Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 147, 21 June 1922 — Page 14

PAGE FOURTEEN"

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 1922.

CULTIVATE FRIEJDSHIP ; WITH MEXICO, IS PLEA v OF BISHOP AT LIBERTY

fSpecial o The Palladium) LIBERTY, Iivi., June 21. Closer relations -with MeyJcoa more Industrious c ffort to understand her problems and assist in their .solution, more charity nnd a friendlier reeling for the Mexicans, were asked by Bishop Thierkield in an address on ""Our Chance in Mexico" before the Fivorth League convention in Liberty, Tuesday afternoon.

church Is encouraged, or tolerated, the object of the mission workers being

simply to alleviate social conditions and destroy suspicion, and to provide

the people with an education, accom-, panied by an ability to make use ofi an open Bible. Many Possibilites I "Economic possibilities of Mexi,

and of other Latin American countries, are immeasurable," said Bishop Thierkield, after the meeting. "Mexico has the largest oil wells in the world, 100,000 barrel wells being common. In her fertile soil, and in minerals, still abundant in spite of centuries cf exploitation, as well as in forests, can be found the possibilities for a great nation. "It 1s the tragedy of Mexico that

foreign countries have taken so much

, greater friendship, said the speaker. ho the COuntry and have remvested

whose bishopric includes Mexico, fan-

jima, Costa Rica andPeru. Where political, military and, economic conoaests have failed to gain friendship, missionaries have overcome native suspicion. Further mission.work will not only pay big dividends,; but is bound to progress with ever increasing speed as it is becoming more and .more selfsupporting, instead of continually abKorbing the efforts of foreign, missioncries. In the heart of Mexico City.isaid the cpeaker, the Gante church, with a membership of 1.300, which includes nn increase of 500 within the-last two yeas, has been assuming an ever increasing share of its own support since he first observed it. In 1919, the congregation paid 2,500 pesos ($1:250); in 1920, 6,000 pesos, while in 1921 the congregation assumed ntlre self-support, raising 12.000 pesos. For the year ending in 1922, 13,800 pesos' were raised. This congregation now supports its

pastor and Bible readers, and a num-

so little capital, vt tne on wens, o

percent are owned in the United States and 21 percent in England, with only two percent owned in Mexico. "The New York bankers' conference, with its plans for aiding development of Mexican resources, is looked upon as of the greatest importance to the economic condition of the country. "Heretofore, the United States, rather than playing the part of the Good Samaritan, and promoting a feeling of good will, which would have resulted in and has maintained an armed guard of suspicion at the border. For 100 years we have watched just across our border, a struggle for liberty and human rights without lending any assistance. Our nearest neighbors, we have been on least intimate terms with them, and although many of the million and a half population have spilled over into this country across the 1,200 miles of border, yet in spite of the fact that this country, touching our border, and containing unlimited

economic and political possiDinties,

RENCH STEEL INDUSTRY NEAREST 1513 STANDARDS

U.S.SECOH0. LEADING ENGLAND. BEtCIVM

PRODUCTION EXPORTS

INGOT

PROOUCnOM

STANDARD OF 1913

EN&LAMD

50o BELGIUM

- Mi.

, FRANCE

BASED ON INFORMATION OFFICIALLY COLLECTED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE HOW THE MUMCIfAL Sim-PfcODUUHO COUKTWES 6E6AM COPYBIGMT 1922 BY SCIENCE. SERVICE, WASHINGTON, P-C

WILL DEMONSTRATE

CULLING OF POULTRY IN EVERY TOWNSHIP Poultrv cullins demonstrations in

every Wayne county township is the aim of the county agent for this fall, and preparations have been started in a letter sent out to all township federation chairmen, asking them to appoint two township agents to work with the county office. One or two farms in each township, preferably

where owners have been feeding forj

egg production, will be selected.

Poultry culling was one of the most popular activities of the county office last fall, and many communities

which were late in getting in their

4,000 Gallons of Oil To Be Pat on Streets About 4.000 gallons of oil will be put on the streets this year as compared with 3,800 gallons last year, Everett Davis, assistant city engineer, stated Wednesday. Three carloads of oil have already been spread and an additional carload is now on the way here and

will arrive within two days in order to allow the oil plenty of time to dry, Mr. Davis stated.

police car really comes from the general fund, and an ordinance taking the $1,700 from the general fund and placing it in the miscellaneous fund now is pending in council. " ( About $200 worth of bills are novf T pending against the department.

Red-haired people are said . to be

I less subject to baldness than any

other.

her of students in schools. The congre-J we have made only the smallest ef-

gation also has established 38 prayer

meeting sections throughout the city instead of holding one general prayer meeting at the church, and one of these centers already has become a self-supporting church. Help Themselves Another example of the way in'whlch the Mexicans are contributing to-their own aid now, said the bishop, is in the action after the destruction by fire of the huge church and school at Puebla, which was the cgjiter of the women's foreign missionary work. There were a boys' and girls' school, each accommodating 500 pupils. Aftor the fire 20.000 pesos were subscribed for

rebuilding, a record unmatched on any mission field, and mostly given by very poor converts. One trained nurse gave all her savings, amounting to 800 pesos, while many examples were round of barefooted peon women who gave as much as 20 pesos. Evangelical work, concluded the speaker, is limited in Mexico only by the men and money available, as appeals for new missions are coming faster than they can be established. That Mexico is urgently in need of educational facilities as the first essential to economic development, wns emphasized by the speaker. Eighty per cent of the population cannot read or write, he said, and the poverty of the peons is shown by the fact that fourfifths of them live in mud huts without chimneys or windows. Living in misery they are a prey to all diseases. This in spite of the fact that Mexico is the richest undeveloped country In the world. Key to Latin America Cultivation of friendship with Mexico will be a key to closer relations -ith all Latin America, Rev. Thierkield predicted. It is the country closest to us, and easiest for us to un

derstand and cement in friendship. Its: allegiance will guarantee the friendship of South American countries, while its antagonism probably will mean also the suspicion and distrust of its neighbors. - A good opening has been made by the mission work, which is heartily approved by public and officials alike. Warm commendation was given by tinCcsta Riean president at the orening

of a new school at San Jose, while the. oppr.ing of a new hospital, the most! modern on the Pacific coast, at. Lima,! Peru, was distinguished by the per-, Fonol attendance of President Leguia' and his full staff. Obregon in Mexico.!

a'.so watches educational and social program of work with great interest. In Mexico City, the mission workers have opened the first social center of iis kind to be operated in such a field, quipped with boys' and girls' club facilities, a dispensary, free hospital care, and accommodations for mothers. This is the first social center formed by any mission in the city. Xo strife with the Roman Catholic

fort to understand and help solve their

problems.

Handicap to Progress. "An indication of one of the handicaps to progress is seen in the fact that it takes me 12 days to get from Mexico City to Panama, and 19 to 20 days to reach Peru from there, while from New York I can reach Panama in six days and Lima, Peru, in 12." Bishop Thierkield, believing in the practical value of economic salvation before expecting spiritual development, Is turning his attention to agriculture, a basic Mexican industry, and

has purchased a large farm in Quere-

taro with a hugh hacienda which will be turned into a school building.

Church workers will be trained to

act as agricultural teachers and ex

tension agents, and peons will be

taught elementary principles. "Not

only do the peons, who farm the land, live in mud huts," said the bishop, but

they plow with a sharpened stick, just as Moses did. They must learn newer

methods and we hope to teach them

The three-day League convention, at which the address was delivered, closed at noon Wednesday with the serving of a picnic dinner to all the

delegates.

MiLroy was announced as the home

of the winning chapter in the effic iency contest, leading all other chap ters with 3,404 points. The New Pal

estine chapter was next with 2,101

points, Waidron third, with 852 and

Liberty fourth with 777 points.

Circuit Court

ASKS $700 DAMAGES

uamages amounting to 5700 were asked in a complaint filed by Ernest

O. Ewan against Charles Thurston

Tuesday. The complaint is the result

of an accident which occurred on

East Main street, near Twenty-first

street. June 12. A truck driven by

Thurston struck the car owned by

;,Ewan, the complaint alleges.

MARRIAGE LICENSES

Wesley Harris Dorand and Beula L.

Callaway wGre granted a marriage

lcense' Wednesday.

BREAD, lVi-Lb. Loaf Now Only 12c Henry Farwig & Son 1031 Main St.

Winchester Man Perfects New Sanitary Bottle WINCHESTER, Ind., June 21. The Overmyer Mold Manufacturing company have succeeded in perfecting a mold for making a new bottle which was recently patented by a New York firm. Work was. started on the new mold about two months ago and com

pleted last week. On June I, Mr. Overmyer took his equipment to New York

and word has just been received that the first attempt made was success

ful.

The Hygeia Nursing bottle, as it is

called, is about six inches high and about one and one-half inches in diameter. It has been adopted as the

standard bottle by the American Nursing association and by the Red Cross.

Mr. Overmyer is credited with being the first to blow this bottle.

Dismiss Jury. In the case of the State of Indiana

against Paul A. Rupe, the jury was

discharged, having failed to reach a verdict after nearly 24 hours deliberation. The trial was on a charse of

grand larceny. Married Saturday. Mrs. Rose Thornburg of this city was married to Roy J. Thornburg, of Parker, Saturday, at Muncie, the Rev. William J. Sayers, of the Friends church, that city, performing the ceremony.

Police Court News

RELEASED WITH WARNING

R. G. Tilton, 225 North Twelfth

street, charged with leaving his automobile stand on North Fifth street

without a tail light, was given a warn

ing and released at police station

Wednesday. VIOLATES MOTOR LAW

Edward Chauncey was fined $1 and

costs when he pleaded guilty to leaving his motor running without an attendant. Wednesday. FOUND NOT GUILTY George Spivey, accused of stealing

chickens was found not guilty in police court Wednesday.

POLICE DEPARTMENT FUND IS EXHAUSTED

Because of tho appropriation ofitl,700 from the police miscellaneous ( fund to pay for the new police car,

reauests. were disappointed in their bias on wnicn are to re received

desire for a demonstration. It is in ! Thursday, and the failure of council order that all parts of the county may I to pass an appropriation from the gen-

get a fair chance for a demonstration this year, that the new program will

be followed.

Franklin township leads in poultry

population, according to a report be

ing complied from assessors sheets bv

era! fund to replace this $1,700, bills against the city police department will be held up two weeks. City Controller Webster Parry stated Wednesday. The police miscellaneous fund,

i wnicn is usea 10 pay smau dhis

Miss Hollingsworth of the county against the department, was entirely

agent's office. It has 12,717 chickens

while the nearest competitor is Wash

ington with 9,707. Jefferson township

has 9,434. Curiously enough, although poultry demonstrations were held in ,

Ferry township last fall, the assessor's sheets do not show any poultry in that township. In Abington township, only one farmer reported possession of poultry, making the total for the township 72 chickens.

exhausted when this $1,700 appropria

tion was made. The monev for the

SOCIETY

Continued from Page. Four.)

at Earlham Heights church Thursday

evening at 7:30 o clock. All are in vited to attend the social.

The Coterie club will be entertained by Mrs. Martha Shute at her home

southeast of the city Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. The Ways and Means committee of the Mary F. Thomas Refuge home will meet Thursday evening at Mrs. Thomas's home, 1,400 North F. street All members are requested to be present as very important business is to cqme up.

ROB STORE DURING PARADE LAFAYETTE, Ind., June 21. Quickworking thieves robbed the Bonner

Meat company yesterday while the owner and proprietor were watching a circus parade, taking $500 from an unlocked safe. The store force was

not twenty feet from the safe during the robbery.

Make Itemized Accounts Of Orders For Poor Itemized accounts of all poor orders filled out by orders of the city in the

past three months are now in the hands of the township trustee and will be made into a complete report within a few days, he announced Wednesday. Orders will be payable July 10. Trustee Edgerton expressed his thanks Wednesday for the consideration and cooperation shown by grocers in making out their reports. All

reports were itemized this quarter and the result will be to facilitate the work of his office, he said.

SHEET MUSIC

-SST7S I CA LLV ir , r

Opp. Post Office Phone. 1655

ItiiimuunniiniiHiiiiuiuintnuHimiiitntimmtiuiititnimiiRiinttniiuiiiimmi ! 5-Ft. Solid Oak Porch Swings I I $1.98, at 1

ODD'S

rji

nmiiiininnnmiuuiiuiininiiiiiiiuiiiniiiHiiiiiiiiHtifiiiiiittiiiiiiiHniiiiiiiiiiiiri

0

ICE CREAM The National Food

Ice Cream is the national food because it is the food of all classes. You find it eaten by poor and rich alike because it comes within the means of everybody. It graces the banquet table and it is the nourishing dish for the orphan child. And you'll like Price's because it has all the wholesome and palatable qualities demanded of good Ice Cream.

There are more than 200 regularly registered women physicians and surgeons in Missouri.

A Clean Shave Gives you new pep. 5 skilled barbers Harter's Shop In the Murray Bldg.

The Easy Way to Save and Earn " Prudential Stock Investment Savings Plan Prudential Loan & Investment Co. Under State Supervision 20 S. 8th St. Phone 1727

Mulberry Leaves, Silk Worms, Cocoons and Modern Machinery Bring Yon r. Beautiful Silks Many persons know that Silks are obtained by the weaving of fine silken threads reeled from a cocoon spun by the tiny silkworm which feeds on mulberry leaves but Did .you know that the discover of silk dated back to 1700 B. C. and was kept a secret for over 2000 years by the- Chinese? The discovery was made by Si-Ling-Chi, the wife and queen of the third Emperor of China named Hoang-Ti. About the year 555 two Nestorian Monks smuggled silkworm eggs into PfTsia where silk industry was carried on and then came to Greece and Syria, later to Italy and France. The first silk culture in America was in the year 1622 having its 'ups and downs' till the year 1838, when Corticelli Silk Mills started the manufacture of Silk and today ranks first among the leading silk manufacturers. THE SILKWORM The silk moth or sericano mori. lays the eggs which, when hatched delivers the silkworm. The silkworm lives on mulberry leaves, it breathes through spiracles, small holes along the side of the body. They have no eyes but are sensitive to a jar; they are velvety, smooth and the flesh is firm, almost hard. It sheds its skin five times and at the time it molts It remains in a torpid state nearly two days. The worm grows from of an inch to 3 inches in length in 9 days. When it has attained its fuel growth it starts to spin its cocoon. In about 3 days the cocoon is complete. The color of the worm's trolegs indicate the color of the cocoon with a silvery white, creamy yellow, lemon or green. After the cocoon Is complete In ten days the cocoon used for reeling is placed in a steam heater to stifle the insect within, otherwise when the moth emerges the threads are broken and the cocoon is ruined. The fine silk threads are reeled from the cocoon and spun into thicker threads by machinery in skeins and ready for use either for sewing or weaving into fabrics. An Interesting display may be seen in our front show window showing the live silkworm eating the mulberry leaves. Children or teachers can obtain books on silk culture from the Corticelli Silk Mills. Ask us about it. The Geo. H. Knollenberg Co.

tftHiiiiiiiniifiituiiiiiiiMiiiiitiHiitmiiitiiimfHirtiiiiiiniiiniHiuHiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiitin

King's Klassy Trousers I I S2 S3 $4 $5 I KING'S, 912 Main ) MIHfHIIIIIIIHIIIMIllinilMIIIHHUHIIIUIUHIIHIfUltltllKIIIIinHtlllHItlllHUIIIItHIIH

BLACK TREAD TIRES Witi New Features CORD-ROAD KING PARAGON (FABMC) 1 FABRIC ) Supreme in Appearance, Mileage, and . Non-Skid Security Ed. A. Feltman F. E. Threewith Driggs & Grimes Brooks Brothers R. R. A, Richmond

Thistlethwaite's The Original Cut-Rate EVERY-DAY PRICES in Effect at All 7 Stores

GET THE HABIT! Thistlethwaite's ICE CREAM 20c Pint 35c Quart It It Delicious Eat it with your meals.

At Feltman9 s

-a Wonderful Value in a Black and White

Sport Oxford

$fioo

with Neolin soles, low heels and patent trimmings, a vTy trim and dressy model.

Feltman's Shoe Store.

The World's Largest Shoe Dealers S5 Stores 724 Main Street

A 11

Water Color for Walls

n

An artistic, sanitary, lasting and economical wall coating. Easily applied to any interior surface, whether plaster, wall board, wood, brick or canvas.

18 Colors and White

A- G. Luken Drug Co.

626-628 Main Street

FACTS ONLT

TRUTH ALWAYS

KUS'BmJM'S Bigger Business June Event Extraordinary Specials for Thursday, Friday and Saturday

aunrmrtmmtimfmTftmHnmifmminOTiHiiHiunmMM

Dafler's Dru

N

ewslets

Circulation Thousands of Satisfied Customers.

Our Motto The Public be Weather Forecast Always Fair at Pleased. Dafler's.

VALUES

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 1922.

SERVICE

GUILTY GUILTY We are going to be found guilty this week by our customers of selling Jergen's Tales at such thrifty prices. This Talc comes in odors of Lilac, Violet, Rose and Castolay. Only 21c per can

Miles' Nervine 89c Pinkham's Compound . . . 89c Garden Court Talc 25c Day Dream Talc 24c

FACE POWDERS Garden Court 50c Melba 47c Satin Skin 23c Djer-Kiss 50c

Special at the Cigar Stand CAMELS and LUCKY IF. STRIKE Cigarettes for XOL WHITE OWL CIGARS, 8c; IPtwo for -LtjC EL DALLO CIGARS, 8c; OfJfour for '. t)l ALL SCRAP TOBACCOS, Orn 3 pkgs. for

Kodak Film Developing and Printing 24-Hour Service

Get It Where They've Got It SS5SotoSeSSS If It's Advertised, It's at Dafler's she Vru" Store

Packer's TAR SOAP, ideal p for shampoo, per bar Ov

We Thank You Call Again Main at Ninth Phone 1904

SUITS

One lot of Ladies' Suits, consisting of Trico- I tines and Poiret Twills in navy and a big line of I 1 Tweeds and Jerseys, in all colors; values from 1 1 $10.00 to $7.r).00. Priced special at I

half price

luiiiNiiiiHiiminniiniitiHmiiniiiiiuuiuiiuciuiiniiiitiniiuiiiimmliiniminniminiiniinuwniniiiiimiiiiiniiiniiiiuiiimiin

Children's Coats One lot of Children's Coats, sizes 2 to 16. made of the wanted fabrics, good colors. Priced special at half price

Nifty Porch Dresses, made of good grade Ginghams. Percales and Crepes, $3.50 aDd $5 values. Special at

:2

48

BIG SILK SPECIALS

One lot Silks, consisting of Foulards in the desired shades, Messalines in staple and high shades, and Taffetas in all the leading shades and small checks,

values up to $2.00; priced

for quick clearance at

$1.39

$1.50 Crepe Silk Poplin, a big range of colons to select from at (J- -4 Q yard pl.

S9c Silk Pongee, 36-inch material. Jap cloth with CQ dressing; the yard.. OcC Satinella, an ideal satinfini.h cloth for lingerie; yard wide, in white QQ and flesh iOC White Sport Silk. 36 and 40inch, in good assortment of patterns; priced special at S1.00 to $3.50

Lee B. Nusbaum Co

NUSBAUM BUILDING

Porch Dresses

7