Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 187, 8 August 1922 — Page 12
PAGE TWELVE
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELE GRAM, RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, AUG. 8, 1922.
TEACHERS' INSTITUTE ' OF PREBLE TO HEAR GEORGE M.MORRIS
Deaths and Funerals
EATOX, Ohio, Aug. 8. George M. Morris, connected with the state de
partment of education, is announced as one c the speakers for the annual Preble County Teachers institute, wh,ich will occur the week of Aug. 21-23, in Eaton. Speakers representing health work, state teachers' readins circle. Red Cross and other branches will be present during the week. Instructors for the week's meeting are Dr. B. F. Dyer. Cincinnati, formerly head of the Cincinnati schools, and Dr. T. L. Gibson, connected with the state department of schools In
Maryland. The program for the meet
ing will be arranged from day to day.
Plant Opening Delayed. Delay In arrival of some of the equipment is delaying opening of the Eaton branch of the Miami Valley Milk Producers' association Paul Fudge, manager, states. Mr. Fudge has Just been named manager of the branch, which will be located in the Klepinger building, Barron .and Monfort streets. The Wayne Dairy Products company, Richmond, Ind., has contracted for the . branch's cream. There are 115 members of the branch. Interest in Election. - Reports from various sections of Preble county indicate manifest interest in today's primary election in the county. The contests on the two
party tickets for state offices and the several contests on both tickets for offices in the county is expected to
bring out a large vote on both sides. In. addition to the regular tickets to be voted, the electors of Eaton have before them a proposal to issue $17,000 worth of bonds for the purpose of repairing Main street, building new cuibs and gutters and repairing the public library building. ' Pastor Improving. The Rev. Hiley Baker, pastor of the Christian church, who was operated upon h few days ago in Reid hospital, Richmond, Ind., continues to show improvement, according to advices given out at the hospital. ( Plans for Camp. County Agent E. D. Turner is busy
these days planning for the county boys' and girls' club work camp, whicli wiil b4 conducted Aug. 14-19, on the Ime3 farm, near Lewisburg, and which is sponsored by the county farm bu
reau. Enrollment tor me camp is ou
JESSE DRULEY Funeral services for Jesse T. Druley, who died Monday morning, will be held Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock (city time) at the home, 5'J
South Thirteenth street Burial willi
be in Boston cemetery. Friends may
call Wednesday afternoon and even
ing. CHARLES W. SCHMIDT Charles W. Schmidt. 5$ years o;d, died Monday afternoon at' 3 o'clock, at his home, 322 North Eighth t-treet. Death resulted from cancer. He is survived by his widow and daughter, Mrs. C. N. Johnson; five sisters, Louisa Schmidt, of Piqua, Ohio, ani Mrs. Mary Stall, Piqua; Mrs. Kate Yeni-
helper in the St. Louis-San Francisco
railroad shops at Monett, Mo., re ported that he had been beaten with strands of wire rope. Three met were held in connection with the attack. Asks Workers Protected Governor Allen of Kansas asked Mayor Burton of Kansas City, Kas., to furnish additional protection to
I workers at Argentine, where a work
man in ine bania re snops was attacked. Three men charged with violation of a federal injunction restraining strikers from interfering with operation of the Texas and Pacific railroad were found guilty at New Orleans and sentenced to thirty days. One man charged with a similar offense was discharged. , Declaring that a general state of lawlessness has prevailed at Needles,
CLERK'S CHAIR MADE FROM EARLY CHURCH IS GIVEN TO FRIENDS
Yearly meeting, and Dr. H. C. Bedford
Marion, Ind. Accept Recommendation Before adjourning the meeting voted to accept the recommendation of the
j permanent board that standard time be rt-al-.used during the sessions of the meet-
Harold, who 'the Five Years Home Mission board, DcwsSOn Family to Hold itorate; Wil- with speeches by several representa-j J .
west mancnesier Reunion?
pastor of Detroit; Earle
lard O. Trueblood. clerk of Western i Hvas nt thu ian,i-tmpnu of the hoard
In the evening "Dramatized Letters
from the West"
and a speech
Charles E. Tebbetts will feature the
program.
Sunday Club and Asher Council Plan Joint Session
Plans for an all-day joint meeting' of the Virginia Asher Business Women's council and the Billy Sunday clubj to be held on Thursday, Aug. 24, at Glen Miller park, were to be laid at; the joint meeting of the executive) committees of the two organizations:
at Romey's furniture store at 4 o"clock
linger, of TiDDecanoe: Mrs. Minnie j '-am., since me Deginnmg or me;
Howard, of Cincinnati, and Mrs. I strike, I. L. Hibbard, general manager Amelia Clawson, of Arkansas. i of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Funeral services will be held Wed- the San Bernardino county grand nesday evening at 7:30 o'clock fromj 3ury . would be asked to. investigate the home. 322 North Eiehth street. ! conditions.
The remains will be shipped to Piqus, Striking railroad shopmen lost Ohio, Thursday morning at 9:35 three contentions in federal court at o'clock. Burial will be Thursday after- Portland, Ore., when motions to strike
noon at Piqua. Friends may call at the home Wednesday afternoon and evening.
GONGRESSWOMAN
f Continued ircai 1-jz.o One.) places that amount of American-made goods and deprives our working meu and women of just so much wages. Combine the words 'imported' and 'reduced' and the 'bargain' becomes irresistible.
"But." Miss Robertson wants to
out portions of a complaint against them were over-ruled. Orders Investigation Governor Parker of Louisiai a . instructed Attorney General Coco to investigate the situation at Grftna, a suburb of New Orleans, where 15 men were imprisoned after they testified that they had been beaten by alleged strikers and strike sympathizers Several men testified they were flogged by negro trustees within the walls of the jail. The prisoners were released by Federal Judge Foster. Governor Parker, in his instructions to the
A clerk's chair, made from the
nut frame of the east 'gable window jinf" . . " . . , . . ! Louis T. Jones, pastor of the South of the old yearly meeting house, was . Eighth street meeting, gave the serpresented to the one hundred and sec- J mon at the morning devotional exerond annual session of the Indiana cises, preaching on the need of power yearly -meeting of Friends Tuesday Pdta of the Christian reErrDHnihT The followin committees were aptore do-an the old building. pointed by the permanent board. TuesThe chair was made by FYank Pick- d t0 ge,ect offjcers their-DOard. ett, a grandson, of Benjamin Pickett To nominate c,erk WilHam p Hen.
vuin.ru uu lac " IV. ( ar naEP' Km m s XlnJnr
. . - J v- .rnor-a ' : ! ' "- ."CU6rB, c .
castle, and Emma Unthank. Richmond I luefua' aut"lwu
it is expected mat tne pians win m elude a program of inter-club sports
read to the conference. "Christ our
Lord is nailed to the cross whenever life is. taken in war, when there is suffering from urremployment, and nhsn thoro ia tin in the world." th;S
a memorial concerning Sarah B.
Woodward, of Fountain City, was re
ceived by the board from New Garden
meeting
Earle Harold, formerly of Richmond, pastor at Wilmington, Ohio, gave the sermon, at the devotional exercises
UTST MANCHESTER. Ohio. Aug.
bvi8. The Davisson family will hold its
reunion on Saturday, Aug. 19, at the home of F. M. DavUson. The Woman's Bible class of the Christian church will serve the dinner in the residence basement. The attendance from a distance is usually large, a number from jndipta lining present yearly. The usual number servd on these occasions flas been more than 150 persons.
was constructed .auring me
xoii--t. j trustees or Earlham: Eva M. Jay, Epistles from the London. Dublin Ricnmond; w 0 . Barnard Newcastle;
ana wrmac jeany iu;imBa ".Timothv Nicholson Rhmnnrf ot,h
Mary J. Overman, Marion., The retiring trustees are Joseph A. Goddard and Lucy Hill Binford. Receive Memorial
London letter declared, stating that "unless man's creative energy should go to the spread ot Christ's principles, om- civilization would destroy itself."
Spiceland and Winchester quarterly'
meetings, in memorials to the meeting
asked that a uniform way ot Keepin
SHEET MUSIC
fsrusicAitr
r1-
Opp. Post Office
Phone 1655
contests where prizes will be awarded.
a picnic dinner and a program of
speaking and music in the evening, j The plans also will include reserva-i tions of a section of seats for the I evening program of the Chautauqua.
accounts for the yearlg meeting
and !
for the Five Years meeting be devised.
and that a competent accountant De secured to audit the books of the two meetings, for that purpose. The memorial was referred to the permanent boadd. Want Time Changed
Winchester quarterly meeting also
I attnxnc.f n-nn 1 J,l 3 i
ionment of the men was a "disgrace to requested that the time of the jeaily
know, "are they really bargains? Why, j the state." He threatened removal of
we are tola mat tne proms on m" I any officials found deficient in their duported wares run from 100 to 2,000. tjs jn connection with the affair. -per cent." - Members of three locals of the BroShe states that articles that cost therhood of Railroad Trainmen, in' a 25 cents abroad have been selling tor ! joint meeting at Houston, Tex., adopt$5 in this country; a watch worth 60 .ed resolutions protesting the use by cents in Europe has been sold for $25 j railroads of defective rolling stock durin the United States; a razor which Hng the shopmen's strike, cost only 3 cents abroad has retailed , Rumors that members of his organifor $3 in America. "And so all through i zation were takinsr a national strike
an almost innumerable list," she adds, j vote were denied at St. Louis by E. j. (report
'meeting be changed to the old time
the last of September and tne nrsi oi October. The evangelist, p&stors and church
extension board referred to the meet-:
ing a recommendation that the record-1 ink of ministers be done by the year-, ly meeting itself, as is done in Iowa.; After some discussion the suggestion j was referred to the meeting for min- ( istry and oversight for discussion and j
Monday evening.
"Men are ranked by their ability to see vision," he declared. "The object of the church is to make it easier for the people to live up to their Godgiven powers." H. Elmer Pemberton led the devo
tional part of the meeting, while Earl; Folger, Shirley, sang a solo. Tuesday evening the meeting will hold devotional services, and Wednes-j day morning reports will be made byi
We Will Loan You Money Call Us for Particulars
PRUDENTIAL LOAN AND INVESTMENT CO. 20 S. 8th St. Phone 1727
Largest stock of high-grade 31cycles at lowest prices. ELMER S. SMITH 425 Mair St Phone 180S
Thistlethwaite's The Original Cut-Rate EVERY-DAY PRICES In Effect at All 7 Stores Complexion Powders Mary Garden 98c Azurea $1.09 Djer-Kiss .50c Three Flowers 69c Armand Bouquet 50c
ALL SCRAP TOBACCO, 3 for
25c
Must Realize Condition.
Miss Robertson a'sserts that the American women must come to realize what a continued buying of foreignmade articles may mean to this country. She says, however, that she cannot plead with American shoppers not to buy them. "There is only one remedy for the
situation, the early approval of the
protective tariff act now pending, she asserts. . "And mind you," she continues, "a
Manion, president of the Order of Rail
way Telegraphers.
Agent Turner is sending out a circular protective tariff is a national safeletter to each camper, advising them I guard. Jt directly and indirectly proaa to articles to brine with them to'tects us all. every man, woman and
camp and also setting forth rules that
will govern the camp. Farm Bureau Speaker. O. E. Bradfute, Xenia,,haed of the Ohio state Farm Bureau federation, is announced as a speaker for the annual joint picnic and outing of the farm bureau and grange of Preble county, which will occur here Aug. 18, at the fair grounds. It is expected the grange also will have a speaker. C. A. Padd'ack. Charles Plummer and Howard Hart will have charge of the bureau arrangement for the affair.
Houses Getting Smaller, Declares City Official; August Building Jumps "We'll soon be back to the days of our forefathers," said a city official, Tuesday. "Houses are getting smaller and smaller. A man came in here and
took out a permit for a three-room house the other day. If this keeps up, it will not be long till the one-room log cabin of Abraham Lincoln's day will be in style again." August will prove a much better month from the building standpoint than July, if we are to judge from the start that has already been made. Permits for work amounting to an estimated total of 520,190 have already been granted this month. During the entire month of July, building permits to the value of $39,122 were issued. The monthly report of the building inspector, to be presented at a cabinet meeting this week, shows permits
for new work numbered 25; remodel-
ine and repairing 22; while their esti
mate costs was $29,397 and $9,725 respectively. Thirty-three wiring permits were issued, and four heating permits.
THREE HURT IN AUTO WRECK SI IELB YVILLE, Ind.. Aug. S Three persons were injured here Monday when an automobile, driven by Joseph Labarbera turned over twice on the Marion road. F. J. Wegman of Indianapolis, Paul Fix and Charles Louden, of this city, who were in the automobile, were injured. Mr. Wegman suffered several dislocated ribs, a dislocation of the breast bone, cuts and bruises.
child in every state of the union. It
promotes opportunity, it safeguards every occupation, and it insures against idleness." Miss Robertson makes it plain that she does not favor the erection of a tariff wall which would keep out all foreign products, and she states that the tariff act now in the making does not provide for excessive protection. Under the new tariff, she says, this country will continue to import hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of foreign-made goods each year, but under the pending law the United States will not be at the "mercy of foreign producers as we are today."
Hold Cincinnati Boy U ntil Father's A nival Robinson Grambrel, 14 years old, of Cincinnati, is being held at the Home for the Friendless pending word from his relatives in Cincinnati. The boy was arrested in the Pennsylvania railroad yards Tuesday morning by Isaac Burns. The boy told police officials that he did not know how he got to Richmond. Word was received from Cincinnati late Tuesday that his father would be here soon to take him home.
The following visitors were intro
duced to the session: James M. Moore, Fallington, Pa.; Allen B. Clements, Pennsylvania; Anna B. Thomas, Baltimore; Charles E. Tebbetts, Whittier, Calif.: Murray S. Ken worthy, Wilming
ton, Ohio; H. Elmer Pemberton, Salem, j
Ore.; Isaac m. Stanley, rnenusvmt-, Tenn.; L. Oscar Moon, newly elected
Brief
s
I
Ice Cream Social to be held by Moose Legion at Moose Hall on North Tenth street
! Wednesday evening.
GREEKS AGREE TO NEUTRAL ! ZONE NEAR TURK CAPITAL' nmi,,,m,,m,,inm,mu,,,,im,m,mimm
ATHENS, Aug. S Allied and Greek ; I
military delegates today signed a protocol establishing ?. neutral zone three and three- fourths miles wide between the Greek and 'allied forces, along tho Tchatalja frontier, a few miles outside of Constantinople.
New Fall Suitings for Men r
DENNIS-GAAR CO., Inc. I Tailors and Haberdashers ' Ij 1 1010 Main St. In the Westcott : UtlilUIMIUIUIIIItlHM1111lllllllUIIIIIII1l1IUMUMtl)MIIMIIHUIIlllHIIIIIIIHIIIintl)It!rf
HARDING
(Continued from Pase One.) mally decided and, as to the latter, to
consider a question which has not been formally heard and decided, but which has been inferentially touched upon in the resolution of July 3, 1922 "
The July 3 resolution which de
clared that striking shopmen were no longer employes of the roads was wrongfully interpreted as "outlawing"
the strikers, Ben W. Hooper, chairman of the labor board, asserted. "The board's offer to hear the seniority question and render a decision on it came on the heels of President Harding's proposal to railway execu
tives and the striking shop crafts. Increasing disorder marked the ! progress of the strike which is in its sixth week. Troops were ordered to Joliet, 111., where two men were killed and Sheriff James A. Newkirk was wounded in a clash yesterday at the Elgin, Joliet and Eastern shops. Governor Thomas E. Kilby of Alabama, ordered national guardsmen to Albany following a report that author
ities were unable to cope with disorders growing out of .the strike o!: Louisville and Nashville railroad shop men. Austin King and B. J. Murphy, former carmen in the Northern Pacific railroad shops at St. Paul, were arrested when Samuel B. Smith, a shop employe charged that the men attacked him when he went to work, beat him and threatened to hang him. Howard McDonald, a machinist's
See the New 1923 Buick Chenoweth Auto Co. 1107 Main St. Phone 1925
NEW FALL FABRICS now on display. Let me tailor you a suit that will please you. GT. H. GERLACH
1031 y2 Main St.
Over Farwig's
Reductions on All Porch Furniture
The Highest Grade Candies and Better Frozen Delicacies PRICE'S
Ever Get Bilious? Try This
Take NR at once. Get digestive and elirninative organs working in harmony and relief is immediate. Never causes griping.
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When your liver goes on strike and vou feel a sick headache and bilious spell comingr on, instead of prodding your liver with dangerous calomel and lashing your bowels with strong, Irritating purgatives, get out your box of mild, gentle-acting IvEt Tablets and take one right oft Belief will come Just as qulcklr and
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4f Feltman's
for Men Black Calfskin Oxfords
Made of light weight. Calf s k i n stock, French toe, welt sewed with first quality rubber heels $00
We Welcome the Members of the Wayne County Farm Bureau to Richmond
Feltman's Shoe Store.
The World's Largest Shoe Dealers 35 Stores 724 Main Street
A. G. LUKEN & COMPANY
- 1 'I'm Bit
Notice Elks! Members will meet at the clubhouse at 7:30 o'clock sharp Wednesday evening to proceed to the home of Brother Jesse Druley, 59 South Thirteenth street, to pay our last token of respect and esteem to our depart ed brother. Albert Morel, Act. Sec. L. M. Feeger, E. R.
11
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TDEAUTY is the heritage which nature bestows upon just a few of her daughters. But Fashion, more generous makes her charms available to all womankind.
A flattering frock, a simple youthful coat, can accomplish wonders in one's appearance. Let us help you
to discover new possi
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Rcady-to-Wear Department of
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We Welcome the Members of the Wayne County Farm Bureau to Richmond
mrsBmms
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Wednesday All Day and Thursda Morning Specials
v
One Lot of
Navy, Tricotines, Serges and Jerseys., $25.00 to $50.00 values; choice
ONE LOT of WHITE WASH SKIRTS, 24 to 28 waistbands, mostly all preshrunk, $3.98 to $7.50 val- Q-j QQ ues; choice tpXc0 ALL CHILDREN'S COATS, 2 to 16 years, at ONE-HALF PRICE
ONE LOT of INFANTS' DRESSES and
SLIPS, slightly soiled; special,
your choice
50c
INFANTS' SHIRTS, sizes 1 to - A 5, 25c and 35c values, choice. . . J-"v
1 lot of TAFFETA and WOOL DRESSES, $25 to $35 values, all to go for S10.00
1 lot of COATS, Tweed and Herringbone materials, $15 to $20 values, go at
1 lot of COATS, navy blue Serges and Tricotines, all large sizes, $25 values
$8.95
$8.95
We Welcome the Members of the Wayne County Farm Bureau to Richmond
3
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