a manufacturing center. Its power companies are hitching Niagara to industry. Not only is it the headquarters from which large quantities of a well known breakfast food are scattered daily to a waiting world, but it has become a center of the electro-chemical business, a very important industry. So far, however, the city is mostly famous to Americans as the place where the falls is.

Bankers and Business Men to Attend Stock Meeting A number of Wayne county bankers and other business men -have- been invited to 'attend the meeting of the Wayne county breeders at Centerville, on Wednesday evening Those not receiving invitations will also be welcomed. The idea Is to get all who Are Interested in arranging for an annual live stock and agricultural show in Wayne to take hold and get the wheels in motion. "Such a show is not merely the business of any single association, it is a matter of community interest," say the officers of the breeders, the men who put on the show at Jackson park this month.

Philately, or stamp collecting, had its origin in the second decade after the issue of the first adhesive postage Ftamp. .

PREVENTION OF FIRE -AIM OF STATE DRIVE CHARLESTON, W. ,Va.Sept 28. The fiftieth anniversary of the great Chicago fire will be observed throughout West Virginia as a day ' for impressing upon the public the importance of fire prevention work. . October 10 is designated as fire prevention day in a proclamation just issued by Governor E. F. Morgan. .The state's chief executive urged that appropriate exercises, be. held in public schools, and by all churches and civic organizations. He urged city, district, county and state officials to use every effort to interest the public in fire prevention work. C. L. Topping, state fire marshal has arranged to send, an expert lecturer throughout the state to stress fire prevention. . , .

PENSION FUND AVAILABLE. (By Associated Press) COLUMBUS, O., Sept. 2S. In Wyandot county, 4S.7 cents for every man, woman and child, are available for the mothers' pension fund, according .'to a compilation made by the Ohio Institute for Public Efficiency.

The New Edison llllil lilP "IN THE WESTCOTT PHARMACY

Do you discriminate at the dining table or are you thoughtless? In thousands of homes, a "line" ia drawn at the breakfast table. Tea or coffee is served for "grown-ups" and Postum for children. But some parents do not discriminate. Caffeine and tannin, the injurious contents of coffee and tea, seriously retard the development of the delicate nerve tissues in children. Consequently, instead of rich, satisfying Postum, children are over stimulated by the drugs in tea and coffee; and so may grow up irritable and nervous. Any doctor can tell you that this is a great evil and should be corrected. Although some parents feel a certain justification for the personal indulgence in coffee, yet the harm to them may be equally serious. It may take a little while longer for the drugs in coffee and tea to affect an older person, but in many cases the nervous system and allied bodily functions will become weakened. The surest way to avoid such possibilities is to quit coffee entirely and drink Postum instead. The change permits you to get sound, restful sleep. Postum is the well-known, meal-time beverage. Like thousands of others you will like it because, in flavor, it is much like a high-grade coffee. Do away with the distictiro at the table. Serve delicious Postum, piping hot, to all the family. One week's trial and it Is likely that youH never return to tea and coffee. Postcm eomcs ia two forms: Instant Postum (in tins) Bsada instantly in the cop by th addition of boiling water. Poetum Caraal (in packagas of larger bulk, for those who

yimwi id mui we anna wnue nm meat is Deiag prepared)

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A pipe won t burn your V

tongue if you smoke R A. ! Get that pipe-party-bee buzzing in your smokesection! Know for a fact what a joy'us jimmy pipe can and will do for your peace and content! Just check up the men in all walks of life you meet daily who certainly get top sport out of their pipes all aglow with fragrant, delightful, friendly Prince

Albert! And, you can wager your week's wad that Prince Albert's quality and flavor and coolness and its freedom from bite and parch (cut out by our exclusive patented process) will ring up records in your little old smokemeter the likes of which you never before could believe possible! You don't get tired of a pipe when it's packed with Prince Albert! Paste that in your hat! And, just between ourselves! Ever dip into the sport of rolling 'em? Get some Prince Albert and the makin's papers quick and cash in on a cigarette that will prove a revelation!

Print 'Albert it told in toppy red bag; tidy red tine, hendtome pound emd half pound tin humidor and in the pound crystal glaee humidor with tponge moietener top.

Copyright 1921 by R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Winston-Salem, N.C

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the national joy smoke

Easy To Take Yeast Vitamon In Tablet Form QUICK SURE RESULTS FOR THIN, RUN-DOWN FOLKS BETTER HEALTH AT SMALL COST

To at once increase energy and put on firm, "stay-there" flesh, thousands of thin, nervous, run-down folks have turned to the new tablet form of true yeast-vita-mines known to druggists as Mastic's VITAMON. This supplies a proper dose of all three vitamines (A, B and C) and is so highly concentrated that results are quick and wonderful. Mas tin's VITAMON mixes with your food, helps it to digest and provides the health-giving, strength-building nourishment that your body must have to make firm tissue, strong nerves, rich blood and a keen, active brain. It will not cause gas or up

set the stomach, but, on the contrary, is a great aid in overcoming indigestion or chronic constipation. Pimples, boils and skin eruptions seem to vanish as if by magic, leaving the complexion clear and beautiful. So remarkable are the benefits from these highly concentrated VITAMON tablets that entire satisfaction is absolutely guaranteed or the small amount you pay for the trial will be promptly refunded. Be sure to remember the name Mastin's VI-TA-MON the original and genuine yeast-vitamine tab- : let there is nothing else like it, so do not accept imitations.

You can get Mastin's VITAMON Tablets at all g-ood druggists, such as Dafler Drug Co., Thistlethwaite's, Qutgley's, John Fosler.

MinmmnimummmnttiiiititiiniHnmmimMliiHtiuitinmiiim S 5 " i A Very Easy System 1

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. NE OF OUR PATRONS has tried

several plans for keeping a rec-

ora or an nis income and ex- -pense during the year but he has found all of them a lot of trouble to keep up-to-date. But he has a fine system now. The bank is keeping this record for him. He deposits all his earnings in the bank and then he writes checks for all the money he spends. Even for his pocket money he writes a check once in a while and marks it "Misc. Exp." When he wants to know the amount of his income he looks "at his Bank-book. When he wants to find out what he is spending, he looks over his Canceled Checks. " By sorting these old checks into several piles he finds what he is spending for food, clothing, fuel. etc. That plan is easy. It is safe and business-like, too.

ImMmnnimmuiiiwuumummmtiMmnmiimtmuimHmmmimutiiwimmmnmi I Second National Bank I 1 Member Federal Reserve System - 1 Richmond, Indiana - iMfiuitimimHmminMiuuuimmiimnimiMitiiium

Get It Repaired

Why keep that "mill" of yours useless. Just because it is broken, or needs cleaning? Duning has the best repair shop in Richmond for typewriters ajiy make or model. A new Corona, if you say so, with a good allowance on the old machine! Drop in and let's

see what we can do!

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GOAL

Pocahontas (Q Lump or Egg. . vt)U Kentucky (7 f Lump tP I t)J West Virginia dr7 PA Lump . . . . P 4 DU Ohio Lump, ' Q7 OP per ton I AO Mather Bros. Co.

Wait Until Oct. 8th to buy that Globe or Garland Stove and Range Big Sale Starts Then Weiss Furniture Store . 505-13 Main St.

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It's Time to Buy Your Fall Grocery Supplies Hasecoster's Grocery S. 9th and C Sts. Phone 1248 I

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Ladies' & Misses' Sweaters $1.79 to $4.98 Rapp's Cut Price Co. 525-529 Main St.

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Your Every Clothing Need Convenient Credit UNION STORE, 830 Main

Stoves, Ranges and Cook Stoves at

a Saving of 20 to 30 Guttman Furniture Co. 405-407 Main St.

Inqor DAMP WASH Weighed Dry) Dampwash phone 2766 Ro?chibDry

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