Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 71, 24 March 1922 — Page 7
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1922.
PAGE SEVEN
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TOWNSHIPS IN COUNTY
Reports from townships were- heard Friday by the executive committee of the Senator New campaign. There is a decided trend toward Senator New throughout Wayne county, it was said by one of the members of the committee. The matter of a New meeting was discussed and It Is probable that a definite date will be announced within the next week. Senator New still remains in Washington, being unable to come to Indiana to give personal attention to the campaign in his behalf excepting a day or two at a time. It is believed Improbable that he will be able to make a speaking campaign in any part of the state. Miss Eleanor Barker, of Indian
apolis, head of the women's organiza
tion for Senator New, probably will be in Richmond within the next week to
attend a meeting of Wayne county wo
men and it is likely also that she will come to Richmod before the cam
paign is over to make an address at a
New meeting at which also Charles m . '
.eooKwaiwr, rormeriy mayor 01 maianapollB, will be one of the speakers. The members of the executive committee of the New campaign organization in Richmond is composed of Alonzo M. Gardner, Gath P. Greeman, L. S. Bowman, Edward Paul, Ray K. Shiveley, D. S. Coe. Will W. Reller, Clarence Kleinknecht, Gustave Hoelscher, L. P. Meredith and Shuman Jones. The county campaign committee composed of representatives from all townships as well as the city of Richmond, will be announced next week.
Harrison Township
Get-Together Meeting By WILLIAM H. SAXBORX v When the farmers of Harrison town
ship get together at a meeting, they come in bunches. Odd Fellows hall at Jacksonburg was Jammed to the doors Thursday night, and this seems to be the rule at Jacksonburg, where the programs often are of special interest County Federation President Everett Hunt was on the program Thursday night, as were also County Superintendent C. O. Williams and Miss Harmon, domestic science teacher. President Hunt discussed the . farmers' new livestock commission company, now getting ready for business at Indianapolis, and advised liberal support of the new concern on the part of farmers and shippers. Superintendent Williams talked on this text: "The betterment of the community for the boy and girl." Miss Harmon talked interestingly to the women with relation to the domestic science coursas as given in our high and g-ade schools. We are told, too, that a few candidates for county offices were present to meet the voters, to talk briefly or at least announce themselves and shake hands.
22 HOMES OPENED FOR PRAYER SERVICES
Homes of 22 families will be opened for cottage prayer meetings to be held
In connection with the Billy Sunday campaign, Friday night. Miss Alma Thomas, in charge of the headquarters here, urges citizens to attend the meetings. An average of about 10 persons have been attending each home on meeting night. Miss Thomas said. Following are the homes In which the meetings will be held Friday night and the names of the leaders: District 2 Mrs. Creag, 33 South Fifth street; Mrs. Russel Cox. District 3 Mrs. Townsend, 1225 South A street; Mrs. C. A. Bennett; Mrs. Ray Longnecker, 63 South Fifteenth street. Miss Luring; Mrs. Belle Harris, 636 South Twelfth street, Mrs. Ed Saxton. District 4 Mrs. Lee B. Nusbaum, 110 North Eleventh street, Mrs. A. H. Dackus; Mr. Jordan, .216 North Sixteenth street, Mrs. Charles Benson. District 5 Mrs. John McDanlels, 506 North Seventeenth street, Mrs. Kay Wright; Mrs. L. D. Harter, 527 North Nineteenth street, Mrs. Chester King; Mrs. Belle Baumer, 304 North Twenty-first street. Mrs. F. R. McFail; Mrs. Charles M. Trimble, 108 North Twentieth street, Mrs. Inez Harris; Mrs. Harry Reeves, 123 North Eighteenth street. Mr. Reeves; Mrs. W. O. Nearon, 401 North Nineteenth street, Mrs. Nearon. District 8 Mrs. Byrum, 907 Sheridan street, Miss Charlotte Lamb. District 9 Mrs. Elma Jenks, 100 KInsey street; Mrs. John Edgerton, 236 Pearl street, Mrs. Sylvester Jones;
F. M. Clevenger, 224 Randolph, street.
Joseph C. Mullen; Mrs. Crowtell, 404 Richmond avenue. Miss Crowell; Mrs. Jardner, 301 Randolph street, T. A. Edwards' Mrs. Ernest Whitesell.
Northwest Fourth street; R. H. Scott,
319 Kinsey street; Mrs. C. Wellbaum, 222 Northwest Fifth, Rev. H. H. Compton.
CURFEW RULE IN PEORIA IN WAR ON CRIMINALS
PEORIA, 111., March 24. Following a series of crime here during the last few weeks, and with a view of riddling the city of all undesirables by breaking up gangs which frequent pool halls and assemble at "street corner" hangouts, Chief of Police Martin last night put into effect a curfew law with the deadline at midnight.
LEETE WILL PRESIDE
AT M.E. CONFERENCE
Bishop Frederick D. Leete, of Indianapolis, will be the presiding bishop at the Methodist annual conference which will be held in the Trinity M. E. church at Elkhart, April 5 to 11. The conference lecture will be given on Friday night of that week by Dr. Russell H. Bready, pastor of the Cen tral M. E. church, and mayor of Pontiac, Mich. Dr. Bready was platform manager of the Richmond Chautauqua last fall. James E. Watson, United States senator, will be among those present at the conference. Dr. R. J. Wade, former pastor of this city, also will be
on tho program at the conference. Mrs. A. H. Backus will address the pastors wives, who are at the conference. Last year, the Richmond district won the "area" banner for the best centenary report in the state, and great efforts are being made locally to retain the honor, again this year.
The Farm and the Farmer By William R. Sanborn
Called by Death
LIBERTY. Ind., March 24. Mrs. Mahala Thomas died after a short illness Saturday evening at the home of Ross Hollingsworth. Funeral services were held at the home Monday morning at 10 o'clock, Rev. S. L. Martin officiating. The remains were taken to Anderson for burial. Three daughters, Mrs. Emma Powers, Mrs. Carrie Bridges and Mrs. Ross Hollingsworth, survive. LIBERTY, Ind., March 24. Warner Gardner, 74 years old, a prominent farmer of the Cottage Grove community, died Wednesday morning at 8:30. He leaves a widow and two sons. Funeral arrangements announced later.
ELLEN FULKERSON EATON, Ohio, March 24. Funeral services for Mrs. Ellen Fulkerson, ,71 years old, who died here Wednesday in the home of her daughter, Mrs. U. J. Poffenberger, after a four weeks' illness, will be conducted Saturday cfternoon at 2 o'clock in New Madison, in the U. B. church. The Rev. Mr. Smelker, U. B. minister, Dayton, and the. Rev. A. J. Buzzard, Methodist minister, Eaton, will officiate. Burial will be in New Madison. Mrs. Fulkerson was for many years a resident of New Madison. The last four years, after the death of her husband, W. H. Fulkerson, she had lived with her daughter in Eaton. The daughter and two sons, H. E. Fulkerson of Eldorado, and Charles Fulkerson, of Hollansburg, survive her.
REJECT BILL EXTENDING FRANCHISE TO WOMEN v. (By Associate! Press) CAPE TOWN. Union of S. A., March 24. The house of assembly has rejected a bill which would extend the franchise to women. The vote was 53 to 51.
While it Is a fact that Wayne coun-; ty has comparatively few sheep on its farms we still have a number of farmers who like to see them on the place, although wool is low a-ji mutton cheap on the hoof. For this reason the visit of Claude Harper to Richmond this week to talk sheep raising and the proper handling of wool was warmly welcomed by the small group of sheepmen who met with him in the county agents office, on Wednesday. Mr. Harper is in charge of tho department of sheep husbandry at Purdue and is well informed regarding ' sheep and. wool, the results of pooling the last two clips, etc. Mr. Harper advised the marketing of Indiana lambs early. He says a good time to market them is between April and July, while three-fourths of our lambs have been marketed between July and September, when they come into competition with western lambs and at a time when they are apt to bring the lowest prices of the season. He commended the pooling of wool, stating that farmers who pooled their 1921 clips obtained considerably more money than did those who sold early in the open market.
Wayne Contributes $400 Loan. . The Wayne county farm bureau has sent $400 to the new farmers' live stock commission company, just in process of formation at Indianapolis. Advices received in Richmond was to th effect that this mnnev was want
ed at Indianapolis by Saturday and in J
order to act promptly the county farm bureau officials decided to remit this sum from the county treasury, and to collect from the various townships in due course. .This decision was reached at the meeting of officials on Wednesday afternoon. The $400 was sent as a "loan," said Treasurer R. B. Morrow, and it will be repaid out of the profits of the business done. "The county will be given credit for this loan, but in the meanwhile we shall send a list to Indianapolis of the sums contributed by the various townships, and by our county live stock shipping associations. The latter are supposed to chip in $50 each. These credits will be entered on the books at Indianapolis and when settlements are made the commission company will remit to the men or townships named in our list. Mr. Morrow states that the membership solicitors for the United States
GTain Growers, Inc., have notified him that they expect to begin the canvass of Wayne township on either Monday or Tuesday of the coming week. Live Stock Easier. In spite of comparatively light receipts of live stock at all market centers on Wednesday prices slumped, more in some places than others, but there was weakness all along the line for no definite cause, that was appar
ent on the surface. Thursday showed
a little more strength and there was some recovery. At Chicago nearly half the gain in cattle prices made in the first two days of the week was lost, while hogs showed a loss of 20 cents on tops, although' the average was off but 10 cents on the day. The head buyer for the Armour company said on Wednesday that he expected to see hogs selling at $9 before reaching $11 again, the price recently paid in that market. But the Armour buyer, like the rest of us can only "guess." Farmers well remember that when hogs were at the low last December.
packers' representatives began arguing that they would go still lower, instead of which they advanced almost $4 per hundred weight. East Buffalo was the high spot on hogs on Wednesday at $11 for top, but that market advanced 25 cents on Thursday. Indianapolis made a top of $10.65 on Thursday, while Chicago advanced its top 10 cents to $10.40, on a few loads. Free Lime For Farmers. The big beet sugar factory at Paulding, Ohio, has announced that a vast
.hill of steam-slacked lime, accumulat
ed over a period of years, can be carted home by farmers, free of charge. It is estimated that there are 60,000 tons of lime in the pile, and thousands of tons are added annually. Refineries use quick-lime to make up the milk of lime that serves to absorb impurities of the sugar. Tests now under way will determine whether, in addition to its calcium content,
this lime by-product contains valuable phosphates,' absorbed in the refining process. . A Mighty Good Idea.
rne unio extension service news for March says : "The farm bureaus of Medina and Delaware counties have organized local speakers' ex-' changes. The idea is for communities 1 to exchange home-grown ideas thru '
the medium of home-grown spokesmen." American Potato Stocks. A potato census as of March 1 is reported by the department of agriculture at Washington, covering potatoes
in the hands of warehousemen and! farmers in 15 states. These state's j produced about 70 percent of all the I
potatoes grown in this country last! year. The department finds that on March 1 the potato ' farmers hid 73,486,000 ! bushels and the shippers and. ware-j housemen had 17,460,000 bushels in stock, making a total of 90,486,000,' bushels. It is expected that farmers j will sell and ship about 31,000,000
bushels and will retain the balance for seed and table supplies. In addition to the supplies shown above are the millions of bushels held by retail dealers in all parts of the country, the farm production for home use, the hundreds of cars in transit when the census was taken and the supplies in a million family cellars. Taken all in all there is no potato famine in
sight. Although potatoes are grown in all
states, at least for home use, only the
15 great producing and shipping states were .included in the census. The states covered are Maine, New York, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Montana, Colorado, Idaho, Washington, Oregon and California. Best Permanent Pastures. Native, pastures are becoming less abundant with the .increase of cultivated land. "These "native pastures frequently do not have heavy stands of plants and consequently not a stiff sod. Red clover and timothy are the
seeds usually sown by farmers for pasture, because of tho cheapness of the seed and certainty of a stand. However, such a seeding is not very permanent and timothy is not a particularly good pasture plant, says Prof. M. L. Fisher of the soils and crops department of Purdue. A better combination for ordinary soils is as follows, per acre: Timothy, 4 lbs.; red clover, 5 lbs.: alsike clover, 4 lbs.; Kentucky blue grass, 15 lbs.; red top, 4 lbs.. Sow the clover in the spring; the timothy, blue grass and red top in either spring or autumn, preferably autumn. Sowings can be made on oats, but preferably with wheat or rye, or alone. Pastures should be dressed annually with 200 pounds per acre of a fertilizer carrying two to four percent nitrogen, 12 to 14 percent phosphoric acid, and two to four percent potash. Liming once in five years and a covering of manure once in three years will greatly aid success, says Prof. Fisher.
Fruit Steamer, Collides 'With Boston Schooner fWv Associated Pressk NEW YORK CITY, March 24. The steamer Metapan, of the United Fruit company, inbound from Cartagena, collided with the Boston schooner, Charles A. Dean, off the ight at Barnegat, N. J., last night, wireless reports said today. The Metapan was not damaged, but the schooned filled with water. The crew managed to keep her afloat, however, and she maae for the coast.
A Big Aid to Good Living
Canned foods, properly used, can save housekeepers a thousand worries. The unexpected guest causes no consternation in the household whose larder is stocked with canned soups, fish, vegetables, meats and fruits. The old idea of merely dumping out the contents of a can and serving is passing. There are hundreds of ways in which canned foods can be made into dainty appetizing dishes. For instance, delicious entrees, substantial luncheon dishes, or a dainty little supper may be prepared from canned sea foods alone, at a minimum outlay of labor and time. The scores and scores of ways of using canned foods have been col
lected and published in : a booklet.
Our Washington Information Bureau will secure' a copy for any of our readers who fill out and mail the coupon below. Enclose two cents in stamps
I for return postage on the booklet, and
oe sure to write your name and address clearly on the lines of the coupon.. f Do not send the coupon to The PalUdltim. Mall It direct to Washington, Da C )
Frederic J. Hasr.in, Director, THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM Information Bureau, Washington. D. C. I enclose herewith two cents in stamps for return postag? on a free copy of the booklet, "Recipes for Canned Foods."
Name
Street City . . State ,
Suits, Coats, Capes and Dresses for SPRING
PREBLE DOG OWNERS MUST GET LICENSES EATON, Ohio, March 24 Warning has been issued by the county commissioners to dog owners in Preble county that a campaign Is to be waged agajnst owners who do not "come across" and obtain license tags for their canines. The commissioners state they have further extended tho
time to May 1 for securing tags. Artec that the penalty of $25 will bo exacted. Records of the office of
County Auditor S. C. Hunt show 1250 j
dog license tags have been issued up to this time, the number being ap proximately 800 short of the total tags issued last year.
London Not to Imitate New York Skyscrapers (By Associated Press) LONDON, March 24. London will not imitate New York in erecting skyscrapers if the ideas of the royal institute of British architects are carried out. The architects have voted against a report of their building acts committee advocating alteration of the London regulations to allow the erection of buildings 120 feet in height instead of 80 feet as at present.
PAMPHLETS TO TELL FRIENDS' ACTIVITIES A series of pamphlets under 'a heading "Tales from Quaker Trails" describing the work of the . separate boards of the Five Years Meeting of Friends, has been Issued by the Central office. The "trails" are the various activities that are carried on by the Friends and the "tales" tell, of work In Africa, Palestine, Mexico, the South, Oklahoma amongst the Indians, and of the publications work centered in Richmond.
Attorney For Rickard Promises Perfect Alibi NEW YORK, March 24. Opening the defense of Tex Rickard, charged with criminally assaulting 15 year old Sarah Schoenfeld, counsel for the sport promoter today told the Jury that a perfect alibi would be proved tor Nov. 12, 1921, the date of the alleged offense.
CORNS Lift Off with Fingers
1 "ral r J Iin
Doesnt hurt a olt! . Drop a little "Freezone" on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers. Truly! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Freezone" for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the callouses, without soreness or irritation. Advertisement
WARNING ! Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin. ; s Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets,' you are" not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 22 years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain - Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions. Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggist Aipirtn Is the tr.de mirk of Bajer Muufactara of Moao.oeUcmcKle.ter of SsllcyUcmeia '
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SUITS We show a very large line of Dress and Sport Suits Tricotine, Poiret Twill. Tweeds. Price range $19.93 to $85. We show special values at $25, $29.98, 539.75 All the newest and latest models.
DRESSES Our Spring showing In this department 13 superb. AH the new models, Taffeta, Krepe Knit, Canton Crepe, Crepe Satin, etc., including Sport Dresses. Price range ?3.98 to $45.00. See the special values at $14.98, $19.98 $25.00, $29.75
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