Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 102, 29 April 1922 — Page 15
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., SATURDAY, APRIL 29, 1922.
CLERK III MEAT SHOP IQ UCIR cnD UAVIMfi
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AND SELLING LIQUOR WINCHESTER, Ind., April 29. Leon Alexander, clerk In a local meat shop.
was arrested Thursday on a charge of having liquor in his possession and of
telling It to Lester Hiatt It is said
Hiatt first told Chief of Police Ed Dunthat he brought it to this city from Illinois. When informed that he had violated the law, and would be turned over to the federal authorities, Hiatt
weakened and acknowledged that he bought the liquor of Alexander. The affidavit against Alexander was filed in the circuit court by Durr and Alexander was released on bond in the sum of $200. Post Given Reception The Woman's Relief Corps tendered McKinley Post, Spanish-American. War Veterans, a reception Thursday which was held In the Sons of Veterans' hall. Mrs. Dora Pierce, president of the relief corps, in behalf of the order, presented McKinley post with a large American flag. It was accepted by U. C. Daly, commander of the post. After a number of interesting talks a supper was served.
Commencement Held The high school commencement of Wayne township was held in the audi- i torium of the Wayne school Thursday and was largely attended. The address was delivered by the Rev. George Win
frey of Anderson and a musical program was rendered by pupils of the Wayne school. The following graduated: Mary Mason, Ralph Gettinger, Carol Haines, Norris Browne, Ethel Mikesell, Branche Thomas.
CAT OR SNAKE EACH TO HER TASTE.
CATTLE FEEDERS USE SCIENTIFIC METHODS
(By Associated Press.) LAFAYETTE, Ind., April 29 That Indiana cattle feeders are applying the methods proved by experimental work at. Purdue university as the best, is shown by investigations made recently by farm management specialists at Purdue. The farm management men are working with 186 farmers in Clinton, Tippecanoe, Randolph, Delaware, Henry and Rush counties, studying cost of producing beef for market.. More than three-fourths of these farmer-cattle feeders are using ensilage in their feeding operations, shown by 15 year3 of experimental work at the university to be the most economical
roughage. Most of the feeders are
feeding the ration which generally has
bhown the best results in the steer
feeding trials at the, university. Several hundred of these men at
tend the annual spring and fall cattle feeders' meetings at Purdue and thus keep in touch with the experimental
results obtained so that they may get the latest information to apply on their own farms.
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Miss Evie Doty, a member
the Reptile Study Society, Introduces a new style in spring millinery.' Observe the snake colled around her hat.
After Ten Years By MARION RUBINCAM
i A single pair of sparrows and a nest of young ones consume about 3,000 insects a week.
A STRANGE HAPPENING Chapter 41. Affairs seemed to go from bad to worse in the newly poor household of the Buchannans. Mrs. Prake -went about with the pursed lips and virtuous manner of one who is doing her complete duty. Her complete duty consisted in doing rather more' than her half of the
housework, and in doing every day or twice a day such little tasks as even a good housewife does up only a few times a week. It consisted also in going behind Millie, doing over the Jobs Millie had been careless about. Mrs. Parke was the type that housecleans by moving the contents of one room all over the rest of the house and making the inhabitants thereof miserable for days and days until the orgy of cleanliness had been gone through. She had a queer habit, also of getting one person's idea about another
and then carrying that opinion to the person about whom it was expressed. Somehow, without really meaning it, she could in time break up a long, warm friendship. She sought her sympathy about town now. And the varying opinions she heard about Humphrey, Humphrey's failure as a business man, and Millie's martyrdom, found their way back to her and home. "It is just a pity you had to"3iv up your nice room in your own home," Cova sympathized. "My mother would die if she had to get out of her own place to live in well of course, Humphrey's house isnt a stranger's house, I don't mean that,, but then it is different, isn't it?" "Terribly different," Mrs. Parke sighed. "But of course, I want to
and I must say she's made the most of her subject I'm. through!" "What do, you mean by through?" Patty 's voice came in, quivering a little from nervousness. For Humphrey looked terrifying, towering in the roflm, his fat face red, his little eyes gleaming almost malignantly, hia coat and vest flung over a chair he had paused between discarding these and
putting on a smoking jacket, and the smoking Jacket was hanging now in his hand. At Patty's voice he quieted. "I simply mean this household makes me nervous I am going to get out of it as much as I can. I can sleep on that couch in the office and I
don't care who knows. I can't afford to live there, so I'll come back here for my meals." He swung into his coat and vest again. He made for his little den the refusal of the knob to turn reminded him that Mrs. Parke had appropriated it as a storeroom and had the key. He swore under his breath and went out. "You needn't wait up for me, ni be
late, he called back.
"Where's he going?" Millie asked. For there was something unusual in
his manner. "Joe's of course." said Mrs. -Parke,
"Where he'll lose money." "He won't have blankets or sheets at his office," Millie worried. "Patty we had better make up a bundle of bedclothes and carry them down. WTe can do it while he's playing pool you go in with them and I will wait outside the office door. "Huh! He'll be back tonight," Mrs. Parke remarked, pulling her shawl
over her shoulders and getting ready to go out on the porch. "Men are like cats they like to prowl around, but they usually come home nights." Millie was worried nevertheless. She went upstairs with Patty and be
gan putting clothes into a suitcase. Monday Patta Discovery
BATHTUBS IN AMERICA DATE BACK 80 YEARS
Bathtubs in America date back only 80 years, and met with the united op
position of medical and law forces in its Infancy, according to the following article reprinted in - The Red Cross Courier from The American Review: "The first bathtub In -the United States was installed in Cincinnati, Ohio, In December, 1842. It was lined with mahogany and sheet lead and was exhibited by the owner at a Christmas party. "The new invention caused a great
deal of criticism from physicians, state
legislatures and the press. It was
criticised by some papers as "an epi-
PAGE FIFTEEN curean luxury," while others counted its use undemocratic. Doctors declared that this method of bathing would lead to all kinds of rheumatic fevers, and the common council of Philadelphia failed by only two votes to make bathing illegal between November 1 and March 15. "A law was passed In Virginia laying a tax of $30 on each bathtub, and Boston made the use or bathtubs unlawful except on the advice of a physician. President Fillmore, however, in 1851, had one installed in the White House, and by 1860 every hotel in New York had a bathtub." . . . i
In Thibet one son at least of every family must join a church, partly from spiritual motives and partly to gain the temporal protection of the monasteries, the most powerful factor in the country.
(Political Advertisement)
Lady Idina Gordon of London, with the wild Serval African cat, which she broueht back from the jungles. It is only a kitten as yet and not as ferocious as it looks.
help all I can, and if selling my house to start Humphrey in business again will help, I don't complain." "How generous you are!" Mrs. Werner cooed. Mrs. Werner was quite certain now that the Parke house was really Humphrey's and that Mrs. Parke had not lost so much of her own money in the recent fiasco, but she could not think of any way to ask. "There's one comfort," Mrs. Parke observed to Millie, as she pared potatoes for supper that night. "We have the sympathy of our friends, even if we haven't it from our our family." Millie knew she meant Humphrey by this. She repeated a few of the expressions of sympathy. In her enthusiasm, she might have colored a few of them. She repeated them again to Humphrey. - - v . "But Isn't your room comfortable? he asked at length. , "Well, of course I have always been used to a southern exposure, so north
ern windows make it seem gloonty. But I don't complain " . "Don't you though!" Humphrey broke in. "Millie, mother will sleep in our room which has her southern exposure. We wiU take hers." "It's a single bed we will have to move furniture " "I am going to sleep at the office," he answered. '
A bomb shell would have had but
little greater effect, had it exploded somewhere in the vicinity. "Wha-what do you mean?" Millie asked finally, thinking there must be a great deal more behind thi3 than she guessed. "Just that! I can't 'stand the complaining and bickering and tale-bear
ing in this house. I can't stand your
resentment at my presence and mother's constant digs about my incompe
tence. . It's always something. When
I made money, it was because I did
I not make more. When I lost it she had something real to talk about
EMMA GOLDMAN, EXILED BY SWEDEN, GOES TO PRAGUE STOCKHOLM, April 29. Emma Goldman, who came here out of Russia some time ago, has left Stockholm to settle down at Prague, after having
guaranteed to abstain from propaganda. She is not to return to Sweden and will not be allowed even to pass through the country. Alexander Berkman and Alexander Shapiro, -her fellow anarchists who came with her from Russia, have disappeared.
A state lunch In China comprises 146 dishes. Cl'T THIS OUT IT IS WORTH MONET Cut out this slip, enclose with 6c and mail It to Foley & Co., 235 Sheffield Ave., Chicag-o, 111., writing: your name and address clearly. You will receive in return a trial package containing; Foley's Honey and Tar Compound for coughs, colds and croup: Foley Kidney Pills for pains in sides and back; rheumatism, backache, kidney and bladder ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly cleansing cathartic for constipation, biliousness, headaches, and sluggish bowels. A. G. Luken Drug Co., 626-628 Main. Advertisement.
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NEVER AGAIN! If the Universal offered me one million dollars to do again what I did in "Con"f lict" I wouldn't do it, life's too precious PRISCILLA DEAN
FOUR BIG DAYS STARTING SUNDAY
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FOUR BIG DAYS STARTING SUNDAY
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in Her Greatest Triumph
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CONFLICT
Supported by Herbert Rawlinson. From the Famous "RED BOOK" Story 5 BIG THRILLS NEVER BEFORE SHOWN ON ANY SCREEN
RICHMOND THEATRE ALL WEEK STARTING, SUNDAY, APRIL 30
And the New York World Says: "The picture industry possesse3 far too few Priscilla Deans to allow this charming young brunette to take such chances with her life as those shown in 'CONFLICT.' We do not wonder that her insurance company warned her against repeating such risks.".
Bays the New York Evening Mail: "Mystery, drama, adventure and one of the most thrilling passages ever seen on the screen, all are found in 'CONFLICT.' The scene in which priscilfe Dean rescues her lover from d(ith in a raging torrent on the brink of a waterfall is a marvel. The famous ice scepe in 'Way Down East' scarcely equals it."
SPECIAL MUSICAL PROGRAM 2:00, 4:00 5:45 7:30, 9:15
Thursday Friday Saturday Marie Prevost
-In-
"THE DANGEROUS LITTLE DEMON" A picture that will leave you smiling. DON'T MISS IT!
No ADVANCE IN PRICES Time of Shows: 2:00,4:00 5:45 7:30, 9:15
COMING SOON - -
ELAINE HAMMERSTEIN in "Why Announce Your Marriage?"
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ADMISSION
ouuua-y txiu ahiiils Auuitss, oo ixms , vniiaren, xo cent3 Weekday Matinees Adults, 25 cents; Children,. 10 cents
111 1:00 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:00
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