Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 103, 1 May 1922 — Page 12
PAGE FOURTEEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, MAY 1, 1922.
POLITICAL LEADERS PREDICT VICTORIES; FACTIONS CONFIDENT
The Farm and the Farmer By William R. Sanborn
, through the transition period from AnnOUnce ominafions
agricultural products ror its own consumption. Are we going to recognize agriculture on a basis that will ena
ble us to continue to be a seir-sustain
One of the signs that summer Is on' which opened on Monday morning, the way Is an advertisement by a man ! This committee, known as the fruit namprt T,ovP. in Chicaeo. Mr. Love marketing committee, was aoDointed
(By Associated Press) . f the orriini nf "laree. 1 months ago on reauest. bv th Amor.
INDIANAPOLIS, May 1. On the eve juicy rlpe watermelons; the first cars .'can farm bureau, a number of fruit of tomorrow's primariesrival political the season." We have doubts as to 'growers In the membership, deeming leaders within both the Republican and , the juicy ripenes of those melons; we jit .wise to attempt cooperative markDemocratic parties expressed conn-'nave never known early melons touting of fruits. The next step is the wmocriiuc parcies expressed tonu jiir. Rt tl-o war- creation of a eeneral r1 no-on
dence of victory, after devoting today j rant that the prlce tnese meiong bring , under above name, and J. S. Edwards, to their last efforts towsu-d strength-1 .m v, ,! onnnci I of California, was selected as eenprni
uc juuj ' o I v.. t t
At this particular season thousand, ,.."2 of incubators, with capacities of from j market fruit on a large scale. The 60 to 200 eggs each, are tuned up and; committee has spent several months at work, mostly in farm and village a making an analysis of all the facnmP, Now a nronerly made . and ! L0"e5lnf..o fruit marketing and
nf th nrimarv was the T?pmihl,Vnn SPT1- . . . ..... " ... ' lveu uue aiienuon lO ail tne lO-
atorial contest between Senator Harry i aleJ? Pe "m . ?. berr marketing co-op
For Earlkam Board Members of the Earlham Alumni
association have made the following
ening their neJd organizations. As a last word to the campaign, a few speeches were on today's political calendar, but the main effort was the drive toward getting out the vote. Outstanding as a statewide feature
S. New and Albert J. Beveridge, for
mer senator, while among the Democrats a similar contest with five entries had not been so bitterly fought State managers for both Mr. New and
Mr! Beveridge were confident of sue-) cess, each claiming victory by a majority almost overwhelming. Some leaders, however, expected a close race. . The heavy vote In the cities was regarded as acontrolling factor in the statewide contests, and among the Republican leaders considerable Importance seemed to attach to Marion and Lake counties. In both these counties, the rival organizations had somewhat submerged the personal aspects of the contest, with leaders of either declaring that the primary fight centered against machine control. In Northern Indiana Senator New, who spent the last week of the campaign in active work in "Indiana, devoted several days to
northern Indiana, particularly the Calumet region, while Mr. Beveridge made several speeches at southern and central points of the state. In the Democratic senatorial, race party leaders here were of the opinion that the contest was between Samuel M. Ralston, former governor, and Daniel W. Sims, Lafayette lawyer. Congressional races among the Democrats were hotly contested in all except one of the districts, while six Republicans were without opposition for the national house of representatives. Other Republicans were fighting it out with one to three candidates against them. The big fields of candidates in the county and township races had taken first rank in the voters' interest in many counties and party leaders here counted this as an assurance of a big vote. Estimates on the total vote for ihe state ranged between 350,000 and 500,000, the weather conditions being counted on to play a big part.
handled and with a little care is perfectly safe under average conditions
There Is really no reason why you cannot run an Incubator without burn-
j ing down the house, but as a matter of
fact houses are set on fire every season bv unsafe incubators, or because of lack of attention and carelessness in handling or regulating the lamps. A story of warning has just been given to the press, telling of an Oregon ranch home which was destroyed by a fire which started in an incubator. Three children were burned to death and the parents are suffering from burns.
Heating Brooder Houses
eratives in the country. One of tha
Important tasks set for the new organizations is to bring about national standardization of fruit grades, containers, etc., and to conduct such advertising as will help the industry. The headquarters will be located in
Chicago. A temporary board of di
rectors, with James Nicol of Michigan i
as president, has been selected
ing nation, or are we going to weaken ' nomlnation8 f0r njumnl member of the ourselves by becoming dependent onother food-producing nations? We lard of trustees of the college: Gertbetter not do that." Irude Bartel, Richmond, Ind.; Clyde Farm Bloc Grows Chesty jAllee, professor of zoology at Chicago The Farm Bloc is a little chesty. 'university; RUfUS Allen, of the Starr ?2? XSi Fiano company. Richmond, and Glen prosperity. There is a place for it in Wood, of Chicago, and Charles A. the scheme of things, but it can serve Reese, '00, of Indianapolis, Mrs. Ethel effectively only by serving intelligently iSvmonds Stewart, of Indianapolis, is in the interests of the whole country. ! ; , The real farmers of the country hfi trustee whose term expires nrfi Hrfd of beine went over by croc-r u ne ...
odile-tear-shedding senators and con-. nominations wn.cn were , an-
gressmen. Moreover, it nuns me . ' V .' . " , T fo,mn,.-a th hnk because it!1.11. be on during the jubilee
r, ty,an aiixr : celebration, the person elected to
ally useful national legislation."
Will Take Up Case of Self-Confessed Slayer fBy Associated Press) MT. HOLLY, N. J., May 1. The
Rev. Backas Addresses
ABOUT THE FARM BLOC The editor of Farm and Fireside devotes a page to the Farm Bloc in his April edition. Too much, of course, for our use in this department but
Men who raise chickens in a large here are a few quotations which are
way usually heat the brooders with 'worth reprinting. The editor begins
by stating that: "The Farm Bloc you hear so much about simply means that certain senators and representatives in Congress,
BELIEVE STOLEN GAR WAS RUN INTO OHIO
anthacite coal, in stoves governed by
thermostats, and which are entirely safe. On such plants the houses are built in series, and separated by sufficient ground to give the colonies enough outdoor space for enclosed range for the growing chicks, while small. In other instances a single large building, or one entire floor, is used for brooding and the temperatures are regulated in each section, according to the ages and need of the chicks.- Proper brooding is essential to success as is the hatching. The amateur with his little incubator is not thus equipped. But his chicks must be brooded and whatever his hnnse nr makeshift arrangement all
Fountain City Students
The Rev. A. IT. Backus, pastor of Grace M. E. church, delivered the baccalaureate sermon for graduates of tha FYmntnJn fMtv Vilirh sphnnl Knnilav
county grand jury today was expected ! night Among those present from to take up the case of Charles M. Richmond were C O. Williams, county Powell alleged self-confessed slayer ' school superintendent, and Misses of John T. Brunen, circus proprietor, j Helen RiSS3 apd Dorothy Hennlng.
and Harry C. Mohr, a brother of Mrs. j We can grow hair on your bald head
Brunen. Mohr Is accused of hiring Powell for ?1,000 to kill Brunen. Prosecutor Kelsey said he would seek indictment of both men for murder. Detective Parker said sensational information, hitherto kept secret, would be presented to the grand jury.
BOYS ARE DISMISSED BY MAYOR HANDLEY
Porter Line3 and Russell Zell, each 15 years old, both of Connersville, were represented by Mayor James L. Clifton, of Connersville. when they appeared in police court Monday morning; They were arraigned on a charge of petit larceny. Zell and Lines had been arrested at
4 o'clock Saturday afternoon near Earlham college. According to the story told by witnesses the boys started to take a tire off a machine nearby when a tire went flat on their car. A bystander called the police, and they were placed under arrest by Officer William Lawler. Mayor Handley discharged the boys, saying that he would be loath to do anything that might reflect upon their record in the future. He gave them a warning that if anything of the kind
occurred again, they . would be dealt with severely. ' Prosecutor Beckett called their attention to the fact that charges of vehicle taking carries with it a probable fine of $100 to $5,000 and a sentence , of three to five years. WILL ASK ST. LOUIS OFFICIALS TO RESIGN
(By Associated Press.) EAST ST. LOUIS, 111., May 1. Resignation of Chief of Police Mulconney Chief of City Detective Nevill, and seven other members of the police de partment will be demanded by the board of fire and police commissioners as the result of an investigation of the death at police headquarters of John Companelli, a prisoner, according to the St Louis Post-Dispatch.
More street accidents occur in New York in the "slack hours than during the business "rush" hours.
with
BARE-TO-HAIR Treatments in our shop or for sale in bottles. Harter's Barber Shop In the Murray Bldg.
Dandruff Surely Destroys The Hair
realizing that American farmers for
the first time in history have succeeded in organizing their strength nationally, have banded together to champion this new strength. "The Bloc was started in- March, 1921, by Senator Kenyon of Iowa, who called the first meeting. Congressman Dickinson, also of Iowa, soon after
started the House Block group by also j don't. calline a meetine. There are about It doesn't do much good to try to
22 Bloc senators out of 96. and aboutlhrush or wash it out. The only sure
Girls if you want plenty of thick, beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for it will starve your hair and ruin it if you
25 Bloc congressmen out of 496. These groups meet every ten days or two
danger from fire must be obviated if weeks in Washington, and discuss leg- ... . . A 1 . . . (- .j . I .
ho would sleeD in Deace. A hatch ot
more than 100 thriving chicks was lost through the burning of the brooder on a suburban home plat in Wayne township about two weeks ago. You can't be too careful. The Spring Pig Crop. C. G. Nash, of Wabaunsee county.
islation affecting agriculture,
"The Farm Bloc is merely one of the steam bubbles that rise to the sur-
way to get rid of dandruff is to dis
solve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the
HOME DRESSED MEATS We Deliver Nungesser Meat Market 337 South 12th Phone 2350
Columbia Grafonolas Will continue to be Delivered for One Dollar Down During this Entire Week.
face when the water at the bottom of 'finger tips. the pot gets boiling hot. It is a ! By morning, most if not all, of your wholesome thine in that it is servine! dandruff will be gone, and three or
to center the nation's mind on the up
heaval that for some years has been
Kansas, reports very heavy losses orsiowiy making neadway m our agrispring pigs, in his letter to the Breed- j culture." er's Gazette. Mr. Nash is the county "In recent years, since free or cheap
ppricultural reporter and he says: i land has
"One breeder saved 100 pig3 from 65 tion more sows, another 11 pigs from 4 sows, to be a h
still another 23 pigs from 7 sows, attair, ana nas Deen torcea to convert Many pigs are fai rowed but they do 'itself into a hard-boiled money-mak-not live. Some say that too much corn j ing business. fed to sows is the cause; others savi "In other words, we are now goins
that a condition resembling cholera is
four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop, and
become scarce and popula-1 your hair will look and feel a hundred
dense, farming has ceased I times better. You can get liquid ar-
home-making, acre-grabbing von at any drug store. It is inexpens
ive and four ounces is all you will
need, no matter how much dandruff you have. This simple remedy never fails. Advertisement.
A six-cylinder touring car, owned by Newt Bunker, and reported by him as stolen at 10 o'clock Sunday evening.
is believed to have been taken over the Ohio line by automobile thieves. Reports from " Walter - Moore, living east of town, were that a machine had passed along, the road north of the Bishop farm between and 10 o'clock Sunday evening. .' The machine carried three lights, he stated. Moore made the report when he brought a number plate into the police station Manday morning. The plate was numbered 238,928 which corresponds with the number given the police by Bunker. The plate had been torn off the machine and thrown into a field near the road. Machines seldom pass along the road north of the Bishop farm according to Moore, who lives on that road, and his curiosity was aroused Sunday
evening when he saw this machine go i
through.
SENIOR DAY ANNOUNCED Senior day at Earlham will be next Wednesday, May 3, according to an announcement Monday by Leslie Pennington, senior class president. Timothy Nicholson Is to be the speaker at the chapel exercises.
thn muse"
In summing up Mr. Nash says: "Ij do not think that the heavy feeding of t !L1A TacCQC !
Corn la respousiuie iui iiicnc oo..3.
This is just an off year. We should forget about it and come back again. A poor pig crop means a bumper crop." B. F. Morris, of Clay county. Mo., writes: "The spring pig crop is falling short of expectations. Although an increase in the number of sows bred was in evidence, it is doubtful whether a normal pig crop materlizes." These reports are in line with many received from farmers in Wayne and adjoining counties. As recently stated in this column Illinois has been having similar experience in its farrowing pens. Fruit Sales Agency The Federated Fruit Growers, a na
tional fruit sales agency, was organ-j
ized at Chicago on Friday, following
a conference of the committee of 21,
1
niHiniiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimuiHiniiHiiiiiHuiiniiMiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiuiniiiiiininiinn
I The Biggest Line ot used 1 Cars in Eastern Indiana Chenoweth Used Cars 13 S. 11th St. Phone 1541 MmiiiiniliinilHUliiiimntniHiiiiitiiHttinuiiitfHtiiiniiiiiniiiiititnniiirMiMniii
In Greece there are hundreds of families who never taste meat during the entire year, except on New Year's t'av and Faster.
nnwmiiiintiiiHiMniniiiiiiiiuiiiiiinitiiiiniiiiiiiitimitHiiiniHiiiitmnmininn j Try Our Home-Cooked Meals
TO
ti . Kit
arv Y'r oolm r v fi ' Muimr fi DIXIE II DIXIE i ; CHICK FT U "1 g . CHICK MASa j; U fill sf
DIXIE CHICK MASH follows COmiElLormua dili improvements Cornell University proved their Mo. 8 formula best in eix waeka trial of 720 chicki 7 flocks ot 110 each. With some Improvements dried buttermilk insead of okim milk, foe sample giving needed lactic aetd we follow Cornell's No. C formula in DIXIE CHICK MASH With Dixie) Chick Feed It forma a tested and proved ration for more and better chicks at least cost. Order these feeds today: insist on the Blue Shield Basra. Feeding directions in very bag. ROBERTS FEED CO. Distributor Richmond, Ind. DIXIE MILLS CO, East Sk Low's, in. Makers also cf Dixie Hors and Mnl Feed, 244 Protein Cow Fend, Hen Feed, Larin Mash, Hos Feed. Pit Meal and Calf Meal.
Henry Farwig & Son 1031 Main St. 3
f nifmnmnnfrtiiitimmmiiiiiiiMiim if minHf 111 nmintm iimmiiiminiinmiii . 1
Complete Floor Lamp with 26-Inch ! ; All Silk Shades, at $18.65
For pimples and boils take Yeast Foam Tablets
The lack of vitamin B in present day foods results in malnutrition which is indicated by a falling ofi in health, lowered vitality and skin disorders such as pimples, boils, sallow color, etc The easiest way to replace this essential vitamin, and thus correct these sinister conditions, is to take Yeast Foam Tablets along with your regular food. Get a package of these pure, whole yeast tablets from your druggist today. Take them as directed and note their efficient corrective action. Northwestern Yeast Company, Chicago, HI. Makers of the famous baking yeasts, Yeast Foam and Magic Yeast.
if
y u
The Better Fountain Service
When you want a fountain drink or frozen delicacy that REALLY satisfies and is pure, you should come here. All syrups and special toppings are made of the purest ingredients . in- our own kitchen. The Ice Cream is our own make, made with cream to give you the most palatable and nourishing refreshment that you have ever eaten. Meet Your Friends. -at Price's OUR 57th YEAR
If
BARGAINS Victor Victrcla, good as new, priced Kfi now at ' eUvl Lorophone, upright model, mahogany case, was $95.00 aT.5:.1?:'.. $47.50 Full-sized Columbia Grafonola, was $120.00, now parc.ed ... ... $69.50
(OLC
ST
everyth
Opposite Postoffice
Phone 1655
FACTS ONLY
TRUTH ALWAYS
SAVE THE BABIES"
National
Baby
eek
May 1st to 6th
Red Comet Coal ONLY A BUSHEL OF ASH TO THE TON OF COAL "We also sell genuine third vein Pocahontas, Anthracite, Crystal Block and other Kentucky and Vvest Virginia coals. Klehfoth-Niewoehner Co. Phone 2194 North 2nd and A Sts. "If Service and Quality Count, Try Us"
Yeast Foam Tablets ore recommended for BoOs , Pimples Failing appetite Under weight Lack of energy Indigestion Nervous troubles Run down conditions
Visit Nusbaum's Infant Department on second floor. This is National Baby Week in the interest of new and tiny babies. Let us assist you plan your baby's wardobe. We will be glad to show you all the adorable little things, such as Dresses, Slips, Socks, Shirts and every last accessory baby will require. Wise mothers know it i3 prudent to provide baby's new wardrobe when the need can be met with such GENUINE ECONOMY.
Thistlethwaite's The Original Cut-Rate E VERY-DAY PRICES in Effect at All 7 Stores 25c Colgate's Tooth Ol p Paste 11
43c
50c Pebeco Tooth Paste .
60c Pepsodent jftn Tooth Paste 11 L ALL SCRAP TOBACCO, 25(
At Feltman's
Men's Specials $395
Black last.
Kid Bal, Tramp
Black Kid Bal, straight last, rubber heels. Black Kid B 1 u c h e r, good solid soles.
.Feltman's Shoe Store. The World's Largest Shoe Dealers 85 Stores 724 Main Street
SHOES
You must be sure that shoes are right, for tiny feet are exceedingly tender. This first summer afoot you must give their tiny feet a chance to grow right $1.00 and $1.25
Hose Mercerized Hose 19 to 35c Silk and Wool 59and650 All-Silk Hose $1.00
Blankets Little Sweaters 31.25 to $2.50 Cotton Blankets 29d to $2.00 Silk Blankets $2.98 to $7.50
Bootees Baby Bootees, knit and satin, priced from 29c to $1.25
Caps and Bonnets ORGANDY CAPS .35c to 75c ORGANDY BONNETS .. $2.00 to $2.93 PIQUE HATS $1.00 to $1.50
DRESSES and SLIPS
Embroidered Petticoats of flannel and flannel
ette, especially priced at
Vanta and Carter's Cotton. Wool, Mercerized and Silk Shirts ff C-t ff priced at DUC tO 1.90
59c to $2.00
a?dnSHp!.D.r.e.SS.e.8.. $1.50 tO $2.98 Stamped Dresses OQ - to qo Vanta Knit Knities and Knit Gertrudes espe- at Oa lt P..SO
cially priced. Hemmed Birdseye Diapers, 24, 27 and 30-inch, put in sanitary packages.
Baby Chair Cushions, Quilted Pads, Rubber Sheeting moderately priced.
Baby Baskets, Costumes, Clothes Racks, Dressing Tables, Nursery Victrolas, Nursey Chairs. All very reasonablely priced. ACCESSORIES Combs and Brushes, Rattles, Carriage Clips, Baby Books, Rubber, and Floating Toys, Carriage-Straps, Coat Hangers, Hot Water Bottles, Teething Rings, Binders and Ear Caps to keep wee ears shapely, etc. LEE B. NUSBAUM COMPANY NUSBAUM BUILDING
