Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 204, 28 August 1922 — Page 7

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, AUG. 28, 1922.

PAGE SEVEN

List of F looks and Supplies JFor Pupils in Grade Schools Prices Are Announced by Superintendent Bate, and Parents ,re Urged To Buy Early So that Rush .

at Stores May Be Avoided.

aLa "i ne school books and sup-1 Frye. Atwood Geography. Book. 2 1.80

a Dy students in tne grade SCnOOlS W fra nnnrmnnorl hv Sunprin.

tendent F jate Monday for the conven

lence oi parents who wish to "avoid the rush in buying the books. The texts i ed in the junior and senior high sc hools will be announced when studea ts enroll as studies vary ?n the higher grades. First Grade A Chifc i classics First Reader $0.23 Cor gdon mUSiC primer No. 1 20 Co; ley Crayons. Box No. 4 .15 A' pha Pencil .05 The following articles are needed in thi3 grade, but have been purchased before and should ba on hand: Scissors 15 to .30 Ruler, No. 151, graduated whole inches 05 First Grade B Child Classics Primer J0.22

Copley Crayons, Box No. 4. 15 Alpha Pencil 05

Ruler, No. 151, graduated whole

inches 05

bcissors 15 to .30

Second Grade A

t mid Classics Second Reader $0.30 Copy Book, No. 1 10

Copley Crayons, Box No. 4 15

Alpha Pencil 05

Perfection Tablets, No. 96 and 99.

each 10

The following articles are needed in this grade, but have been IIGrchased before and shoull be On hand:

i ongdon Music Primer, No. 2 20

Kuler, No. 152. graduated

inches 05 Scissors .15 to .30

Second Grade B

tongoon Music Primer, No. 2... $0.20 Copley Crayons, Box N?o. 4 15

Alpha Pencil OS Ruler, No. 152, graduated 'i

mcnes 05

Kerrection Tablets. No. 96 and 99,

earn 10

The following- articles are ueeded in this grade, but have been purchased before and should be on hand: Child Classics First Reader

Scissors 15 to .30

TWrd Grade A

Child Classier. Third Reader $0.37

-piey crayons. Box No. 3 1

capv uoow. No. 4 10

rejection Tablets, No. 96 and 92

each 10

Frye-Atwood Geography. Book 1. 1.1

Pencils 05

The following articles are needed in this grade, but they have been purchased before and should be on hand. Wentworth-Smith Primary

Arithmetic $ .33

Eleanor Sm:fa Music Book No. 1 .56

Ruler, No. 154, graduated V inch Scissors 15 to Penholder (wood tipped) Mastery of Words Speller, Book 1

Third Grade B "Wentworth-Smith Primary Arithmetic ...$0.33 Mastery of Words Speller, Book 1 .30

Eleanor Smith Music Book 1 Copy Book. No. 3 Copley Crayons, Box No. 4 Ruled, No. 154, graduated inch

Perfection Tablets, No. 96 and 92, each 10 Penholder (wood tipped) 05 Pencils 05 The following articles are needed in this grade, but have been purchased before, and should be on hand. Child Classics Second Reader $0.30 Scissors 15 to .30 Fourth Grade A Websters Elementary School Dictionary $1.20 Robbins & Rowe Studies in English. Book 1 65 Copy Book, No. 6 10 Spectrum Color Crayons 10 Perfection Tablets, No. 96 and 97

or 98 .10

Pencils, each 05

Drawing Pencils 05 to .10

Pencil Eraser 0.3 The following articles are needl ed in this grade, but have been i purchased before find should be j, on hand. '. Elson Primary School Reader,

Book 4 $0.40

Wenthworth-Smith Primary Arithmetic - .3

Eleanor Smith Music Book No. 2. .60 Manual Arts Crayons, No. 1 15 Ruler, No. 15S, graduated H inch. .05 Scissors 15 to .30

., Penholder (wood tipped) .05

tr Frye-Atwood Georgraph, Book 1. 115 t Mastery of Words, Speller 33 I Emerson & Betts Hygiene and Health, Book 1 77 " Fourth Grade B

Elson Primary bchoot Keaaer Book 4 $0.40 Robbins & Rowe Studies in English, No. 1 65 Emerson & Betts Hygiene and Health. Book 1 77 Eleanor Smith Music Book II 60 Copy Book No. 5 10 Cpectrum Color Crayons 10 ?.Ianual Arts Crayons 13 Ruler, No, 158, graduated inch .05 Perfection Tablets, N. 96 and 97 or 98, each 10 Pencils, each 05 Drawing Pencil 05 to .10 Pencil Eraser 05 Frye. Atwood Geography, Book 1. 1.15

The following articles are iitcuid in this grade, but havebeen purchased before and should be on hand. Ventworth-Smith Primary Arithmetic $ .33 Scissors 15 ta -30 Penholder (wood tipped) .05 Mastery of Words, Book 1 .36 Fifth Grade A Perfection Tablets, No. 96 and 9' B or 98 $2-10 The following articles are r ,eedcd in this grade, but have been purchased before and shoul d be on hand: Elson Grammar School Rea Jer, No 1 0,45 Wentworth-Smith Adv. Arit hmetic 57 Eleanor Smith Music Book y No. 2 .60 water's Ele. School Diet ionary 1.20

Water Colors, Bradley's Tax No. Bl - - " rirawin? Pencil ... .Oo

' " " - - -

.40!

.05 .10 .15 .20

.36 .65

.05 .30

.05

.36

.56 .10 .15 .05

Robbins & Rowe Studies in Eng

lish, Book. 1

Mastery of Words, Book 1. Emerson & Betts Physiology and

Hygiene, Book 2 i .92

Zaner Manuel No. 144 20

Fifth Grade B

Elson Grammar School Reader

No. 1 $0.45

Wentworth-Smith Adv. Arithme

tic 57

Emerson & Betts Physiology and

Hygiene 2 92

Frye, Atwood New Geography,

Book 2 1.80

Water Colors. Bradly Box No. Bl. Ruler, No. 150, graduated 1-16 in. Perfection Tablets, No. 96 and 97

or 98, each

Pencils, each .02 to Zaner Manual, No. 144

The following articles are needed in this grade, but have been purchased before and should be on hand:

Webster's Ele. School Dictionary 1.20 Eleanor Smith Music Book, No. 2 .60 Penh'older, wood tipped 05 Drawing Pencil 05 to .10 Scissors 15 to .30

Pencil Eraser 05

Mastery of Words. Book 1 Robbins & Rowe Studies in English, Book 1

Sixth Grade A Elson Grammar School Reader, No. 2 $0.45 Eleanor Smith Music Book No. 3. .64 Perfection Tablets, No. 96 and 97 or 98, each 10 Pencils, each 02 to .15 The following articles are needed in this grade, but have been purchased before and should be on hand: Wentworth-Smith Adv. Arithmetic 57 Manly-Baily Lessons in English,

Book 1 20 Webster's Ele. School Dictionary 1.20

Water Colors. Bradley's Box No

Bl 40 Ruler, No. 150, graduated 1-16 in. .05 Penholder, wood tipped 05

Drawing Pencil 05 to .10

Frye, Atwood New Geography,

Book 2 1.80

Mastery of Words. Book 2 36

Zaner Manual 144 20

Bourne & Benton's Introductory American History 1.0 Sixth Grade B Elson Grammar School Reader,

No. 2 45

Bourne & Benton's Introductory

American History 105 Eleanor Smith Music Book. No. 3 .64

Mastery of Words Speller, Book 2 Perfection Tablets, No. 96 and 97

or 98 10

Pencile 02 to .15

The following articles are needed in this grade, but have been purchased before and should be on hand: Wentworth-Smith Adv. Arithme

tic 57

Webster's Ele. School Dictionary 1.20

Water Colors, Bradley's Box No

Bl 40 Ruler, No. 150, graduatftd 1-16 in. .05 Penholder, wood tipped. -05 Drawing Pencil - 05 to .10

Robbins & Rowe Studies In Eng

lish, Book 1 i. ... 65

Frye, Atwood New Geography,

Book 2 1.80 Zaner Manual No. 144 20

INFANTRY REGIMENTS

CUT TO 37 FiY ARMY ACT

(By Assrj elated .Press) WASHINGTON I, Aug. 28. The new reorganization "plan for the army,

drafted by the general staff In order j to meet reductii jns in personnel in accordance with congressional acts fixing the enlistf -d strength at 125,000 men, calls for s weeping changes in the number and sr je of tactical units. An explanatory st itement issued today by the war depf .rtment shows a large number of su ch units which will be either furth r reduced in strength, made inactive . or demobilized. Only 37 re giments of infantry will remain in tlw 3 combat service as a result of the r eduction, as compared to 64 regiments called for under the national defers e act of 1920. The cavalrv regimei its are reduced from 16 in 1920 to 14:, the field artillery regiments frorr . 33 in 1920 to 13, plus 8

separate I ;attalions; coast artillery regiments from 9 to 4, plus those at fixed defe? lses, ar.d the engineer regi

ments fro? ja 13 in 1920 to 7. In addi .ion to the reduction In num ber, the i nfantry regiments, the state

ment sp ja, have been reduced m strength from 1490 to 1150, and the

cavalry regiments from 818 to 641.

K. of C. Notes

We dnesday Noon Luncheon.

Me eting every night this week of

the r membership committee.

The New Community Spirit rHE Wayne County Fair, September 13, 14 and 15, 1922 has been undertaken by citizens of Richmond, at the request of and with the co-operation of farmers and breeders of Wayne County, in the hope and belief that it will be the nucleus of a permanent organization that will provide an annual fair, beginning with next year, with permanent grounds fitted to meet the requirements. There must be a start made sometime and somewhere. A new community spirit must be in evidence and an era of good feeling between Richmond and county in general must prevail. The farmers' organizations in Wayne County are making commendable efforts to bring about better conditions which will result in a material advancement of the science of farming and stock raising. No greater stimulus to the farming industry in all its phases can be offered than a county fair. To bring a fair into existence in Wayne County will require the very fullest co-operation of Richmond and there is evidence on every hand that sentiment favorable to such co-operation exists. It has required action in some form to crystalize this sentiment and put it into tangible form. The fair now planned is the step taken. For this year the city of Richmond has granted the use of a part of Glen Miller Park for the beginning of a county fair that wfll permit farmers and breeders to display live stock and every variety of farm products. The farmers have taken up the task with a will. They have fixed the dates and have undertaken a classification and preparation of exhibits that will be highly commendable. The committee of business men and other citizens who, have vouched for the financial success of the ehterprise do not propose that the first fair shall be conducted in a manner that shall not meet the demands. The money investment will be small compared with the results that will accrue. The new community spirit that will be created will outweigh the work and the cost. Material benefits to the individual are not to be considered. No section of the city is to be neglected. Fairs are held on fairgrounds, never in the streets of the city where located. The 1922 Wayne County Fair will be held in Glen Miller Park, but the benefits therefrom will accrue to the city of Richmond and the county as a whole. Another year, it is hoped and confidently expected, a tract of ground will have been provided and equipped that will adequately meet the plans the farmers and citizens committee have in mind. Members of the committee have had brief time in which to set the machinery of organization in motion. They have been working tirelessly to produce a result that will be satisfying. The premiums to be offered exhibitors for the best offerings in the various classes will amount to $2,400. The housing of the various classes of exhibits, erection of pens, stalls, etc., the providing of entertainment features of a high grade and giving of proper publicity, will require $6,500 in addition. The whole undertaking, is approximated from a careful survey, will cost between $8,500 and $9,000. It is not unreasonable to believe that there are one hundred men in Richmond who would underwrite the undertaking at $85 each. It should not be difficult to finance a proposition that will bring forth real returns in the way of a new community spirit and which in the final analysis means material benefit, though this is not the primary aim of the project. The financial part of the undertaking should not be considered anything but a simonpure investment. It will not be an expense. It is the opportunity to carry into effect the idea of most citizens that there is need for a new spirit of relationship between city and county in general. Very truly, L. A. HANDLE Y, General Chairman

MISS BAKER TO WEL.

THOS. TARKLESON PAUL JAMES ROY HODGE FRANK DRUITT E. H. HARRIS JOS. H. HILL RAY WEISBROD ROBT. HEUN J. A. BROOKBANK HENRY E. BODE WM. H. RINDT

HERBERT KECK LON KENNEDY N. H. JOHNSON DEMAS S. COE ELMER E. EGGEMEYBfl WM. M. BAILEY GUILD COPELAND RICHARD GRANGER O. G. WHELAN ROLAND NUSBAUM EMMETT BARTEL

V. " - -T&Sfc

1 f imlnSi' if v?4fd Oil . iA Pi n

The Doctrine of the True American

SALVATION ARMY

SPEAKER

The true American believes in liberty, equality, and justice. He believes in freedom of religion, free speech and free press. He obeys the rule of the majority. He is a patriotic American who knows and understands the three greatest American documents the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of the Confederation, and the Constitution of the United States. An attractive booklet containing these three historic masterpieces is

offered free to our readers. Send for

a copy of this work and get a better understanding of the history and gov

ernment of the greatest country in the world. Merely fill out and mail the cou

pon Delow, enclosing two cents in stamps for return postage. Write

your name and address clearly. To not Bend the coupon to The Palladium. Mall It direct to Washington, D. C)

Washington, D. C. Frederic J. Haskin, Director, The Richmond Palladium Information Bureau, I enclose herewith two cents in ftamps for return postage on a free copy of the Constitution Booklet.

Nam Street City .

State

Race cards have been filled with a

larger number of entries than usual, and good races are promised, the

horses having shown speed in earlier

events.

Miss Mary Langdon Baker of Chicago has again promised to marry Allister McCormick and set the time as September 18. McCormick is certainly a persistent wooer.

Ex-Khedive of Egypt Bandished From Land CAIRO, Aug. 2S. Abbas Hilmi

Pasha, deposed ex-khedive of Egypt,

who has Deen In exile ever since the

beginning of the World war, is destined to spend the rest of his days outside of his native land, if the decree depriving him of all rights in his native

land is carried out. A law signed by

King Fuad I and countersigned by ev

ery member of the Egyptian ministry has been promulgated, restricting in various respects the ex-khedive's political, as well as social rights.

Special meetings will be held at the

Salvation Army nail during this week with Envoy E. Pauline Schwartz, from the central territory headquarters at

Chicago, in charge. Miss Schwartz has been making an extensive tour over the central territory and has in

cluded Richmond in her itinerary. It is expected that she will arrive Tuesday morning in preparation for the opening of the series Tuesday night. The meetings continue for a week.

Envoy Schwartz was one of the Sal

vation Army lassies who carnea doughnuts and coffee to the boys in the front linos in France during the World war. She is a graduate of Mt.

Holyoke college, . and has spent six years in evangelistic work in Japan. She has since traveled extensively in Europe and South America. Late in

August, 1921, Miss Schwartz returned

from a long trip through the Holy Land and is expected that Fhe will dwell upon conditions there together with the Bible history of the country, in her talks here. Envoy Schwartz sometimes talks about Alaska, South America, war

work and social conditions in the near

cast. Klwanis and Rotary clubs everywhere have heard her, as bava various church missionary societies, Sunday 6chool classes, advisory boards and jail inmates. All join in declaring her a most interesting and forceful speaker. COLD WINTER COMING, INDIAN SAGE PREDICTS OKEMAH, Okla.. Aug. 28 "It will be a hard winter." This i3 the forecast of the Harjo family of the Creek Indian nation here. The Harjos. members of Creek royalty, have been accepted as tribal sages and prophets, dating far back into savagery. "When the silk on the corn is heavy the winter will be severe," according to the Harjos. The silk this year is heaviest for at least two decades.

NOW THE GREATEST AUTOMOBILE VALUB XN AMERICA

AG ED BROTHER AND SISTER

BURN TOTJEATH IN HOME " UNION, Mo., Aug. 28. Joel Watkins

ar id sister, Mrs. Grissam Reinfensthal

r oth octogenarians, were burned to

' leath when their home near Gerald in the western part of Franklin coun

ty, was destroyed by fire. Watkins

was 80 years old and his sister 86.

Scissors

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ENFORCEMENT (Continued from Page One.)

life a force that can always be telied upon to exert itself on the right eide of every moral or social question.. Be

yond the peradventure of a doubt the

women cf this country can be impend

ed upon to support rigid law enforcement But we must not overlook the

importance of the struggle now going

on to make JLhe eighteenth amendment

ineffective. 1

"Among the most subtle and decep

tive of all propaganda is the persistent cry that the law is unpopular and

cannot be enforced; that it is being violated and therefore should be repealed. Nothing can be mors fallacious than the statement that it should be repealed because it is violated. "Little is to be feared from those who are positively hostile to law-enforcement. I think there is danger in those who are negative or fail to express themselves. To assist in the enforcement of the law must becos.ie his duty toward his country. "Prohibition is paying its own way, indicated by the fact that during the past year approximately $62,000,000 was collected through forfeitures of bonds, compromises, taxes, flnos and penalties. Those who are forced, through such forfeitures, compromises, taxes, fines and penalties to foot the bills are, of course, making a loud noise about it."

CHARGED WITH FORGERY PRINCETON, Ind., Aug. 28. Virgil Akers, 24 years old, who, it is t9id, is an escaped convict from an Illinois prison, was arrested on a charge of forgery. Checks ranging from $175 down to about $20, it is alleged, were passed by Akers for a small amount of merchandise.

Police of Conner sville Search For Stolen Safe COXNERSVILLE, Ind., Aug. 28. Search for clues to the robbery of a half-ton safe, containing securities and ?65 in cash, which was rolled out of a home and trucked out of the city, was fruitless Monday. Tracks of the truck were still visible when the robbery was discovered, and led to the highway where all trace was lost. Methods used in the burglary have

convinced the police that the gang.

which must have been composed of

more than two men to handle the

heavy safe in the time they did. is

made up of local characters familiar

with the community.

Government Gives Surplus Material For Rocd Building WASHINGTON, Aug. 2S. Surplus war materials valued at $139,773,986 was delivered to the states for use in road construction up to July 1, reports the bureau of public roads, United States department of agriculture. The material, which consisted of all sorts

of supplies and equipment suitable for road building for which the war de

partment had no further need, was dis-

tnDutea on the same basis as monetary federal aid. In value of material delivered, Texas and New York lead

with nearly $3,000,000 worth of material, and every state with the exception of five of the smaller ones receiv

ed supplies valued at over a million

dollars.

BUY COAL NOW

We have the right coal at the right price. Jellico & Pocahontas Lump. ANDERSON & SONS N. W. 3rd & Chestnut Phone 3121

RICHMOND GASOLINE More Miles per Gallon Richmond Oil Co. 6th St. and Ft. Wayne Ave. For More Pep, Use

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THE Overland Sedan combines economy, comfort and good looks in a truly remarkable way. Triplex Springs make riding comfortable extra large braking surface makes driving safe and the sturdy motor makes motoring economical most owners average 25 miles to a gallon.

Shelbyville Exhibitors

Prepare For Fair This Week SHELBYVILLE, Ind., Aug. 2S. Con

cession owners and stocK exhiDitors were busy placing their attractions on the Shelby county fair grounds Mon

day in preparation for the fair this week. Large crowds gathered on the grounds and patronized the early concessionnaires on Sunday. Pig club boys will exhibit 32 pigs in their show, conducted in co-operation with the fair.

V -J? ti&vSP J& (LJ E B t-T TOURING . . vss kSsSP J TT ROADSTER . 55 at J3?sj

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Ruler, No. 150, gradual 1-16 in. Penholder, wood tippei 1 Pencil Eraser -

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