Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 149, 23 June 1922 — Page 3

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., FRIDAY, JUNE 23, 1922.

PAGE THREE

FARMERS MAY USE SELLING FACILITIES OF HEW CO-OP FIRM

All Wayne county farmers may use the selling facilities of the new cooperative livestock commission firm at Indianapolis, and both the shipping association membere, and every farm bureau member in the county, is auto

matically a member of the firm and entitled to the profit eharing, if stock

14,000 Negro Farmers Get Large Corn Yields (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON. June 23. More than 14,000 negro farmers in North Carolina, Texas and Virginia, who raised 90,000 acres of corn last year under the ddvice of county agents, employed co-operatively by the depart ment of agriculture and state agricultural colleges, obtained average yields of 35 bushels an acre. The average for all farms in these states ranged from 14 to 25 bushels an acre, the depart

ment said today.

In Virginia, nearly 5,000 of the ne-

I. -I.! A IV.t . V- M 111 1 ...I " UllilUUJuowiO I"""""

Uu. lUB mu, u uU j b 3 C00 selectcd seed for

" "'"""Vt o their 1922 crop. All these demonstraassurance given by J. H. Settle this ,. , r v .

week.

While the firm sells just as does any commission firm, for any custo-

tion plats of corn were harvested except 87 acres which were "hogged down." It is estimated that 70 per

cent of the negro farmers in Virginia

PROTEST GUARDING OF RHINE BY BLACK TROOPS.

mers wno wi i patronize k. asa " are following methods of growins corn pects to be able, with its large volume t M fe extenslon workers. of business, to place the stock advan- ' ,

tageously. members will also have the

advantage of sharing in the profits of the firm at the end of the year. In appreciation of the $400 so promptly contributed by the Wayne county farm bureau toward the establishment of the firm, a county membership was awarded to Wayne, said Mr. Little. For all local shipping associations, of which there are four, at Cambridge City, Centerviile, Fountain City and Williamsburg, it will be n easy matter to secure patronage refunds for the members. There has

ANNUAL CONVENTION OF LUTHER LEAGUE OPENS HERE MONDAY

The twenty-fifth annual convention of the State Luther League of Indiana will be held in St. Paul's Lutheran church, beginning Monday, and will

been a cloudy understanding of the lst until Wednesday evening of next

way in which farmers could take aa

week.

According to the program, the convention will be divided into six sessions and a rally meeting. The first session will open Monday evening at

7:45 o'clock when the Rev. J. P: Miller, D. D., of this city, will take charge of vespers. The convention sermon also will be given at this session by the Rev. J. S. Albert, of Muncie. After the services a reception will be held for delegates and visitors to the convention. The second session will be held at 9 o'clock Tuesday morning and will be devoted chiefly to the business of the convention. Tuesday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock

open and the

vantage of the selling pUn where no association exists, however. Can Ship Direct According to Mr. Settle's latest statement, which clears up the misunderstanding, any farmer located in Hi community without an association way ship direct to the firm in the name of the Wayne county farm burrau, per himself as agent. This will fiilcw transactions in the Indianapolis office to be carried to the credit of the county "Arm bureau, which is listed as a member of the firm and entitled to the patror.ogo refunds. The price received for the stock will ilioii e ectnt Aivcfiv tn tVi cliirinor

inc. , ,vf CMrthe taird session will

ments to any commission firm and a devotional services will be to charge credit will be carried in the name of of?eJ- C; Vlley' ?astr 0? ,Sef cMr nrtii the f th ar end church, Richmond. Karry Hodges,

when he will receive his patronage refund, also sent direct from the central office. Over-time work at the office, to take cere of the 250 per cent increase since tho first week's receipts, has been the rule for the past week, reported Perry Crane, secretary of the state farmers federation. The business of the cooperative has grown from seven percent of the total receipts during the first week, to 17.7- per cent of all receipts during the fifth week. The office force will be increased next week to take care of the growth.

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CONGRATULATE GANDHI

ON HIS CONVICTION BY PROVINCIAL BODY

hostile critic that we have achieved ; JL. I Prpnnre Far almost or nearly all that we bad in "WCOrae rreportS rOT

Big Fourth Celebration

(By Associated Press) BATALA, India, May 23. M. K. Gandhi has been congratulated on his

conviction by the Punjab Provincial 5 vanced so far in this matter that our

Conference, which at the same time ! future is full of promise and there is

view. Hindu-Mohammedan dissections

have been the root cause of our weakness but are nearly non-existent today. We have made rapid strides In sinking our differences and creating that atmosphere of mutual trust and goodwill without which no common endeavor is possible. "I do not mean to say that we have done all we wanted to do, but I most

certainly maintain that we have ad

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expressed in a second resolution gratification at the stand made by the people of the province during tho past few months against the restiictions Imposed upon them by the government. The conference declared its firm adherence to he principle of nonviolent non-co-ODeration recommended

by three successive sessions of the In- J

aian isationai congress as me oniy means of attaining political freedom in the immediate future, and called upon the -people not to depart from the strict observance of non-violence. Later resolutions called for the establishment of a regularly constitutea university to carry out the constructive program of national education which has been adopted, and to direct and control the various national'educational activities in the province. The

proposed university would open scien-

no room for despondency. It is true

no doubt, that we have not wrested power from the hand of the bureaucracy, but that is only a question of time. If we would only persevere in the same path and with the same zeal, the day would not be far distant when we would have secured full Swaraj."

NEWCASTLE, Ind.k June 23. Elaborate preparations have been maifi for the celebration of the Fourth in Newcastle, with $1,200 worth of fireworks, a band concert, and a sham battle by the local militia company. Memorial park will be used for the celebiation. and parking space, protected by police supervision, will oe provided for 5.00C cars. The sham battle will be Btaged between 3 and 4 o'clock.

15,000 TO 30,000 . SERVICE WORKERS

CE7 Associated Press) CHICAGO, June 23 Between fifteen and thirty thousand people in the United States are engaged in some

kind of professional social service, ac-

The Counteji of Warwick has started a fight in Parliament in protest against the guarding of the Rhine sector by French Colonial troops, who, she charges, are violating German women and girls. She advises the boycotting of French merchandise until France puts an end to tha atrocities.

cording to an article in the Journal of

title, technical and industrial depart-1 the American Institute of Criminal ments and would be incorporated with j Law and Criminology. "They reprethe national college already existing j sent a wide variety of fields, for social at Lahore. service in the modern sense has been

The conference expressed its com- developing with remarkable rapidity,"

APPROVE INCREASING TELEPHONE CHARGE rnVM'F.T'C'VTT.T.Tr Tnrt tnnfl M A

general secretary of the Luther, . . , . League of America, will deliver an ad-!raise m Connersville phone rates m

"DOCTOR OF SAFETY" DEGREE SUGGESTED TO CUT ACCIDENTS

(By Associated Press) CHAUTAUQUA. N. Y.. June 23. "If every club woman in the United States would confer on herself the degree of "Doctor of Safety', traffic accidents would soon be virtually done away with," Eaid John C. Long, of the

National Automobile Chamber of Commerce, Epeaking before the general Federation of Women's Clubs herts today. "Most accidents on our highways are needless," said the speaker. "The conditions which cause them are preventabls. Twenty-eight cities lowered their traffic fatality records in 1921. Detroit and St. Louis nearly halved their previous highway mortality figures. Credit for this decrease belongs to local 'Doctors of Safety' who diag

nosed the trouble and then applied strong remedies to bring about convalescence. "The increase of motor vehicles to the number of 10,000,000 in use today has come about so rapidly that we have been staggered by the traffic problem, and have often been led to handle in a panicky manner a condition which will yield to normal treatment. Laws Not Sufficient "We have passed stringent laws, cried for punishment cf, the speeder, r.r.d demanded that traffic rule violators b? put in jail. This i3 all well enough, but it Is not fundamental.

I'ejtons who spread disease should be Quarantined but that does not necessarily stamp out the source of the malady. "Among the causes of traffic accidents are careless drjving, children piaying in the streets, poor parking r.'jccnimodations. insufficient playgrounds, bad street lighting, lack of s igns, narrow street limits, inadequate police force, unintelligent traffic regulations. "If a boy or girl in your community

is taken ill, the doctor is called in and makes his diagnosis. He decides v. hether the trouble Is croup, or ncarl't fever, or what, before attempting to prescribe a remedy, if a child has typhoid fever the whole water supply system of the town may need investigation. "If a child is injured in an automobile accident, howevr, someone may be crrested, the police may insist on all motorists carrying special cards, a few more ordinances may be passed, but in most communities there will be no exhaustive examination of why that accident occurred."

dress at this session, on "The Luther

League and Devotional Meeting." Another address will be given at this session on "The Luther League and Social Meetings" by Mr. W. C. Kauf

man, 01 St. John's at Anderson. Tuesday Evening At the Tuesday evening session, the vespers will be in charge of Rev. F. A. Dressel, of the First church, of this city. The sermon for this session will be delivered by the Rev. S. A. Metzger, of the St. John's church at Anderson. The Wednesday morning session

will be devoted to convention business. The Wednesday afternoon session will take up at 1:30 o'clock with the Rev. C. R. Isley in charge of the devotional services. There will be two addresses given at this session, one by the Rev. J. B. Gardner, Missionary superintendent, and the other by the Rev. F. L. Lineberger, of Deer Creek, Indiana. The convention will close with a rally meeting to be held Wednesday evening at 7 o'clock when the closing sermon will be delivered by the Rev.

H. G. DaVis, president of Weidner institute, t , Besides the speakers of the convention there will be some extraordinarily good musical numbers at all of the sessions. The choral work will be done by the choir of St. Paul's Lutheran church where the convention is to be held, but the soloists listed on the program are . from other churches both in Richmond and elsewhere.

Visitors to the convention will be entertained in the homes of the local

members of the church, such enter

tainment to consist of lodging and

breakfast to be free of charge. Dinner and supper will be served at reason

able rates by the Ladies' Aid society

at the church.

it could more easily be dene by the company and a charge made to cover the expense.

plete agreement with the Central Khalifat committee and held that the proposals of the Paris conference were unjust and disastrous for the Turks. Santanam Presided The conference was presided over by K. Santanam. In the course of his presidential address, Mr. Santanam said: : "A careful study of the present situation will convince even the most

the article continues

"Social service now has. a profes

sional organization in the American Association of Social Workers. The members of this association, formerly the National Social Workers' Exchange, have been developing a program similar in purpose to that of the American Medical association, the American Bar association and the engineering societies."

f FASTEST tZz&l j GOUAO 1 C!GAf3

BilJfli R.LJ? S ft m t n I

v B the mild, 1 1 y E Mapaeuba I f SSte S MrMahan R t",iSf!W 9 L",b Co- Inc- 9 K&a&.TvJ? Diributor I Andern. Ind.

the form of two additional charges

and abolition of an extra charge for listing names in the directory, has

been approved by the public service j commission. A charge of 25 cents aj

month for each quarter mile of line in rural districts, after the first quarter mile may be made when the line ha3 been built, or re-built by the company. Rural subscribers living more than 30 roas from the road also will

pay 35 cents a month additional for each quarter mile in excess of 30 rods.

A charge of 25 cents a month for

each quarter mile beyond the city limits also may be levied.

Evidence presented showed that

many rural subscribers lived on isolated farms'reached by lanes, and that being unable to build lines themselves.

Although women have had the right to vote in Norway since 1907, the recent election to the storthing of Mis3 Kareen Platenfi is the first instance of a woman being selected for that office.

PESK

CORNS Lift Off with Fingers

Jk

As Offered in This Special Reduction of Footwear For Friday and Satuaday These are only a few of the extra specials that we offer. Our stock has been marked very close.

BUILD CAMP FOR VETS NEW YORK, June 23. The $3,463 left from a fund raised by the old Manhattan club of New York for the purpose cf defense during the war, has been turned over to the New York American Legion to be used in building a veterans' tuberculosis camp in the Adirondack mountains.

Rats in tha Cellar Mice in the Pantry Cockroaches in the Kitchen What can be more disagreeablei than a home infested with pests? Destroy them with Stearns' Electric Rat and Roach Paste, the standard exterminator for more than fortythree years. Kill rats, mice, cockroaches, waterbugs or ants in a single night. Does not blow away like powders; ready-for use; better than traps. Directions in 15 languages in every box. 2 oz. size 35c. 15 oz. size, $1.50, Money Eack If It Fails

lea

(Pesky Devils Quietus) P.D. Q. is the new chemical that puts the everlasting to the Pesky bedbugs, roaches, fleas, ants and cooties impossible for the pesky devils to exist where P. D. Q- is used. Recommendations of Hotels, Hospitals, Railroad Companies and other public institutions are a guarantee to the public that tha safest, quick estand mosteconomical way of ridding the peaky insects is by the use of P. D. Q.. as this chemical kills the egg as well aa tha live ones, and will not injure tha clothing.

A 35c package makes a fall quart, enough to kill a million bedbug s, roaches, fleas or cooties and also contains a patent spout to Ret the eras nests in the hard-to-set-at-plaeos and eaves juice. P. D. Q. can also bo purchased in sealed bottles, doable strength, liquid form. Sold by A. G. Luken Drug company. Advertisement

Doesn't nurt 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 irrita-tir-.-Advertisement.

tHigh Heels Vi

$1.95 S1.95

Ladies' White Canvas 1 -Strap Slippers Military Heels

Ladies' "White Canvas Oxfords Military and Low Heels

Boys' White Tennis Bal

Shoes

Brown trimmed, suction

soles, all sizes

$1.50

MEN'S BROWN CALF OXFORDS Rubber heels, Goodyear welt soles, a $5.00

value at

$3.45

Children's and Misses' White Canvas and Patent Slippers at a Great Reduction

FIVEL'S SHOE STORE

33 Main Street

CHEVROLET

Four - Ninety TOURING

$200.00 Down Balance ?35.50 per month E. W. Steinhart Co. 10th & Sailor Sts. Phone 2955

GENUINE PALM BEACH SUITS, $15.00

803 Main Street

In accordance with naval regulations, the colors are raised at S o'clock in the morning and lowered at sunset. In th? army the flag is raised at sunrise and lowered at sunset.

Have You Piles? Dr. Leonhardt's HEM-ROID will relieve any form of Piles quick action In even old stubborn cases. No cutting no greasy galves a harmless tablet that removes the cauo. Money back If rot eatlsfled. A. G. Luken Drus Co. Advertise nent. '

Electric Irons

ALMS OR

1 A

Do you give "alms" or "charity?"

Very Special Electric Irons FRIDAY and SATURDAY $2.98 These are extra quality Iron3 and guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction. Holthouse 530 Main St.

The difference is that alms merely relieve a need temporarily, and charity not only relieves the immediate need but removes the cause of distress. for instance: A father deserted his family just before another baby arrived. There was destitution and suffering. From several charitable organizations came food, fuel, medical and nursing care. Then one society traced the delinquent father, caused his arrest for desertion, got the sentence suspended on condition that he would support his family. In the long run, the family again became self-supporting and happy. These organizations, working through the Community Chest, extended charity, not alms, and thereby put an end to the need for public relief.

r u n w

.-lave a Heart

Subscribe to the Community Chest

Race victory

at INDIANAPOLIS

at WICHITA

EbIb Man

4

Choose Tit

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500 miles at 94.48 miles an hour a relentless grind over a rough-finished, sun-baked concrete and brick pavement at record-breaking speed that is the gruelling test Oldfield Cord Tires underwent successfully at Indianapolis Speedway May 30th. They were on the winner's car for the third successive year and on eight of the ten finishing in the money, upholding the confidence successful race drivers have in the trustworthiness and ability of these tires to meet the greatest demands of speed, endurance and safety. Their records in every other important race have been equally as good. ' Consider this achievement along with another test of Oldfield quality made at Wichita, Kansas, this past winter and early spring. 34,525 miles on rutted, icy Kansas roads, running day and night on a Studebaker stock car without a single tire change. This test was made by a group of Wichita automotive dealers in a tire, oil and gasoline economy run. 'Mayor Kemp of Wichita was official observer and made affidavit to the mileage and service given by Oldfield tires. You may never subject your tires to the gruelling experience of Indianapolis nor the steady grind of bad winter roads, but it is good to knew you can get such safety and mileage economy by buying Oldfield tires. Ask your nearest dealer.

Increased

iq Bosines

The buying public is the surest barometer of the value of any article. Their approval of Oldfield value has been demonstrated by the increase of lb5 in business for the first five months of 1922 over the corresponding period of 1921.

AganU Everywhere Oldfield Tires are distributed through 73 branches and distributing warehouses in all parts of the United States. More dealers are constantly becoming Oldfield agencies and Oldfield Tires are now available i n your community.

"The Most Trustworthy Tires. Built" The Oldfield Tire Company, Akron, Ohio

Flexible sewed soles, brown calf; neat and serviceable. NEFF & NUSBAUM

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