Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 112, 11 May 1922 — Page 7
THE KlCHMOiND PALLADIUM AND SUN-'iELuGRAM, KiCnMOiND, iaUKiiAY, MAY 11, 192.
50 -YEAR -OLD CAKE IN GOOD CONDITION AFTER LONG CAREER
' CHTCAGO, May ll. There Is a wed
ding cake in Chicago fifty years old, "which has done duty at two weddings and one golden wedding anniversary, und although It has never been cut, It Is still soft and appetizing in appearance, according to its present owner. In 1872 the cake made its first appearance at the wedding of Cyrus H. Sinclair and Miss Marv M. Brockwavl
at Port Huron. Mich. Mr. Sinclair was I from Tuesday
jilonday evening with Mr. and Mrs
Jehn Boren .... Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Aqdleman and daughters, spent Sunday
afternoon with Mrs. Isa Brown Mrs. la. L. Peden spent Sunday night and Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Horn of Richmond Mr. and Mrs. Harry Endsley spent Monday night with Jacob Endsley and family The Ladies' Aid met with Mrs. Guy Anderson Thursday afternoon. Several members were present. After the business session games and contests and music were enjoyed; then refreshments were served Mrs.
Clarence Addelman spent several days
with friends and relatives in Richmond last week Mr. and Mrs. Jehn Boren and son. Forest, were dinner guests Thursday of Mr. and Mrs.- Laf e White
.Mr. and Mrs. S. K. Cofield spent
until Thursday with
then a sailor on the Great Lakes, in their son, K. D. Cofield and family... his occupation h sustain th tmrti. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Horn spent Satur-
tion of his family, for his Scottish day ni Sunday with friends in Rich-
iainer naa oeen a sailor and each ol
his eight brothers were sailors. His father and mother observed their golden wedding before their death, with their daughter and all their sailor sons gathered about them. Goes to Chicago Mr. Sinclair came to Chicago, where
Be became an influential figure in
mohd Mr. and Mrs. Humphrey
Mikesell of near Chester spent Tuesday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Eli Hyde and Miss Wyvona Mr. and Mrs. Harry Marshall attended the funeral of Mr. Marshall's grandmother at Economy Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Marshall was 92 years old last Saturday.... Mrs. Ray Polley is very poorly
Mrs. Stella White spent Saturday
Great Lakes circles. At one time he 'rimnn wt, tu tok pricio,r
was president of a tugging company., Mra Everette White was weefcend He was Inspector of hulls under Pres-Ist of her mother. Mrs. Henry Knoll ldents Cleveland and Harrison. For,an(i KOn Lnnird tind aenrsra Ttafeer
TWAIN'S DAUGHTER SAILS FOR EUROPE
( - rtv ' . r X. f
years he was a wrecking master for a well-known English firm of ship underwriters. A few years ago he re
tired and went with his wife to Corpus Christi, Texas. They returned after losing their property there in the tidal wave two years ago. Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair presented
their wedding cake in 1901 to their con, L. B. Sinclair of Chicago, a restaurant manager, and his bride, Miss Laura F. Bacon.. The old cake was refrosted for the wedding. This year the elder Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair celebrated their golden wedding among old friends in Port Huron. Their son and daughter lent them the cake that had graced the wedding breakfast table fifty years earlier. Before he sent it to Port Huron he had it frosted again, and decorated. A wreath of golden leaves now encircled the cake, while numerals of white and gold record two dates: 1872-1922. Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus H. Sinclair see a symbolic significance in the endurance of the wedding cake that has never been cut and has never crumbled, but remains as a memorial to the occasion it was made to celebrate.
Suburban V : , J
BETHEL. Ind. David Harland of
Frankfort, was buried here Monday. He lived with his daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Endsley of Frankfort. Mr. Harlan spent most of his life around
Bethel. .. .Rev. Roy L. Brown was calle dto preach the funeral of a friend
at Bellefountalne, Ohio, Tuesday. So he went, to Bellefontaine Monday.... Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Hyde of Richmond spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Eli Hyde MiS3 Maud Crubaugh of Richmond was guest Saturday night and Sunday of Miss Lilla VanNuys Eugene Long and family, Mrs. Joseph Long and Mrs. Albert Cappellar of Centerville spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Anson Brumfield and Mr. and Mrs. Willie Brumfield j and children, Mrs. R. G. Anderson and laughter, Virginia and son, Frederick were afternoon callers Mrs. Ezra Thompson spent Monday afternoon with Mrs. Anson and Mrs. Willie Brumfield Mrs. C. M. Hill spent
and children of near Campbellstown.
MODOC, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Troy Kabel, son, Robert, and Rev. and Mrs. A. F. Byrne and children spent Sunday afternoon in Richmond ....... Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Hodson, Mrs. Ozro Rubush spent Sunday afternoon in Rich
mond.... Ozro Rubush and Fred Pursley spent Saturday in Muncie. . . .Mr. and Mrs. Harry Boyle and . daughter, Irene, spent Sunday in Ohio Mr.
and Mrs. Guy Pelps and children spent Sunday in Winchester with relatives Mr. and Mrs. Carl Swain,
daughter, Ruth, and niece, Nar, spent
Sunday afternoon in Muncie.. Mr. and Mrs. Verl Johnson, Master Garland Johnson spent Saturday and Sunday in Losantville Mr. and Mrs. Carl Swain daughter, Ruth, and Misses Lois Levinington and Thelma Hodson spent Friday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Frank McGunegill Mr. and Mrs. William Wright and daughter spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Barker. . . .Mr. and Mrs. George Oren and children of Indianapolis and Mr. and Mrs. Conard Hunt and sons spent Sun
day with Mrs. Sarah Petro. .Albert
Driskill of Cowan was here Monday
afternoon. . . .Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Beall
of near Economy spent Sunday after
noon with Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Conarroe ....Mrs. Wilbur Johnson and children
and Mrs. Verl Johnson spent Friday
afternoon in Bloutsville Miss Pearl Bales of Losantville is visiting her sister, Mrs. Verl Johnson Misses Lois Lennington and Thelma Hodson and
Clyde Driskill spent Sunday afternoon i Muncie Mr. and Mrs. George Moore spet Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Moore near Red Key Paul Henry Edwards and Galen Swain are working in Muncie Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Warner and son, Cecile, spent Sunday afternoon with reatives in Farmland. .Miss Opal Hardwicke who has been visiting her sister at Muncie has returned home Miss Alice Lee left for Chicago Sunday morning, to visit her sister Mrs. Don Ward Mrs. Ozro Rubush, daughters, Mavis and Romalee, and Miss Thelma Hodson spent Saturday afternoon in Farmland. .. .Everett Pursley, who is working in Muncie spent Sunday with hi3 parents, "Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pursley. . . .Miss Katheleen and Howard Puckett spent part of last week with their
Mrs. Ossip Gabrilowitsch. Mrs. Ossip Gabrilowitsch, wife ol the noted pianist and conductor of the Detroit symphony orchestra and daughter of the late Mark Twain, famous author, has sailed for Rotterdam on the S. S. Nieuw Amsterdam.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Shaffer at Unionport Mrs. Stella Hanscom of Muncie spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Swain Earl Skinner of Texas is visiting Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Boyle and daugh
ter, Irene Mr. and Mrs. John Frank
Ross entertained to dinner Sunday the following: Mrs. Obrnathy, Mrs. Jester. Mr. and Mrs. Tharp of Lynn, Mr. and Mrs. Whitesell and children of Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. RoU Phelps,
Mrs. Linne Mills of uuionpon, duu Ward of Muncie, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Phelps and children of Losantville and
Mrs. Charley White vr. ana sa.it.
C. H. Fight, Mr. and Mrs. w. ti. tigui
aa son, wmiam, oi
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Amen rptnM Swain.. Sam Hunt. Miss Mince
wiint and Mrs. Ijwra Rosa spent Mon
day evening in Winchester Mr. ana Mrs: William Baldwin and daughter, firarA nf near Lvnn sDent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Heath Miss Esther Abel of Indianapolis is visiting her parents, Dr. and Mrs. O. E. Abel.. ....Mrs. Emmet McGunegll and Mrs. Russel Dow and daughter, Louise, spent Monday afternoon with Mrs. Ozro Rubush and daughters. .Mr. and Mrs. Bert Veal and children of Economy spent Saturday afternoon with Mrs. "Bello Gaddis.. Mr. and Mrs. Emmet McGunegill spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Art McGunegill at Richmond Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ennis and children of near Green's Fork Bpnet Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Naylor Leottis Chamness of Muncie spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Carver Jordan and family Mr. and Mrs. Chester Wright and Mrs. Lon Hiney and Eddie Warren spent Friday in Richmond. ANTIOCH, Ohio Charles Toney. 1 of Union City, Ind., was a visitor Saturday and Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Clem Huffman and family Miss Helen Weidner, of Wilmor club, Richmond, 6pent Saturday and Sunday with home people. .. .Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Kerns and grandsons, Robert and Karl Weidner, spent part of Sunday at the J. O. Mann home at Eaton Mr. and Mrs. James Potterf were vis-
itors Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. James Thomas and family, of Lewisburg. Alice Thomas, the young daughter who has been ill for several months, is much improved are hopes are now entertained for a speedy recovery.... Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Trunck and children and Mrs. Adam Trunck and son, Ralph, were week-end visitors at the George Duff ield home, near Camden
Mr. -and Mrs. Harvey KIsling and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sease and daughters, all of Dayton, were guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. George Swope and family... Mr. and Mrs. Neal Geeting and son spent Sunday in Gordon, Ohio, with relatives After a week's visit in Cincinnati and Dayton, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. F. J. McConnaughey are at home Miss Grace Call was the
guest Sunday of Miss Thelma Minnlng Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Weidner were guests of Richmond friends Sunday Grangers of Preble county are extended special invitation to attend the Sunday meeting, Thursday, May 18. All who plan to attend should meet at the Friends church, Fourteenth and Main streets, at 7 p. m., going Immediately to the tabernacle.
An Expert Writes: "I used to be called a poor cook, and never pretended to bake a cake worthy of praise, but now I am called the championcakebaker of my community, thanks to the Royal Baking Powder." Mrs. R. W. P,
ROYAL
Baking Powder Absolutely Pure Contains No Alum Leaves No Bitter Taste Send for New Royal Cook Booh It ' FREE. Royal Baking Pow-derCol26WillUmSt,NewYork
Special Kid Matinee Saturday Morning, May 13th "LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE" Washington Theatre
Men's Balbriggan or Nainsook Union Suits
Sizes 34 to 46, Friday and Saturday at... 69c
Buy More For Less
THE HOOSIER STORE Cor. 6th and Main
B.
STATEMENT of CONDITION -of the Dickinson Trast Company At the Close of Business May 5, 1922 As Reported to State Bank Commissioner
RESOURCES Mortgage Loans $ 351,909.22 Loans and Discounts... 1,159,334.85 Stocks and Bonds 339,055.33 United States Bonds 1 16,300.00 Cash and Due from Banks. 499,179.11 Real Estate . .! 275,000.00 Advances to Estates 72,263.31 Furniture and Fixtures 25,000.00 Overdrafts 1,253.99 Other Assets 1,285.82 Trust Securities 1,029,225.06
LIABILITIES Capital Stock $ 200,000.00 Surplus Fund 50,000.00 Undivided Profits 20,149.46 Notes Rediscounted 71,952.85 Trust Investments 1,029,225.08 DEPOSITS 2,498,479.32
$3,869,806.71
$3,869,806.71
It is a pleasure to present to the public the above statement, which not only clearly reflects the excellent condition of this STRONG BANKING INSTITUTION, but also the friendly and satisfying alliance which the Dickinson Trust Company has established and maintained with its thousands of customers by working WITH as well as FOR them. We Have the Equipment and the Inclination to Serve ' You Properly and We Want Your Business UNDER BOTH FEDERAL AND STATE CONTROL , Dickinson Trust Company "The Oldest, Largest and Strongest Trust Company in Eastern Indiana"
mmdw
Weekly
3mS.60 Phone 1679 I
, "72 e rend M&n
VOL II.
Registered
RICHMOND, INDIANA, MAY 11, 1922
No. 5
POULTRY PARAGRAPHS
Never feed your , fowl3 musty grain of any kind. The busy hen is the one that lays the most eggs. The feed is of as much Importance as the breed.
With proper care and food come j
plenty of eggs. Remember, that "anything worth doing at all Is worth doing well." Variety in rations Is one of the most important things connected with good feeding. Sometimes even a faulty ration will give fair results because of the variety that, enters into it. j Don't expect the fowls to find, grit for themselves. No matter how much range they may have it is best to keep grit, charcoal, oyster shells, etc., constantly before them. Apoplexy and egg-bound are almost always the results of excessive fatness among the "hens. Don't feed any1 more wet mash at one time than the fowls will eat up perfectly clean. To allow more is not only wasteful, but promotes unsanitary conditions. Generally two-year-old hens and cocks make the best 'breeders. Or, pullets should be mated to well sea
soned cock bird3 and young cock
erels should be mated to well matured hens. Aways balance youth on the one side with well seasoned stock on the other side.
Don't feed dry grain3 alone to
.your hens unless you want them to become too fat, and always make them scratch for all grain feed by ' throwing it in a deep litter. Over-crowding causes many losses and disappointments with poultry. If you have room for only 50 fowls you will make more money from that small flock than from twice as many fowl3 crowded into the same space. Wreed out everything but the best. This policy not only prevents over-crowding but also raises the excellence of the entire flock.
NOTICE
We receive daily at 10;30 a. m. the Western Union wire live stock 'markets. Anyone wishing this information may have same by calling Phone 1679.
A SETTIN' HEN
TIMELY HINTS
Says Sam: The trouble with cheap things is that they cost too much. This applies to everything from harness to thoughts. Everybody ought to eat at least 12 quarts of canned tomatoes during the winter, say dietitians. The juices are chockfull of vitamins.
Average increases of 32 bushels! to the acre are reported by the 47 Ohio farmers in nine Ohio counties who sprayed potatoes with 5-5-50 bordeaux mixture last summer. Advice is like snow: the softer it falls, the longer it dwells upon and the deeper it sinks into the mind. Coleridge. , Fences, outhouses, and any unsightly spots or views may be screened and the appearance about the home in general be improved by a judicious planting of shrubbery. It's dangerously near being too late to prune those grape vinesvAll of last year's canes should be cut back to two or three buds. The garden, to produce quick growing crops year after year, must
be heavily fertilized, sneep manure is best.
When a hen is bound to set. Seems as though 'tain't etlket .
! Dowsin' her in water till
She's connected with a chill. Seems as though 'twas skursely right Tyin' rags around her tail, Givin' her a dreadful fright, Poundin on an old tin pail. Chasin' her around the yard. Seems as though 'twas kind o' hard Beln' kicked and slammed and shooed 'Cause she wants to raise a brood. I sh'd say it's gettin' gay Jest 'cause Natur wants its way.
'While ago my neighbor, Penn, Started bustin' up a hen; Went to yank her off the nest. Hen, though, made a peck and jest Grabbed his thimb-nail good and stout, Almost yanked the darn thing out Penn he twitched away and then Tried again to grab that hen. But, by ginger, she had spunk 'Cause she took and nipped a hunk Big's a bean right out his palm, Swalle-ed it, and, cool and calm. H'isted up and yelled "Cahdah!" Sounded like she said "Hoo-rah!" Well, sir, when that hen done that Penn, he bowed, took off his hat. Spunk just suits him, you can bet. "Set," says he, "goldarn ye, set!" Jessie York in Farm Life.
Riley's Idea of Farming
The writer recalls a drive through central Indana with James Whitcomb Riley. Bowling along past farms and other smiles of fortune, the poet became reminiscent. "Never told you about the Lick Creek farmer?" said he, suppressing the farmer's name. "You never did," was the answer. "Well, he owned a farm in that neck of the woods. He had never been out of the country, and so one week he went to the State Fair. At last his time had come to put on
airs. He was the guest of the old
Bates House. Fearing the proprie
tor might think him seedy or under the hatches, if he revealed his home
address (a little cornstalk post-
office over thero on Lick Creek) he registered in a flourishing way from his county seat. But he
didn't fool anybody. They all knew he belonged on Lick Creek, or some other creek." "It never pays fo be a liar," added the poet solemnly. "It is like disowning one's country to disown the little nook or valley of our nativity. If I owned a farm I would never apologize for it. I would let others know that It was for me and my family the center of the republic."
The poet went on to talk of the Farm Life.
"fruitions of farming." He seldom j quoted Scripture, but on that par-; ticular day he reveled in the poetry j of the Psalmist: How God is seen; in the outgoings of morning andj evening, how the little hills rejoice, j
now Me mauetn tne eann sou wu-a showers, how He clothes the pastures with flocks, how He covers the valleys with grain, and crowns the year with goodness. "The farmer," Riley concluded, "dwells next door to the courts of the Almighty. He should be glad and sing for joy as long as he lives." Marcus Dickey in Farm Life.
Raising Onions From Seed
It is often difficult to secure good
results from planting onion seed
but by following the directions below no trouble should be exper
ienced.
Assuming that you have the seed
bed in the desired condition, sow
the seed very thin and about a fourth of an inch deep in rows
18 inches apart. Leave every other
row empty so that when the plants
are thinned, the extra ones can be
transplanted in the empty rows. As soon as the seeds have sprouted begin very shallow cultivation. As soon as the plants reach the size of a crochet needle, wet the rows, thin the plants and transplant in
the blank rows. Set the young
plants three or four inches apart. It will be necessary to do some
hand weeding until the plants are
large enough to allow the usef of the hoe. The onions should be cultivated shallow twice a week to prevent the ground from packing and to keep a dust mulch. Plenty
of humus should be incorporated in the soil, which should be a sandy loam. If it is desired to hasten maturity at the end of the season the tops are broken down, causing the plant
to put all the plant food into the bulb. One way to break the tops down , is to roll an enipty barrel
over tht rows. After the onions are thoroughly mature, they are removed from the soil and spread out in the sun to dry thoroughly, after which they may be placed In bags or crates for storage. Some good common varieties are Red Globe, Red Weathersfield, Yel
low Danvers, Australian Browns.
Salsify or Vegetable Oyster This vegetable is one that should be more commonly planted in farm gardens. It is a root crop and i3 used for soup which has a flavor closely resembling oyster stew. It may also be fried, making a substitute for fried oysters. The seed is sowed in drills two feet apart. Cultivation should be frequent. The plants are dug in the late fall and stored for winter use, or they may be allowed to remain in the ground. This crop may be carried over the winter much the same as parsnips. Salsify is biennial, and if the roots are allowed to remain in the ground until the following spring they will 6prout stems and produce seed. Care should be taken that the plant is not allowed to spread because it will quickly become a weed. Farm Life.
PRICE HIGHER, QUALITY THE BEST; POTATOES Received another car. The sign is just right for planting as today, the 11th is the beginning of the dart of the moon. We have truck
stock. Red River Ohio, Northern Cobblers, Spalding Rose, Carmen No. 3 and Rural New Yorkers.
WHEN TO PLANT CORN
There is a right time to plant corn, and usually the better farmers whether they figure by the calendar, b ythe size of oak leaves, or by the phases of the moon, in every neighborhood know when that right
time comes. It is suggested, however, that more corn is planted too early than too late. Corn is a hot weather plant. In the central corn belt the seed that is planted In April is usually slow in coming up and less hardy than the seed plantted about the middle of May. The distribution of rainfall affect3 the yield, and this varies from season to season, but the corn experts say, and 'this theory is verified by common experience, that the best yields and most rapid growth may be expected from the medium planting dates. Farm Life.
Cleanup Sale on FLOWER BULBS Big Choice Dahlia Roots 15c, two for 25c
j The Ciuanteed fj
New Cafeteria HOMCO Let your hogs feed themselves during the busy spring rush. HOMCO (Hominy Feed) Cheap as corn but a better feed for growing pigs. $30.00 a ton at Whelan's.
Try it, and if you do not find it allwe say that it is positively the best flouryou have used just come and get your money back. Order Today
24-lb. sack, S1.40 OMER G. WHELAN Distributor
Chicks thrive on if There U no reason why too tbould not raite 90 to 95 percent of your bfT chick. Yon urili raise them, too, if 48 to 60 boon after they are hatched you start them on CHICK MASH (formerly known aa BlatchibnTa Milt Math) And here's the reason. Chirks thrivm on
Blatchford's. It shields them from white diarrhea, bowel trouble and leg weakness. It provides them with snch a variety of essential materials that they grow constantly and rapidly. And it matures them earlier than any other feed you can hay. For utmost success in chick raising femd Blatchford'9 right from the start.
OMER G. WHELAN Bichmond, Ind.
Co8taMore Worth It!. "' run. 0
What Does He Want Now? "WEWLYhatched chicks havevery A1 delicate digestive organs more die from improper feeding than any other cause. To insure raising your chicks feed Ful-O-Pep Growing Math from the very first meal, and on the morning of the fourth day, in con-" junction with the mash, feed them
FINE CHICK FEED. consisting of a variety of cracked grains and Oatmeal, then you will have thrifty, sturdy chicks. Ful-O-Pep Fine Chick Feed is manufactured by The Quaker Oats ' Company, the largest manufacturers of feeds in the world therefore the best and safest feed ' to buy and use. ForSaUby OMER G. WHELAN -The Feed Man"
