Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 276, 30 September 1921 — Page 9

RANDOLPH PIG CLUB MEMBERS TO RECEIVE $200 IN CASH PRIZES WINCHESTER, lad., Sept. 30 The first club round up will bo held at Winchester Saturday, Oct. 1 In the Favorite building. Forty boys and girls will exhibit their pigs and receive prizes worth their efforts. Besides the beautiful ribbons given, to each exhibitor, $200.00 in cash prizes will be given to the two classes of Duroc Jerseys and Poland Chinas. Members of the Randolph county pig club are: Noble Warstler, "Wallace

Warstler, Clarence "Wagner, Robert Romack, Herman Lester, Miriam Gir ton, Consuelo Girton, Marvin Site, Pearl Site, Robert Hill, Ronald Kemp, Roy Huffman, John Miller, Mary Miller, David Shockney, Kenneth Parker, Herman Flack, Lee Hollowell, William Robinson, Harry Woody, Lester Menstiel, Charles Reeves, Frederick Reece, Harold Kennedy, Claud Kennedy, Lee Endle, Glen Endle, Herman Strlckler, Ralph Strlckler, Wendel Ludwlck, Randolph Ludwick, Marvin Blansect, Roger Hinkle. Gerald Snell. Prizes Offered Prizes offered in the pig club total $200 for the two breeds, Duroc Jersey and Poland China. There are 16 prizes offered to members of the Poland China club and 15 for the Duroc Jersey owners. In addition $200 will be distributed as breed promotion prizes. R. A. Fields, county agricultural agent, has been very successful with the co-operation of the breeders in promoting this work. The Poland China Breeders will hold a Breeders' promotion show at the same time for which $200.00 in cash prizes are offered. The business men and farmers, members of the Kiwanis and Rotary clubs, are giving a big noonday luncheon at the Main street Christian church where one hundred plates are to be set. A. L. Austin, assistant state club leader, will give a talk during Ihe noon hour. WHAT IS REAL VALUE OF COLLEGE DIPLOMA? Businessmen are by no means aereed about the college man. One class of employers do not want collego men; another class will give precisely the opportunity other men are given; and there is a third class that very decidely prefer the college men. The boy who 13 willing to work his way through colege. Rives at once pretty good proof that he has both unusual ability and unusu;il ambition. I know of no "practical" substitute for ueh an education. Colege at least teaches a boy to think; even if it affords him, often, a very gay time, li also teaches him to study. I am a believer in anything that teaches anyone to think. The first few years a youns man pponds in business are devoted largely to dvplopini; a point of view, "sizing up" the world, and determining a method of attacking it, or of being attacked by it. When a boy goes into business fresh from college, where he has had everything done for him and has done nothing for himself, the first two years of h:3 career are usually given to "finding out that the world expects something from him. j and Is in no wise disposed to take care of him.. He begins to realize that he owes the world a great deal. The men who have worked their way through college, like the men who have enjoyed such a co-ordination of business and college training as I have referred to, do not expect something for nothing.- Their immediate concern is not to find an easy way to make a living ,but to find an opening, or make one,, which holds promise of v future usefulness. They are not looking for promotion, but rather for an opportunity to prove that they are indispensible. They got through college because they worked. It is natural for them to expect to go through life on the same basis. Irving T. Bush, president, Bush Terminal Company, in Forbes Magazine (N. Y.). MOUNTAIN IS MOVING (From the Detroit News) Twenty miles north of Las Cruces, N. M., lies a remarkable natural phenomenon a mountain of calcium sulphate or lime. It is 25 miles long by 10 miles wide, and there are ridges on it from 200 to 500 feet high. The lime seems to ooze out of the earth like the waters of a boiling spring. The fissures through which the mineral is ejected do not follow any general course. This mountain of lime Is traveling steadily westward at the rate of ten miles each hundred years. Nothing can stop it as it creeps along through the centuries, destroying all in front of it. The reason it travels west, instead of east, is on account of the prevailing strong westerly winds. Bow en's. THE CARLTON Men's Tan Calf Shoe A shoe that we are glad to recommend, and you find it's a real value. Combination last, rubber heels in B, C and D widths. For Saturday only $ 450

Boivens Shoe Store 708 Main

SEVENTEEN CHILDREN IN SOUTH'S LARGEST LIVING FAMILY

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Mr. and Mrs. The distinction of being the parents of the south's largest family is claimed by Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Smith of Nettleton. The Theatres rSATURDAY Murray "The Mistress of Shenstone," featuring Pauline Frederick. Vaudeville. Murrette Miriam Cooper in "The Oath." Palace "The Vanderburg Expedition of Africa. Washington "Civilian Clothes," Jack Bessy Stock company. SUNDAY Murray Pauline Frederick in "The Mistress of Shenstone." Vaudeville. Murrette "The Old Nest." Palace Elmo Lincoln in "The Son of Tarzan." Washington "Nothing But the Truth," Jack Bessey Stock company. V. J MURRAY, Some people thrill at contact with royalty or fame, but Pauline Frederick, popular Robertson-Cole star, whose new super-special production, "The Mistress of Shenstone," playing at the Murray theatre, contends that she receives the thrill of her life when she is visited by a real, western cowboy. Among her many friends. Miss Frederick is just about the "grandest gal in the world. No rodeo, that most inspiring of sights to the westerner, is complete without "Polly." and hardly a day passes at the studio that a cowboy from the sunburned plain does not call to pay his respects to his favorite star. A gift which Miss Frederick prizes very highly came from one of her cowboy friends. It is a saddle, real man's size, of heavy len.ther and garnished with bright silver trappings, and it occupies a conspicuous place in a curio room which Miss Frederick has recently had added to her beautiful Beverly Hills home. MURRETTE Never has the heedless recklessness of good womanhood when friendship sounds the call for succor been mors splendidly exemplified than in "The Oath,' the R. A. Walsh production for Associated First National pictures, which opened at the Murrette theatre yesterday. The scene In which Irene Merriam sacrifices everything for the sake of her husband's friend is the most dramatic which has been shown on the screen in years. Mr. Walsh is to be thanked for an admirable piece of entertainment. He ' has taken William J. Locke's novel, "Idols," and while adhering closely to the plot which makes the work suci a strongly dramatic piece of fiction, has brightened it considerably, and made the action rapid and scintillating by discarding the non-essentials and building his picture play around the big points of the original work. The Special for Friday and Saturday Fancy and Staple Groceries Sugar, 7c per lb., 5 lbs. for.. 33c Potatoes, 1 pk 55c 24 lbs. Flour $1.00 12 lbs. Flour 55c Sweet Potatoes, 4 lbs 25c Fre-sh Eggs, per doz 38c Fancy Grapes, per lb 15c Fancy Plums, per lb 10c Bananas, 3 lbs. for 25c Apples, 4 lbs for 25c Laundry Soap, per bar 7c Lard, per lb 12 Pork Chops, per lb 32c Steaks, per lb 32c Boil Beef, per lb 25c Fresh Sausage, per lb...... 25c Minced Ham, per lb 23c Bologna, per lb 2Cc Sliced Bacon, per lb 32c Pressed Ham, per lb 23c M. J. MAHER Delivery Service Phone 6230 329 So. Sth St.

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

W. B. Smith, surrounded by their seven! en children.

Mississippi. This photograph, taken on the recent occasion of the couple's thirty-third anniversary, shows the elder Smiths and finished result is a remarkable structure of dramatic entertainment. The cast which Mr. Walsh Las selected for the portrayal of his story could hardly be improved upon. Mi riam Cooper wins new laurels by thej splendid ability Bhe shows in inter. preting the emotional and contra? dictory character of Minna Hart. Coii way Tearle won the distinction a heading his own company by his wort in the production. Henry Clive portrays the role of Gerald Merriam aed Anna Q. Nilsson the role of Ireic Lansing in a way that entitles tbeei to share honors with Miss Cooper aad Mr. Tearle. f MURRAY VAUDEVILLE ' The Murray presents another god vaudeville bill for the week-end run. The bill which is being run now is one of considerable variety and extraordinary talent. Larimer and Hudson, trick bicycle riders, are most extraordinary in their act. Thye do every possible stunt on the bicycle and stop at nothing in their endeavor to entertain their audience. The riding of Hudson is extreme in every detail. He climbs all over his bicycle while it is circling around the stage and the things he does seem almost a physical impossibility. Howard and Hanley furnlih taa audience with plenty of good singing and their humor is decidedly different. Their stage setting adds to the scene o ftheir act to a great extent. Adams and Barnet pull a feature singing act. - Barnet portrays the wife of a traveling salesman to the point. Their act is unusual and they are good entertainers. The final act, the Clapp Family, consisting of nine members, proves unusually excellent. The two older brothers open with the saxaphone and banjo mandolin accompanied by their younger brother on the xylophone. The sisters add a great deal to the act and make a decided hit. Miss Paddy Burke, an Irish-Ameri can girl of 26 years, is chairman and managing director of a big film com- i pany in London. j

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ill ' nlif Klf A super ppky f ron? V VBjiHil Edgar Rice Burroughs HlVlr itfl world famous novel. The latest and best of his !

SPECIAL FOR TODAY By special arrangement, we have secured for today the most wonderful and thrilling set of pictures now being screened. The Vanderburg Expedition to Africa Hunting Big Game; Trekking; The Lion Hunt; The Kind of a Life that Every Man Wants to Live; Native Belles with a Fig Leaf for Dress Parade; African Pigmies; Cannibals; Life Just as it is Today. WITH IT Mary Pickford and Tom Meighan in "MUSS" Bret Harte's famous Western Story Also a Cartoon Comedy

SUN - TELEGli - M, RICHMOND, IND. FRIDAY, SEPT. 30, 1921.

INtl tl seventeen girls and boys. Mr. Snith is sixty-four, his wife frty-nine, and all the children lie under the parental roof. - rrh ere Is Game Enough For All Five million Americans will go hunting this fall, and most of them will have good luck. From the northern breeding grounds a myriad of wild fowl is moving southward along every river and coast. Upland game and big game are reported abundant. This abundance of game is a triumph of good laws. In 18S0 there was not as much game in America as now. The federal migratory bird law j saved tne wild fowl. Good state laws are saving the other game. There is still much to be done. In 20 years game will be twice as abundant as now if hunters will obey the law. There is no excuse for not knowing the law. An attractive pamphlet with a picture cover, containing a digest of all the game laws in America has been prepared by the Biological Survey. This is a free government publication, and our Washington Information Bureau will secure a copy for any one who sends two cents in stamps for return postage. In filling out the coupon print name and address or be sure to write plainly. (Do not spnd the coupon to The Palladium. Mail it direct to Washington. D. C.) Frederic J. Haskin, Director, I j THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM : ; Information Bureau, ; Washington, D. C. '. I enclose herewith two cents : : in stamps for return postage on : ". a free copy of the Game Law : : Booklet. Street City . State

WOODSMEN DEVELOP

THEIR OWN LANGUAGE IN WESTERN FORESTS By Associated Press TACOMA, Wash., Sept. 30. Workmen in the great woods of the Pacific coast have a language all their own that is not understood by the uninitiated. A "faller" is the workman who "falls" the trees, and a good faller can always fall his tree so that it will drive a stake that he has previously set into the ground. A "bucker" saws the tree into logs, and the process is called "bucking a loe." A "sawver" alwavs works in the lumber mill, and he saws the logs into lumber." A "filer" files tho saws and keeps them sharp. The "hooktender" in a logging camp puts the chain around the logs so they may be hauled in with a donkey engine. A "chaser" follows the log as it is being dragged in, a "swampper" keeps the roadway clear for the logs. and. a "sniper" cuts off the corners of the logs so they will drag the easier. A "choker" is the cable line placed about a log. The High-climber A "hlghclimber" in a logging camp is the workmen who go up the lodging mast to place "high lines" from the donkey engine. The "skid greasers" jputs grease upon skids roads so the logs will slide more readily. The "whistle punk" operates the donkey engine whistle and signals the work; man with it A "donkey is a stationary engine with cables that long ago replaced oxen in log handling in tho west. A "boom" is a number of logs in the water held in place by "boom sticks." In former times the word "bull fighter" was commonly heard. It applied to the men in a logging camp niiimiiiitiiiMniiiMiitMiuiitiiuiiiimtimiiiiHiiiiiiHiiiiiiiuiiiiHiMMiitiiiuiiiiiHiu I RICHMOND Today I i Alma Reubens I in I "Thoughtless Women HtllINillItllMlUtllllinilMUIIIUHMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItttillltlllltlllllllllllllltHWUIIIIIIit.7! Now Playing JACK BESSEY STOCK CO. in "Civilian Clothes 99 A Comedy with a Plot Coming Next Week Mr. Bessey's Favorite Play "NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH" The same play Willie made such a big hit season. Take our tip and seats NOW Collier in last order URRA "BETTER COME EARLY" Pipe Organ Concert Orchestra Here Is a Real Show TODAY LAST HALF The Capps Family Pa, ma and seven clever kiddies in their new act, "AN EVENING AT HOME." A unique novelty presented in an original way. The greatest family of entertainers in vaudeville and we predict them to be one of the biggest hits we ever booked. Adams and Barnet Two beautiful girls in "Comedy Harmony Singing, Talking and Piano Playing". An artistic offering. Larimer and Hudson "A Comedy Bicycle Novelty" Howard and Hanley In "Bits of Comedy and Song" "Two Percolators of Comedy" Pauline Frederick in "THE MISTRESS OF SHENSTONE" 5-Reel Robertson-Cole feature Coming Monday "Rice Pudding", a musical revue; Baby Dorothy; Raines and Avery, and Mcllyar and Hamilton. v

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counter with his fellow workers, who hod demonstrated his superior ability with his fists in numerous enThis expression is no longer heard, loggers say because fighting in logging camps is a pastime in which workmen no longer indulge. A fight is now a rare occurence in the wools of the coast.

PRINCE GETS EVEN. LONDON Every schoolboy envie3 the Prince of Wales and the way he evened up things with Arthur J. Balfour. Some days ago Mr. Balfour handed the prince a degree from Cam. bridge and addressed him in Latin. So when the prince had the chance of giving Balfour a degree from the University of Wales, he talked to him in Welsh, in which Balfour is even less proficient than the prince is in Latin. Isn't it satisfying Just what you

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just when you want it At what you want to pay when you want to pay it."

There's no doubt about it that NOV is the time and HERE is the place to buy. You will get a full season's wear out of your clothes, and right now the stocks are at their best and prices will NOT be lower as the season advances. We have a wonderful stock of clothing now Suits, Frocks, Coats, Blouses, Skirts, Millinery and Silk Underwear for women, all in the smartest styles of the favored mode and brimming over with individuality and exclusiveness. While our Men's Suits, Overcoats and Hats are the kind that men like excellent style, dependable materials, and careful tailoring.

DON'T FORGET THAT OUR Divided Payment Charge Account makes it easy for you to have your clothes while you are paying for them. Our plan is convenient, confidential and without embarrassment

Kiwanis Style

712 Main Street

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"Where tho Stars Twinkle First" Theatre Beautiful Only Two Days More Todav and Saturday DO YOU SWEAR never to reveal our marriage and to go out of my life forever?" the secret-wife entreated. -

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With Miriam Cooper Conway Tearle and an All Star Cast The Last of The Big 5 Productions Coming Sunday "THE OLD NEST

AGE NINE

Original Water Wagon : , Was Tank of Thresher It seems that the phrase "water wagon" started from the large tanked wagons of the northwest, used in the harvesting season to supply water for the steam engine which runs the threshing machine. No onn Is more in need of water to drink than laborers of the wheat fields, working under the scorching un. The workers were prone to hop up cn the water wagon to quench their thrist every time the wagon came in. This was obtained from a keg of water kept submerged in the tank to keep it cool. A postcard mailed by a New York clergyman on May 1. 1901, addressed to a friend in Scotland, only recentlyreached its destination. to have want . . : Show, Oct. 4 and 5 Theatre

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And these two who had bridged the gulf between creed and creed vowed against the love of. which the man seemed ashamed ! v-