Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 303, 20 December 1922 — Page 3
PAGE THREE RICH DAYTON JUNK DEALER IS SUED BY uio ncioiiiT inrr RE-ELECT HITCHCOCK ACHIEVES SORBONNE FAME. LEGION COMMANDER IN RANDOLPH COUNTY
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, DEC. 20, 1922.
mo rcHoam flirt DAYTON, Ohio, Dec. 20. After wandering from village to village In Ukraine, gathering firewood and working in the fields to obtain a livelihood for herself, her aged mother and two children, Rachel Kaplan finally reached America. Her husband, Isaac Kaplan, a year ago brought her to Dayton. He Is the proprietor of the Pennsylvania Iron and Coal company. Now
that he Is prospering, hi3 wife declares, he desire to be rid of her, and is now living with relatives on Lexington avenue, while he allows her to remain in a barely furnished room at 55 Rogge street. She brought suit yesterday for alimony, charging that her sister-in-law, Rachel Lavitt alienated the affections of her husband. Kaplan left Russia at the outbreak of the war, and camo to Dayton. He began a junk business and is now said to be independently rich. Beacons Installed Motorists who passed Third and Main streets last nipht were greeted by traffic beacons on each of the four corners. The beacons flash on and off at the rate of 45 times a minute, warning drivers of vehicles not to tresspass on the 6afety zones which are reserved for the exclusive use cf persons waiting for street cars. In addition to the four beacons at Third and Main, two will be erected at Second and Main, two at Fourth and Main and four at Fifth and Main. AH
will be in working order, before the end of the week. Recovery Doubtful George Byrd, who was hurt severely, when two Dayton street railway company cars crashed on North Main street near Steele high school Monday night, remains in a critical condition in Miami Valley hospital. Physicians say extreme loss of blood makes his recovery doubtful. His right leg was amputated near th hip Monday night.
Cantata to Be Given At New Madison Dec. 24 NEW MADISON, Ohio,, Dec. 20. Christmas exercises consisting of readings and songs by the children, and cantata, "To Bethlehem," , by the choir, will feature the annual observance of Christmas by the members of the TJniversalist Sunday school here Sunday evening, Dec. 24, at 7:30 o"clock. The following numbers will be given in the cantata: Overture. Break Forth into Joy Chorus. And Thou Bethlehem, bass recitative. Warren Duffield. Bethlehem of Noblest Ckies, bass
solo, soprano and alto duet, tenor so
lo, alto solo and full chorus, Warren Duffield, Zelma Brown, Lillie Ray, D. T. Hill and Irene Snyder.
Calm was the Hallowed Night, soprano and alto duet, Dorothy Smelker
and Gertrude Thomas.
Let TJs Hasten to Bethlehem, tenor
recitative and male chorus, D. T. Hill. And They Came, alto recitative, soprano solo and chorus, Irene Snyder, Zelma Brown. - The Morn is Breaking, full chorus.
Behold There Came Wise Men, ten
or, recitative, W. H. Brown.
Three Kings of Orient, male trio.
D. T. Hill. W. II. Brown and Warren Duffield. Fairest Lord Jesus, alto solOj Gertrude Thomas. O Come Let Us Worship, soprano solo, Lucille Hageman and chorus. Mrs. Warren Duffield Pianist. Mrs. Clifton Smelker Director.
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WINCHESTER, Ind., Dec. 20. Robinson Hitchcock was re-elected commander of the Randolph Post, No. 30, of the American Legion; Timothy Baldwin, vice - commander; Donald Brown, adjutant; John Cheney, treasurer, and Pierre F. Goodrich, James
Brady and Franklin Fouse, members of the executive committee, at the last meeting of the post. The post defeated a resolution denouncing the Ku lux Klan, in one of the most lively meetings ever held. Pierre F. Goodrich presented the reso-" lution, in which the Klan was called "un-American." George A. Wilson, living south of this city, is recovering from injuries received when. he was thrown from a buggy struck by a Big Four switching engine, Monday. Mr. Wilson was injured about the shoulders and arms.
His buggy was demolished. . Suit for damage has been filed by James W. Stewart and Eliza Stewart, ex parte, Complaint on note, foreclosure of mortgage and appointment of receiver, with demand for $11,000, have been filed by the Indiana National Life Insurance company against Lodge No. 8C7, Loyal Order of Moose, of Randolph county; Reliance Life Insurance company of Pittsburgh, Pa., William Trickett Giles, James J. Davis, Donald H. McGelloray, as trustees for the Liberal Life Insurance company of Indiana.
Miss Theresa Bonney of New York is a brilliant young scholar who is the tenth American to pass Sorbonne examinations for the desree of doctor of letters. She hopes to become a playwright.
TWO FARM MEETINGS
AT EATON THURSDAY EATON, Ohio, Dec. 20. Two farmers' meetings, one of swine breeders to promote their imlustry, and another of farm women representatives to discuss health projects, will be held at the Eaton courthouse Thursday, Dec. 21.
Two women have been named from each township to consult with Miss Wanda Przyluska of Ohio State university, as to methods of improving the health of citizens, and especially children of the county. The meeting will start at 10 o'clock Thursday forenoon. Members cf the Duroc Jersey and the Poland ' China swine associations will meet at 1 o'clock to plan the promotion of their industry.
Economy Church Women
To Serve Supper Saturday ECONOMY, Ind., Dec. 20. Women of both local churches will serve a dinner and supper at the Friends church Saturday. Thirty-five cents will be charged for each meal.
A basketball tournament will be held at Economy Saturday all day and at night. 1
Abington Church Society To Give Supper Saturday ABINGTON, Ind, Dec. 20. A supper will be served by the Willing Workers society Saturday night, Dec. 23, for the benefit of the church, at the
I. O. O. F. hall. Children will receive a treat around a Christmas tree following the supper. An entertainment also is arranged.
Rush Farm Land Brings $109.95 to $148.75 an Acre RUSHVILLE, Ind.. Dec. 20. Farm land which was sold at open auction this week, brought prices ranging from $109.95 to $148.25 an acre. There were 281.96 acres which sold in threo parcels to three different bidders. The highest and lowest priced plots have good buildings, whiie the third was bought for $127.25 by a man whose farm it adjoined. Clen Miller was the auctioneer.
NEGRO BANK ESCAPES RECEIVERSHIP ATTEMPT CHICAGO, Dec. 19. A petition for a receiver for the Douglas National bank, said to be the only nationa' bank controlled by negroes, was dismissed yesterday in federal district court, at the instance of the petitioner, P. W. Chavers. The bank was declared fu!ly solvent by the controller of the currency.
CHEVROLET fS-jSfffS $193.00 Down Balance $34.61 per month. E. W. Stehihart Co. 10th & Sailor Sta. Phone 2SS5
All are invited to a commuity Christmas tree program to be given Friday night, Dec. 22, at Stevens' school. Presents will be distributed and a program presented. .
LIBERTY WILL HEAR
PROMINENT SPEAKERS
LIBERTY, Ind., Dec. 20. Union county farmers are pleased with the prospect of having he opportunity of heaiing Prof. G. I. Christie, of Purdue university, and Dr. Roberts, founder of the Pitman Moore Serum company, in connection with the farmers' roundup Thursday and Friday. Prof. Cniistie is nationally known as a lecturer on agriculture subjects. ' The exhibits to be displayed during the two days will be held in the part of Robert White's g?.rage that is entered from Fairground street, across from the Presbyterian church. The building will be comfortably heated.
COUNTY AGENT TURNER DESCRIBES CONVENTION
EATON, Ohio, Dec. 20. The due col
lection of the national American Farm Bureau federation was larger in 1922 than in any previous year, indicating
an increase in membersnip, reports E. D. Turner, Preble county agricultural agent, who has just returned from the Chicago convention, to which he was sent as a county delegate. Over 600 delegates from every state in the Union were present, 88 from Ohio, alone. Georges Clemenceau, of France, was given an enthusiastic ovation several minutes long, when he spoke on "The Farmer as a World Citizen." James Howard, former president of the farm federation, H. C. McKenzie, taxation expert, and ex-Governor Frank
Lowden were the principal speakers. The Wednesday evening session was conducted exclusively by women, and discussed women's part in the organ
ization.
Three hundred thousand worlds th-; size of the earth could be stored inside the sun. '
H anna's Creek Christmas Entertainment Friday HANNA'S CREEK, Ind., Dec. 20. Members of the Hanna's Creek Sunday school will give a playlet, "Unto One of the Least," at 7:30 o'clock Friday evening, Dec. 22. A short cantata, "Down the Chimney With Santa Claus," will follow. Presents will be taken from a beautifully decorated Christmas tree and distributed. The public is invited. -
HAS DIARY OF 1807 OWENSVILLE, Dec. 20. A diary kept by William Wilon, Sr.. of New York, during a trip to England in 1807. is the property of C K. Wilson and
Mrs. Leola Skelton, descendants, liv
ing in Owensville. William Wilson, Sr., was their great grandfather.
SELLS 5,000 SEALS MARION, Dec. 20. Thirty-six girls, ranging in age from 12 to 16 years, members of the Girls' Reserves of th? Y. W. C. A., sold five thousand Red Cross Christmas sea's in one day.
GIVE HIM A SWEATER THIS XMAS
Afosr Evtyrr4fts Met xtit
S03 Main Street
Cedar Chests
If you don't know what to give Her this Xmas, decide now to give a Cedar Chest. V e offer wonderful values at
$(Q)50 JJ Hp
j
for
to make 24 Kiddies Happy Christmas Day
fA special Christmas Price on Little SunMaids, luscious little seedless raisins 24 fivecent packages in one carton for $11 Put one package in each Christmas stocking for your little folks. Then let them give the
others to their little friends, as little presents tokens of youthful goodwill. See how delighted all will be. Take $1 to the nearest store and get two dozen little bright red boxes now full of healthful seedless fruit-meats that are both good and good for them any day.
Little
un-ivnaids
"Christmas Raisins
5c Everywhere
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DANCE MUSIC
AD Muddled Up. Fox-Trot.
Waltzing the Bine. Waltz.
Paul Speeht and Hts Orchestra. A-3740 75c
Carolina in the Morning. SiWer Swanee. Fox-Trots.
Eddie Elkins' Orchestra. A-3737 75c
Beet Knee.
LoTin' Sam (The Sheik of
Alabam'). Fox-Trots. Ted Lewis and His Band. A-3730 75c
Choo-Choo Blue. Fox-Trot. That Barkin Dog (Woof
Woofl). Intro. "Walking the Dog." Medley Fox-Trot. Frank Westphal and His Orchestra.
A-3743 75c
Fate. Fox-Trot. Ted Lewis and His Band. A Dream of Romany. FoxTrot. Paul Specht and
His Orchestra. A-3738 75c
I Found a Four Leaf Clover.
From "George White's Scandals."
Time WO! Tell. Intro. "Oh.
How I've Missed You, Mary." From "Sally, Irene and Mary." FoxTrots. The Happy Six. A-3741 75c
Sixty Second Ev'ry Min ute (I Think of You). - Intro. "Sweetheart Lane." Medley Fox-Trot. The Columbians. To-morrow Morning. FoxTrot. Eddie Elkins' Orchestra. A-3745 75c Three o'Clock in the Morn ing. La Golondrina. Waltzes. Prince's Dance Orchestra. A-3724 75c
Four o'Clock Blue. Hawaiian Blue. Fox-Trots. Johnny Dunn's Original Jazz Hounds. A-3729 75e
POPULAR SONGS
All for the Love of Mike. You Can Have Him, I Don't Want Him, Didn't Lore Him Anyhow Blues. Van and Schenck. A-3735 75c Lot (A Wonderful Girl). A I Jolson. If You Don't Think So, You're Crazy. Frank Crumit. A-3744 75c
You Need Some One, Some One Needs You. From Queen o' Hearts." Mammy' Carbon Copy. From "Queen o' Hearts." Nora Bayes. A-3742 75c Mississippi Choo-Choo. rWay Down Yonder in New Orleans. Blossom Seeley. A-3731 75e
INSTRUMENTAL AND VOCAL SELECTIONS
For the Sake of Auld Lang Syne. My Buddy. Edwin Dale. A-3734 75c Orientale. (Cui) Simple Aveu, Op. 25, Flute, 'cello, harp. Trio de Lutece. A-3727 75e Western Stars. Neapolitan Polka. Accordion Solos. Guido Deiro. A-3728 75c Maui Girt Waltz. Moanalua Hula. Ukelele Solos. Frank Ferera. A-3739 75c
I Know I Have Another Building. I Want to be Ready. Male Quartet. Fisk University Jubilee Singers. A-3726 75c Yale Songs; Medley No. 1 Yale Boola, Whoop It Up; Good-night Harvard; Bingo Eli Yale; Down the Field. Yale Songs; Medley No. 2 Wake, Freshmen, Wake; Amici; Brave Mother Yale; Bright College Years. Shannon Four. A-3723 75c
SYMPHONY AND CONCERT SELECTIONS
Manon Lescaut, "In quelle trine morbide." (In These Soft Silken Curtains.) (Puccini) Rosa Ponselle. 79971 $1.00 La Gioconda "Cielo e Mar." (Heaven and Ocean.) (Ponchielli) Charles Hackett. 98040 $1.50 Homing. (Del Riego) O Promise Me. (DeKoven) Carmela Ponselle. A-3732 $1.00
Tannhauser March. (Wagner) Soldiers' Chorus. From "Faust." (Gounod) M e tropolitan Opera House Orchestra. A-6224 $1.50 Robin Adair. Scotch Air. When I Was Seventeen. Swedish folk song. Florence Mjjbrth1K-y2& $1.00 Where the Morning Glories Twine Around the Door. I Wonder How the Old Folks Are at Home. OscarSeagle. A-3725 $1.00
Spanish Dance, Op. 21. (Sarasate) Canzonetta. From "Concerto in D Major," Op. 35. (Tschaikowsky) Violin Solos. Sa8cha Jacobsen. A-6223 $1.50
The joy of a record that is virtually noiseless THOSE grinding, scratching1 surface noises that have bo insistently made themselves heard through the music you love will now annoy you no more. Because Columbia has discovered a process which produces a phonograph record surface so fine in texture, so marvelously smooth that the needle travels over it almost inaudibly. This new and unbelievably quiet surface makes the phonograph what it should be, a musical instrument of the highest and purest type giving 3'ou every inflection, the most delicate phrasing, exquisitely expressed shades of harmony that have previously been lost in obtrusive surface sounds. The New Columbia Records out to-day are all made with this ultra fine, ultra smooth and quiet, new surface. And among them are two you'll want at the very first whirl "All for the Love of Mike" and "You Can Have Him, I Don't Want Him, Didn't Love Him Anyhow Blues." Both are by Van and Schenck singing in their happiest of happy harmonies. And they are deliciously free from irritating scratch or scrape. Tear out the accompanying list, take it to a Columbia Dealer and listen to any or all of these New Process Columbia Records. Note the smoothness and fullness of tone. Note the beauty of expression. Only in New Process Columbia Records 'will you find this new and quiet surface. The process is
patented.
COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE COMPANY
New
York
Make This a Musical Christmas Check Over the Above List of New Releases
66
Say It With Columbia Records"
Each visitor to our record department during this week is receiving a handsome velvet record brush our compliments of the season.
C! Akiuj a
EVEPVTHI
Opp. Post Office
Open Evenings Until Xmas
Phone 1655
PALLADIUM WANT ADS BRINQ RESULTS
