Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 267, 9 November 1922 — Page 16
PAGE SIXTEEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND, THURSDAY, NOV. 9. 1922.
1
LOCAL YOUNG PEOPLE ARRANGETO PROMOTE WORK OF CONFERENCE
Carrying on the work started at the state conference recently held in CrawfordsYille by establishing a Young People's council to promote various Sunday school programs, representa
tives of all the Sunday schools in the
county met Thursday night.
Assembling at the T. M. C the
young people went in groups to the
Grace M. E. church where a fine sup
per was served them and where the
meeting was held after the supper.
One hundred and two persona attended the meeting. . v , "
The following program of speeches was given after the supper hour: "Use
What We Have," was the subject of a talk given by Cecil Scantland, coun
ty superintendent of young peoples
Sunday school work; "Who's Who At
the Conference, by Aaron Unaiey; "Challenges to Lead," Mary Morrey; "Four Fold Life" Gladys Cosand;
"Physical," Albert Benn; "Mental," Thelma Campbell; "Social, Raymond
Bailey; "Religious," Louis Hubbard;
"Using the Class," Clarice Welter;
"Sunday School Class Meeting, How ard Jackson; "Mid-Week Festivities," Doris Weesner; "Using the Depart
ment," Lois Questing, and "Inter-Sun
day School Council," Cecil Scantland.
Perry Wilson Speaks.
.' Perry Wilson, boys work secretary of the Y. M. C. JL, epoka on the Father and Son week which the newly organized young people's council will promote throughout the county during the
: next week.
The council is divided Into two sec
tions, one for boys anl the other for
. girls, each of which has its own of-
; f icers with the exception of treasurer
who acts for both organisations. The
i treasurer elected was Aaron Lindley.
The officers of the girls' section are
i Miss Mary Sprong, president; Miss
1 Lois Hubbard, vice-president, and Miss
. McPherson. secretary. Francis Rob-
I inson was elected to head the boys
j section with Albert Benn as vice-presi
dent and Howard Jackson as secretary.
There win be a meeting of the officere
next Sunday afternoon to plan for fu
ture work.
STOVES
If you have not as yet purchased your Stove for this winter, better do so this week, as we are offering exceptional values in the Furnace Stove Peninsular Moore Throe-Way and Hoosier Hot Blast See these Stoves and get our prices.
ABig AidTo Good Living
Canned foods, properly used, can
save housekeepers a thousand steps and a thousand worries.
The unexpected guest causes no
consternation in the household whose larder is stocked with canned soups,
fish, vegetables, meats and fruits.
The old idea of merely dumping out
the contents of a can and serving is passing. There are hundreds of ways in which canned foods can be made
into dainty appetizing dishes.
For instance, delicious entrees, sub
stantial luncheon dishes, or a dainty little supper may be prepared from
canned sea foods alone, at a minimum
outlay of labor and time.
The scores and scores of ways of
using canned foods have been collected
and published in a booklet Our Washington Information Bureau will secure
a copy for any reader who fills out
and mails the coupon below. Enclose
two cents in stamps for return postage. Write your name and address clearly.
(Do not tend th coupon n Th Palladium. Uall It direct to Waahlngto D. C.)
Information Bureau, I : Washington, D. C. : : Frederick J. Haskin, Director. t I THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM : I enclose herewith two cents I j In stamps for return postage on I a free copy of "Recipes for I Canned Foods." I Name I - i Street t
; City . State
it frr,iM-inrssMfimm i i i iifii If
Rock Bottom Prices on Cord Tires This Week
Cincinnati Batteries Guaranteed 2 Years Attractive Prices This make of Battery is used in U. S. Air Service Until Saturday Night Milwaukee Timers ....1.79 Turner Timers 83.95 Aluminum Step Plates, rubber inside $1.50 Motor Driven Vibrator Horn 81.98 $2.00 Parking Lamps .-81.48 $4.00 Sport Sweater Coats for 82.98 $7.50 Sport Sweater Coats, all wool 85.98 Gloves of All Kinds "If you want an accessory we have it" -t Richmond Tire Service Cor. 11th and Main Sts. Open Evenings and Sundays
THE BOSPHORUS AT CONSTANTINOPLE
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After seizing the capital and depriving the Sultan of all authority, the Turks have forbidden allied warships to enter the Straits without Turkish permission. The Lausanne peace conference has seen postponed. The new Kemalist regime ordered the allied troops to vacate Constantinople. The Powers rejected the demand at once. The Turks are tittering into ,the neutral . zones. Photo shows a -! fTP Hew nf th Po-"hnrlJS.
Grace M. E. Members
To Celebrate Armistice A Bpecial observance of Armistice
Day will be held at the Grace M. E.
church Sunday morning when members of the Harry Ray post No. 65,
American Legion will attend in a body.
The Rev. A. H. Backus, pastor of the church, will deliver an appropriate ser
mon for tne occasion.
WILLIAM P. HOLADAY IS
SUCCESSOR TO UNCLE JOE
DANVILLE, 111., Nov. 9. William P. Holaday, Republican, of Georgetown, was elected by a 6,500 majority to succeed "Uncle Joe" Cannon, for years the representative from this (18th) district in congress. Mr. Holaday is a member of the Society of Friends.
WHEN MAIMS FIFTY
HE TOUCHES LIFE'S MOST TRYING POINT
It was in a railway train that we heard this thing about how a man feels when he discovers he is fifty and thinks he is getting old, says the Los Angeles Times.
You can often hear wise things said
In a railway train. You see, travelers
in a train are detached from their
business and often from the cares and
annoyances that beset them when they are at home. And, under such circumstances, almost any man falls naturally into a philosophic mood. He can ruminate then, and turn the affairs of life over in his mind, and get the
right slant on them, as the saying is Well, there were a . couple of fel
lows in this train who were ruefully discussing the fact that they were
in their fifties or coming close to it.
And they were bemoaning it. They were saying, why couldn't a fellow
stay young, and that life was just a hop, skip and jump, and everything like that. You would think the world
was coming to an end. as far as they
were concerned, to hear them talk. Things Look Different
Just then a man who wore a polka
dot necktie and had been reading the baseball score in the big league
games, and who said he would be eighty-one on his next birthday, chipped into the conversation. And when he got through with the line of remarks he made on the subject of when
a man is old. things looked altogether different to everybody who was in on
the talk.
When about half the natural span
of a man's life is reached, which is
to say when he is fifty, said the gentleman with the polka dot necktie, he grumbles more at the advance of
time than he ever does afterward.
When he is fifty-five be begins to smile
again. And when he is sixty he takes an entirely new grip on himself and makes more plans for the future than he ever did when he- was twenty-one. It is what is called getting your second wind, he said. It is the time
when a man really begins to amount to something. Most Trying Point And the man with, the polka dot tie told the two , fellows that they were now in the hardest time of life. It is worse than when they were teething, he said, or when they had to go through with the measles and whooping cough. It is a trying time in every way to be fifty, he said. But, he said, also a man gets over it the same as he got over the measles and everything, and will soon feel better for having left it behind him. All this, of course, applied to men. How it is with a woman we don't know, only that everybody knows a woman doesn't bother about her age. That "a woman is as old as she
aheibv Lountv farmers i
Set Shacking Recora SHELBYYILLE, Ind Nov. 9. Cort!, shucking records of 90& and 74 bushj els of corn respectively, between tha hours of 6 and 11 o'clock in the fore noon, were piled up by Elmer and Charles Bassett, northwest of Shelby ville, in a friendly contest this week This is a county record for Shelby county. . looks" is, indeed, a true saying; and
in these times, no woman ever looks olL - r j
FACTS Hif fS ONLY JL
It's Time to Think of His Xmas Gift DENNIS-GAAR CO Inc. Tailors and Haberdashers 1010 Main St. In the Westcott
GULBRANSEN PLAYERS
Opp. Post Office
WHINS
Phone 16SS
Carl Kirapel, D. C, Ph. C. v Chiropractor 48 South 7th St Phone 2278
Price's Oysters f Standards Selects Fresh Every Day I Order Them from Your Grocer
oolieEoer,
Printed Stationery Announcement of Unusual Importance
100 Linen-Finish Sheets of Paper (four-page size) and 100 Linen-Finish Envelopes to Match Printed with your name, street address and city, all for
Choice of white or any of these dainty shades of linenfinish paper: pink, buff, blue, heliotrope. The type is in a Gothic face similar to that used in steel die-work, and the printing is in the smart Rytex Blue. . Most boxed stationery contains only 24 sheets of paper and 24 envelopes. At this very low price we offer you a box of 100 linen-finish sheets of paper (4-page size) and 100 linen-finish envelopes to match, printed with your name and address, all for $1.00. Buy a half-dozen or a dozen . boxes for yourself, for your friends and your relatives. "As a gift there's a real touch of thoughtfulness and individuality in a box of printed Stationery"
s
TRUTH ALWAYS
Our Fourth Annual
Peace'.. Anniversary
Started Today. Startling Values in All Depts. We Advisd Early Shopping.
Indian Head 59c Indian Head, 63 in, wide, Belfast finish, suitable for table cloths, art work, etc. aale price, per yard, 59c
18in Huck Toweling Huck Toweling, 18 inches wide, plain or small figure, good weight, Peace Anniversary Sale Price, 18c.
Bath Towels 27c Bath Towels, 22x45, plain white or white with stripe end border, excellent weight, 39c value, 27c.
Zephyr Ginghams 30c Lot of 32 in. Zephyr Ginghams in check patterns, including black, brown, and green, 39c value, yard 30c.
Comfort Challies 17k Comfort Chal'.ies, 36 in. wide, in new patterns. Peace Anniversary Sale price, per yard, 17M:C.
Gingham Aprons
89c
Ladies Percale and Gingham Bress Aprons all sizes fast colors, check & small figures, all colors, 89c.
1 8'
uL 81x90 Sheets 9-4 Sheeting PERCALES ' 7 $1.69 ; 50c 17k 1 Pepperel and White Star 9-4 Pepperel & Kearsarge Percales 36 inches wide, in CT fCt Sheets, 81x90, especially Sheetings, brown or blea- both light & dark patterns, well made and of standard ched, wonderful value for stripe, check, dot, small Is fjT quality, sale price, $1.69. this sale, yard, 50c. figure patterns, 17c. 7, Long Cloth Pillow Tubing 16in. Crash C 17k 35c 6c ' t M ; Longcloth, 36 inches wide, Linen Finish Pillow Tub- Cotton Crash, suitable for (3 V) fine finish special Anniven ing, choice of 36 and 40 in. ,tea towels, 16 inches wide, fyl U I eary Sale price, per yard, widths, Peace Anniversary . special for Peace Anniver- 2 lN-i 17c. Sale price, yard, 35c. sary Sale, 6c. m Outing Flannels 72in. Table Damask 16in. Linen Crash M 19c 79c 18c jC Onting Flannels, 36 inches Table Damask, 72 inches Pure Linen Crash, 16 in- Vta i VU wide, light grounds with wide, high mercerized fin- ches wide, ' unbleached, ly stripe patterns, good ish, extra fine quality, stripe border, Peace An- k! V j weight, sale, yard, 19c. choice patterns, yard, 79c. . niversary Sale, 18c. p? ((a Outing Flannel Linen Damask Table Damask ? I ' 12k $2.49 -; 49c . VA Onting Flannels, 27 inches Poire Linen Table Damask, Table Damask, 54 and 63 V j 1 wide, light & dark grounds 72 inches wide in excellent inches, wide, mercerized lrj yT 1 stripe and check patterns, patterns, Peace Anniver- finish, good patterns, sale JA Yl 20c value, special yd. 12Vc sary price, yard, $2.49. price, yard, 49c. 32in Dress Gingham Bath Towels Pillow Cases Jr ' . 24c 23c 39c 1 V - ' Dress Ginghams, 32 inches Bath Towels, 22x45, plain Fine Hemstitched Pillow ft. j wide, in checks and plaids, white, a 30c value, special Cases, 42x36, made of Nft Ti good patterns, fast colors, for Peace Anniversary heavy quality muslin, 50c W f& , sale price, yard, 24c Sale, 23c. values, special, 39c. Nj I' LEE B. NUSBA-UM COMPANY NUSBAUM VBUILDIN(J
No Greater Bedroom Values Ever Offered All pieces pictured are included, A suit yon ordinarily pay nracli in walnut or mahogany finishes, more for than what we ask now. We advise early buying in order It's a value that Is beyond comto make sure of getting one of parison. If you need a new bedthese suites at only $181.00. room suite, don't fail to see this. See This Suite in Our East Window
Yonll Do Better Here
Thirty Fet f roi 7th St.
"The Price is Always Less at Druitts"
Thistlethwaite's (The Original Cut-Rate) FRIDAY, SATURDAY and SUNDAY "Jack Horner" Box Candy
Nuts and Fruits, Chocolate Covered
49c
Pound Box
Full Pound Box Chocolate-Covered CHERRIES . At Any of Our (7) Stores
69c
GAINSBOROUGH POWDER PUFFS A real assortment in wool and velotrr, pink and whita 10c, 15c, 20c, 25c, 35c, 50c, 75c
Complete Line "Armand" Powders and Creams 35c Tonsiline 29c 60c Tonsiline 49c $1.25 Absorbine Jr. . .$1.15 30c Grove's Quinine. . . .24c 30c Hill's Quinine 23c 35c Pape's Cold Comp. .29c
Vick's Salve. . .24c, 49c, 98c COUGH SYRUPS 35c Piso's 29c 60c King's New Discovery for ..49c 35c Chamberlain's ....29c 65c Chamberlain's .... 59c 30c Bell Pine Tar and Honey for 24c 60c Bell Pine Tar and Hon
ey for ..49c
65c Pinex (to make 1 pint)
for 53c
All other makes same proportionate cut
Rubber Goods
Specials Don't overlook the follow
ing exceptional values in
high-grade Rubber Goods.
Hudnut's 3-Flower Doable Compact and Rouge, biggest seller of today. . Entire 3-Flower line at any of our stores.
HOT WATER BOTTLES All New Stock $1.29, $1.49, $1.79, $2.29
Combination Water Bottles and Syringe $1.89, $2.19, $2.39 Every home should be prepared for winter. Our prices are lowest in years and we stand back of every bottle as to quality and satisfaction. STATIONERY All Tints 29c 59c 79c Buy Your Tobaccos at Our Stores , Scrap Tobacco, 3 for. .25c Camel and Lucky Strike Cigarettes Omar and Fatima Cigarettes 20c
