Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 210, 4 September 1922 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, ' SEPT. 4, 1922.

PAGE THREE

WIN SECOND PLACE IN OHIO FOOD CLUB EXHIBITS AT FAIR

EATON", Ohio. Sept 4. Second place In the state girl3 food club exhibits was won by the Dixon township

team representing Preble county atj the state fair. County Agent Turner reported to the monthly meeting of the farm bureau directors Saturday. An appropriation to cover the expense accounts of the three club members and their leader was made by the directorate. The Dixon township team was selected to represent the county by lot, after that one and the Verona team had tied for first place In the county contest. Arrangements for a county meeting on the proposed constitutional amendments with their tax and debt limitations, allowance of expenses for the club camp, provision for sending the winner of each county club project to the state club round-up, and subscription of $300 to the capital stock of the Preble county co-operative live stock shipping association, which is now operating in northern Preble, were the important actions taken by the directors' meeting. County Agent Turner reported that the co-operative shipping association

Is now shipping stock and would in

corporate as soon as 10 percent of the

stock could be subscribed. On receipt of a letter from C. A. "Dyer, tax expert of the Grange and farm bureau, on the amendments, it was ordered that a mass meeting be arranged for Eaton to be addressed by Mr. Dyer and open to all who are interested.

NEW YORK BAY FISH ON SPREE

& U,Lr r?? ilrf?4- fill hi J s r 1 ! - -

14

I

Don't Let Home Laundering be V 4 Drudgery

YOUNG CLOVER BADLY BURNED BY HOT SPELL

(By Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 4. Young clover is badly burned out" in sections of the state, according to the report of George C. Bryant, agricultural statistician for the government in Indiana. Corn, the report said is also badly fired in all sections of the state. "Weather condition in Indiana have

been variable. In some places the

rainfall has been sufficient to soften

the soil for fall plowing, and a great deal has been done. More rain is needed in most places. "The late planted corn will be of little value as a grain crop, but. may be (used in some sections as silage. The learly planted is fair to good. Some istorm and hail damage has been reported. Silo filling has be J an. "The movement to market of wheatnd rye is rather restricted at this time. Farmers are busy preparing ground for fall seeding and considerably more than usual has been prepared to date. "Oats and barley threshings are completed. "Clover seed hulling is being pushed very rapidly with yields varying greatly. Pastures have been benefited by recent rains, but are not of much feed value. "Truck crops have gone back materially. Packing plants are running to capacity. Melons are gone. Fruits

ere exceptionally heavy and generally of good quality. "Live stock generally is in good condition. A few scattered cases of hog cholera and some stomach worms in lambs have been reported."

Twenty-five thousand broken hooch bottles after contents had been ooured in New York bay. Uncle Sam recently treated New York bay fish the finny kind only to a real PV (pre-Volstead) party when revenue men emptied twenty-five thousand bottles of old whisky, about the same number of headaches, into the bay. The stuff hal been confiscated from rum ships..

SHOOTING OF MOVIE ACTRESS' HUSBAND TO BE INVESTIGATED

(Rv Associated Press) TLATTSBURGH, N. Y., Sept. 4. Interrogation of stage and screen notables said to have been present at the camp of Jack Clifford on Chateaugay Lake last Thursday night when "Buddie" Johnson was shot, accidentally, according to the storios told both by he and his wife, Peggy Marsh, actress and dancer, was planned today by Dis

trict Attorney Jerry and Sergeant

Boyce of the state police. In a statement to Sergeant Boyce Johnson said he shot himself accident

ally while loading a 32-calibre revolver

of Clifford's in preparation for a hunt

According to Sergeant Boyce, Clifford, who is a former husband and dancing partner of Evelyn Nesbit Thaw, has

fold the state police that it was not

his revolver with which Mr. Johnson

was sot. Clifford also ha3 said, ac

cording to Sergeant Boyce that none

of the guests heard a shot but were attracted to the Johnson apartment by a scream, and in the belief there was a

fight.

Everyone was in bed at the time of

the shooting, Clifford told the police

Clifford also is declared to have indicated that the only ones who knew the facts of the shooting were Johnson and

his wife, as they were the only ones

present when it happened. Mrs. Johnson is said to. have just been entering her husband's apartment when the revolver exploded.

At the hospital where Johnson un

derwent an operation after he had been moved with difficulty from the camp in the Adirondacks, it was said today his condition was slightly im

proved but that he was not out of danger of death. . His wife, his mother, Mrs. C' E. Bayne, and his brother,

Tom L. Johnson, who have been at a hotel here, have left the hotel without

making known their destination.

, Berlin Rioting Follows Arrest of Communist

watch over a farmhouse, from which the-twp republic leaders are believed to have directed the operations.

RITISH TURN SHIPS

OVER TO FREE STATERS

DUBLIN, Sept 4. A British destroyer today turned over to the free state government, a steamer captured off the harbor of Cork, laden, wiy arms and ammunition. The vessel headed for the west coast, was reported to have cleared from Hamburg, Germany. The arms were believed to have been intended for Irish insurgents. Eamon De Valera and Erskine Childers are believed to have participated In a battle near Kilworth, county Cork on Saturday. During the conflict, in which national troops defeated a greatly superior number of irregulars, a guard of 17 of the latter kept close

Postoffice Clerks Open Meeting in Fort Wayne (By United Press) FORT WAYNE, Ind., Sept 4. More than 100 delegates and members of the Indiana State Federation of Postoffice Clerks assembled at the Chamber of Commerce this morning for the opening meeting of the annual convention. Delegates and members are expected from nearly every local in the state.

The number thirteen is never used by the Italians in making up their lot apries.

Washing and ironing are about the

hardest household tasks.

Ways of lessening the work of laun

dering are badly,, needed in many

homes. Following the best methods, using good supplies and proper equipment

will go far toward lightening the bur

den.

Experts of the Federal Government

have studied the problem of making

home laundering as easy as possible

The result of their studies is embodied

in a booklet certain to be of great benefit to any housewife who has to

struggle with the weekly wash.

This is a free Government publica

tion. Our Washington ' Information

Bureau will secure a copy for any reader who fills out and mails the coupon below, enclosing two cents in stamps for return postage. Write your name and address clearly. (Do not send th coupon tr The Palladium. Mall it direct to Washington. D. C) Information Bureau. I j Washington, D. C. ! ; Frederick J. Haskin. Director. I THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM j I I enclose herewith two cents ; in stamps for return postage on ; ; a free copy of the Laundry : Booklet. j Name Street. v...... J City i State .......39 PENNSY OPERATES YEAR WITHOUT PASSENGER DEATH CHICAGO. Sept 4. The Pennsylvania railroad operated throughout the year ending May 31 without a passenger being killed in a train accident, according to a statement made by the company. In that time the statement said, 152,000,000 passengers were carried by 1,400,000 passenger trains over more than 11,000 miles of road. TiiinitiniuiiimimiuiiiiiiimiiitiHHitiiHiuiiHitltiinniiiMuitmijiitMiiiiuuifii School Suits for Boys f I LOEHR & KLUTE I 725 Main St uiiimininmiiutiuiniintiuffiiuiniuiiuniiuiiHiiiimiummniiiiiiU(mramHtH

ROUMANIAN QUEEN

INVITED TO VISIT LEGION AUXILIARY (By Associated Press) NEW ORLEANS, La., Sept 4 Queen Marie of Roumania, has been invited to the national convention of the American Legion Auxiliary in New Orleans October 16-29, Mrs. Lowell F. Hobart, auxilary national president, announced today. An invitation also was extended to Mrs. Warren G. Harding, Mrs. Hobart. said. The Invitation to Queen Marie was

fordwarded to Bucharest through Frederick C. Nano, Roumanian . charge

d'affairs at Washington. Distin

guished for her work among soldiers of the Allies during the World War,

the Roumanian queen is one of the most popular rulers in Europe among

American legionnaires. , Expect Many Notables

The Auxiliary plans to entertain some of the most prominent men and

women in the country during the na tional convention to be held in con

nection with the annual gathering of the Legion. John J. Tigert United States commissioner of education, has accepted an invitation to address the convention, and a similar acceptance is expected from George B. Utley, president of the American Library

association.

Other notables Invited include: Mrs.

M. P. Higgins, president of the Nation

al Parent-Teachers' association; Mrs.

Herbert Hoover, who is president of

the Girl Scouts of America: Mrs.

George Minor, president of the Daugh

ters of the American Revolution; Mrs. Philip A- Moore, president of the National Council of Women; Mrs. Agnes H. Parker, president of the Women's Relief Corps of the G. A. R.: Mrs. Liv

ingston Rowe Schuyler, president of the United Daughters of the Confederacy; Mrs. Cora A. Thompson, president of the Spanish-American War Veterans Auxiliary, and Mrs. Thomas

Winters, president of the American

Federation of Women's Clubs.

Mary Roberts Rinehart and a .ntip

ber of other wejl known women .writers are also expected to attend the

Auxiliary convention.

BRITISH DELEGATES SAIL;

BRING STATUES TO U. S. LONDON. Sept. 4 A British delegation headed by Sir . Charles Wake

field and organized by the Sulgrave in

stitution, sailed on the Adriatic yesterday for an Ameiiccan tour, ths principal tpurpose of which is to take a statue of Burke and bust3 of Chatham and Bryce as gifts to the American people. Lady Wakefield, Harold Spender, Sir Arthur and Lady Haworth and H. S. Perris are members of the party.

ITS TOASTED

It's toasted. This one extra process gives a delightful quality that can not be duplicated

CHEVROLET K'jSiTK $195.00 Down Ealance f 34.61 per month. E. W. Steinhart Co. 10th t Sailor Sts. Phone 2955

Wedding Rings ' All Kinds and Styles at . Right Prices ,

0. E. DICKINSON 523 Main St

SELECT A KUPPENHEIMER SUIT

JVosr Even ytat rc Met cttiLJiws ..

803 Main Street

BERLIN. Sept. 4. Serious rioting

occurred in Charlottenburg, a western, f-uburb of Berlin yesterday afternoon , w after the arrest of a communist lead- j ft er. when bands of young communists j g attacked the guard of the police sta- h

lion in an endeavor to liberare him The fighting lasted upwards of an hour, and the rioters only dispersed vpon the approach of strong police rpinforcements. Several on eacii side were injured, and a shop near the police station was wrecked.

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-A N TED

50 MEN

Ask Us for Profit-Sharing Coupons

ILYGGY BR05.

GROCERY.

Thursday morning at 8 o'clock to report at Fair Headquarters, North Ninth street, to assist in erecting tents and other work required in housing the Wayne County Fair. Wayne County Fair Committee

ii. ,..!;.-.;. i! i.j.iic.i . .i'i!ii-i.liit't!,i,iif-;Ji .m! i.,,!,,,'h!-1..t.i....i.J.iu;ii..iu.,i.,;rt;..!:,i.tw.t.: H.i,:!n..iii.!ii.;fcHi.:.:h.:.!t..:itil;;

ey He

ow

Always during September we hold our Annual Heater Sale. Instead of waiting until Spring, we make our offers early in the season and give you the benefit of saving the following winter. Heater prices cannot be guaranteed this year because of the recent advances made in steel and iron. It is a certainty that Heater prices will advance. As long as our present stock holds out, we will offer them at exceptionally low prices.

1-

OUR FAMOUS FURNACE Our famous Furnace Heaters are so constructed that they will give the same comfort to the rooms as a modern furnace, directing the heat to the floor, causing a circulation that means a well heated room. These Heaters are offered -in several sizes and prices that will suit every purse.

PENINSULAR HEATERS The Peninsular line of Heaters is a well established line that is nationally known and gives satisfaction in thousands of homes. The Peninsular Heater is a fuel-saver, and offered in hard or soft coal styles.

MOORE'S THREE-WAY Without a doubt the Moore Three-Way Heater is the finest, most economical constructed stove on the market today. It is claimed and proved that the Moore Heater consumes 38 less fuel than similar heaters. We offer special inducements on these Heaters to those who purchase this month.

SPECIAL-SIX TOURING

SAVINGS resulting from capacity manufacture are now offered to the buyer of the Studebaker Special-Six. The new price of $1275 is $200 under its former price. v..Hiis5tiC Studebaker reductions became effective August 1st after Studebaker had completed the biggest seven months in its 70 years' history. And at a time when Studebaker had 15,000 unfilled orders on hand! It is a Studebaker policy of long standing to share manufacturing savings with the customer. The performance, durability, comfort and quality

of the Special-Six are recognized everywhere. And here's new proof of its endurance: Studebaker's sales of repair parts, covering accidents is well as service, for the first seven months of 1922 were less than they were for the first seven months of 19 19, in spite of the fact that 186,000 new cars were sold and put into operation since January 1, 1920. The Special-Six at $1275 represents a new standard of value the greatest value Studebaker has ever offered and that means a value that is positively unapproached anywhere in the industry.

Cowl lights; cowl ventilator; massive head lamps; tonncau light with long extension cord ; rain-proof, one-piece windshield ; windshield wiper ; eightday clock ; thief-proof transmission lock ; tool compartment in left front door.

EASY TERMS Small Deposit Holds Any Stove

Ho

EASY TERMS Small Deposit Holds Any , Stove

MODELS AND PRICES, o. b. factories LIGHT-SIX SPECIAL-SIX ' BIG-SIX S-Paaa., 11V W. B.. 40 g. P. 5-Pasa., 119' W. B., 50 H. P. 7-Pase., 136' W. B., 60 H. P. Touring.. $975 Touring $1275 1 Touring $1650 Roadster (3-Pass.)- 975 Roadster (2-Pass.) 1250 - . . . Coupe-Roadster Roadster 4-Pass.) 1275 Speedster (4-Pass.) 1785 2-Pass.) .1225 Coupe (4-Pass.) 1875 Coupe (4-Pass.) 2275 Sedan 1550 Sedan, 2050 Sedan. : 2475

Cord Tires Standard Equipment

THE BALLARD SALES COMPANY

Phone 2010

O. L. KELLER, Mgr. Richmond, Ind. Dayton, Ohio

23 South 7th St.

ASSOCIATED DEALERS: EATON' AUTO SALES CO Eaton, O. GREEX CO. HARDWARE CO Xenia, O. HUGHES, PIERSON & REED Greenville. Ohio ADAMS, BATTLES & ADAMS Franklin, O. POWELL GARAGE Beavertown, O.

THIS

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STUDEBAKER

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