Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 33, 13 December 1911 — Page 3

TTTE RICHMOND PAIXADITTM ATO smff-TEliEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1911.

PAGE TIHtElt. .

111 I tKtS I lllli UAIA Oil REIW MERGER Contained in Pamphlet Issued by Salomon Co., Bankers of N. X

Interesting data concerning the Inerger of the Gaar, Scott and compeny. and the Advance-Thresher company, of Battle Creek. Michigan, with the M. Rumely copany of La Porte. Indiana, haa made public In a pamphlet aued by William Salomon miA Aimoany. bankers, of New York. Fne statement contained in the pamph let la signed by E. A. Rumely and is, in part, as follows: Tie consolidated net earnings of the three companies for the three years ended December 31, 1910 as certified by Barrow,' Wade, Guthrie and Co., together with the consolidated net earnings for the year ending December 31, 1911 (partly estimated) will average $910,029. For the present calendar year, the earnings (partly estimated) will amount to about $1,350,000 and thus will be equal to almost 17 per cent on the new preferred stock, or nearly 2V& times the dividend requirements on the present issue of $8,000,000. Estimated on the basis of orders already booked and requisitions from managers in the field, the net earnings for 1912 will amount to over $2,200,000, or 27 per cent on Bald new preferred stock, being nearly four times the dividend requirements. The earnings for 1911 are estimated In part, but the actual earnings will undoubtedly exceed the figures given. The estimate of earnings for 1912 on the lines of the Advance Thresher company and Gaar, Scott and company have been taken at or less than the average for the past ten years, and the estimate allows for practically no Increase by the Rumely plant itself except in the manufacture of oil pull tractor engines. This item would represent the . sale of only 2,000 of these engines in 1912, whereas present production 'and sales are at the rate of 2, 400 engines per year. The Rumely plant at La Porte has been working night and day for the past nine months, and there is a large excess of unfilled orders on hand, and during the past year many have had to be refused because of limited manufacturing facilities. Output and Sales. The growth and stability of the business are shown by the following comv parative statement of the combined annual sales: 1906 $5,989,012 1907 5.874,518 1908 . 6,438,914 19, ,6,629,438 110 7,142,327 V Prospects of Company. JPrior to 1910, the M. Rumely compter's business was confined mainly tffpents! "such 'as tfiresrsTseptf rata hullers, steam tractor engines, etcTut during the past year the companftas completed and placed in operatic an additional plant for the manjacture of a new type of internal Utton enelne nrimariiy designed for iwing purposes, which uses keroaenand the heavier ous insieaa i gatoe or other expensive lueis. t ms ngT, known as the Rumely OH Pull Aixtv-nine Pounds in Tiar Weeks he Great Mney Remedy Saved Her idlng you tb unsolicited testito the erits of your great j 8warRoot, I am only rein a wty small degree, the 1 received from it. After suft4rQt ror 14 years with pains in my Mff in Janiary. 1908. 1 was taken a scveie case of uremic poisonAfter consulting five different icians and still getting: wnr l Mfan the je of your remedy. The url4 gasps went lt. the muscles of my hack and hip?, ranging me excruciat ng agony, bo mat 1 lost sixty-nine nfl one-half pound in four weeks. Myonly relief was morphine, which caufeed after efrecta ulmost us hard toAear as the pain. I could sat no ld food and indeed had no appetite fir It. For nine week I subsisted on a Jjailk dt. My husband and friends ha4 given me up to die. when i commehcod thklng Dr. Kilmers SwampRoot V Improvement was immediate a d rked. Now after taking it lor one ... I feel like a new woman. ! I do all uy own work and sewing Included. Have an eight room housa and' three In the family. I can take lonfLwalks and feel fresh and vigorous1 iivr uivui. iu iaci, i am Detter than I hat teen in fifteen years. You can ' asajUus testimonial In any way, as I reaic is aue you for my wonderful re. nr.' I feel that today I would not living, naa I not taken Swamn. t Again thanking you for your sewn remedy, l am, ;Yurs most gratefully. V' MRS. KATE BOWERS JUdge Ave- Steubenville. Ohio. J!PWonally appeared before me this p2ay of July. 1909. Mrs. Kate Bow;eCiWHO sunscrlbed the above stutA!S& and made oath that the same is is sucstance and in fact. Benjamin .F. Prentiss. , Justice of the Peace. Letter to 'Or. Kilmer a, Co Blnflhamten N. Y. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For i : . . you ' 8nd to Dr. Kilmer Ox, Bingham- . cap. r. Z I or wunpw wiue. it Will COtiYlnce anyone. You will also rettra a booklet of '-valuable informattea. tailing all about the kidneys and tinder. Wken writing, be sure and mention the Dally Palladium. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar site botgaa far aala at all drag toree.

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Best For Asthma, Catarrh, Bronchitis

Why need anyone suffer from any throat or nose troubles when soothing, healing HYOMEI is guaranteed to banish all misery or money back. "The undersigned herewith recommends HYOMEI to all who are afflicted with asthma, catarrh, or bronchitis. HYOMEI was used by my wife for bronchitis and asthma and I used it for bronchitis and sore throat. It has given relief and permanent results and I write these few lines for the benefit of all who are afflicted with the ailments named above." Theodore Boeblan, Traffic Manager of the Concordia Publishing House, Cor. Jefferson Ave. and Miami St. Concordia, Kas., Jan. 2nd, 1911. Sold by Leo H. Fihe and druggists everywhere sell Hyomei. A complete outit including inhaler costs $1.00. Extra bottle if needed 50 cents. Just breathe it. Tractor, constitutes a marked advance in the development of plowing machinery, as it gives increased efficiency with decreased cost of fuel. It uses kerosene and low grade distillates containing 20 per cent more energy than gasoline and selling from 3 to 7 cents per gallon, whereas gasoline is selling at from 9 to 15 cents per gallon. Since only 7 percent of crude oil refines into gasoline, the price of this fuel gives every indication of steadily increasing, whereas about 50 per cent, of crude oil refines into kerosene and the distillates suitable for use in the Rumely Oil Pull Tractor Engine. It is estimated that at the present time 100.000,000 barrels of kerosene oil and heavy oil are in storage in the United States. The Secor-Higgins Combustion System makes possible the use of these oils for the economical development of power, and the M. Rumely company controls the right to manufacture agricultural machinery using this system. COLD8 CAUSE HEADACHE LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine, the world wide Cold and Grip remedy, removes cause. Call for full name. Look for signature E. W. GROVE, 25c Amusements THEATRICAL CALENDAR. At the Gennett. Tonight "McFadden's Plats." Jan. 25 Polk-McGibney recital At the Murray. All Week Vaudeville. At Coliseum. Feb. 28 Symphony orchestra concert. McFadden's Flats. the vulgar, slap-Btick order, but one with a plot and merit in dialogue and situation; and that will please all classes of theater-goers from the most refined to the gallery god is what "McFadden's Flats" is. This is the comedy that the New York Journal called the "18 carat" and during its New York run attracted the most entrusiastic audiences seen since the days of Harrigan and Hart, when they were giving their series of plays of New York life. The great reason for the success of this comedy is that all the characters are drawn from actual life and in every city of the country prototypes of the people represented are to be seen and are well known to their fellow men. Alex and George will be easily recognized as personal friends of every auditor and the wonder is how the author could so analyze these two characters to protray their good and bad qualities so truthfully. The comedy, which is well known, is an excellent one, full of rich but harmless fun and freely interspersed with all the latest hits of the day. The scenery is on a spectacular order and is carried complete for the production. "McFadden's Flats" will be at the Gennett tonight. At the Murray. "Great," "Grand." "The finest ever witnessed," and the like were the re -marks patrons of the Murray made af ter the performance and all were commenting on "Auld Lang Syne," the greatest vaudeville sketch ever placed before the people of this or any other city. It one of heart interest; there's a hart throb in every other second, and a laugh to keep you from becoming too absorbed in the troubles of Walter Robinson, who is driven away from home by his stern, relentless old father. The part of the father is taken by J. F. Bannister, and so clever an actor has never appeared here. The scene is a wonderful one, the setting representing the interior of an old English home with its broad window, open fireplace and crude walls. Through the window is seen the parish church with its illuminated windows, for it is Christmas eye and services are about to commence. Snow is falling and the winds whistle about the house corners and through the door. The father wishes the betrothal to take place that he may be happy on Christmas eve, the cousin consenting to marry the son. fearing to disobey his uncle, while the son has secretly married the distant cousin. Jem Garrison, the village joker, la in love with the cousin, but she refuses him. He makes you both sad and glad by his inimitable acting. When the son and his wife leave home with the curses of the father upon them the church choir sings, day Is turned into night, preceded by the sofe even ing glow, and the fireplace becomes brighter. The father takes a candle from the mantel and going to the win dow sees the son and wife pass by. driven away from home by his stub-

aad the curtain falls.

Better Care Should Be Given A Valuable Farm By-Product

BY ISAAC L. TOTTEN. When we move into a new neighborhood and have our own affairs fairly well organized, most of as, as a general rule commence to familiarize ourselves with our surroundings by asking all kinds of questions of some well informed neighbor concerning the history of the community both in general and in particular. We ask who lives on that farm over there on the hill and who lives in that large white house where we see the windmill; we wonder why that neighbor up the road east don't paint his barn or why some other neighbor don't keep his fences in repair. We want to know who that farmer is who drives the span of big. brown mules; and who that farmer is that has the team of dapple grays. There are a whole lot of other questions too, of a gossipy nature that we ask until we finally begin to feel that we know some of our neighbors, by sight at least, and that we are in possession of a fair portion of their history and of the history of the neighborhood in general. Many things that attract a new comer's attention in a farm neighborhood have become so familiar to those who have lived in the community for a long time that they no longer find them of interest and look upon them in a matter of fact way. It is often the case that we become so familiar with our surroundings that we overlook many very important things and we quite frequently get the habit of doing things in just a certain way and seem to think there is no better way. It is not unusual for someone who is not familiar with our surroundings as we are, to come to us and point out objects of interest right in our neighborhood that we have had before us day after day but didn't notice, and it sometimes happens that the city man who knows nothing about farming can show us better ways of doing our work, and we are often surprised to learn of many things which are neglected. When we first moved into this neighborhood, our attention was attracted by one farmer in particular who kept the road warm between his place and Richmond. Of course, we asked who the farmer was; and, were not only told his name; but, through our gossipy inclinations, we found out a little of his personal affairs. The principal thing that attracted our attention, in connection with this farmer, was that no matter which way we saw him going, either toward town or toward home, he had a load of something, when he was going toward home, was usually stable manure which he had obtained from alley manure boxes in Richmond. A farmer who showed such business sagacity as this, we thought would be worth observing so that we could ob tain suggestions that would be of earn that he knew the Value of stable manure. We found out that he had actually hauled his farm out from Richmond. The place where he put up his build ings had been purchased merely as so much space on which to put this farm which he was hauling out from town. Many farmers haul their land to town in the form of grain, etc., but this man not only hauled produce to town, but he also hauled something back to the farm to take the place of what he hauled to town. We, believe that if more of us were like this farmer and knew the value of manure as a soil 'builder, we would be more careful in our methods of handling it and many of our farms would be yielding better returns. Of course, we do not mean that all of us should haul manure from Richmond, but that we can take better care of the barnyard manure which is made on our own farms. Give the farm "a square deal," that is the idea. Manure, is, without doubt, the most valuable of all farm by-products. Its money value, estimated according to the value of the constituents of commercial fertilizers, ranges from two dollars to seven dollars per ton, according to quality. It does not give this valuable by-product its just dues, however, to place a money value on it according to the market value of the elements which it contains; because it has a humus adding value to the soil, and its real value should be estimated according to the additional money procured by the increase in the crop as a result of fertilizing with the manure. The fact that manure apparently costs nothing, leads to a great waste of this valuable product. It is thrown out in a pile, where it is exposed to the rain and sun for a number of months and here its value is greatly reduced in many instances more than one half. The loss, however, is not so great during the winter as during the summer. The best practice, of course, of handling stable manure is to haul it out while it is fresh and not let it accumulate in piles where it is subinto the crowd of weak, weary, depressed; or are you filled with vitality and energy) Health U thm founda tion or . Nerves, Brain, and Body should be ftnmch dependable. Scott's Emulsion the best of food-tonics, is the finn footing for health,

ject to the deteriorating effects of the sun and rain. There are difficulties, of course, in handling it in this way, especially dur

ing the winter season. It is often the

case that the ground is not sufficient- Lately I learned of your cod liver and ly frozen to admit of driving upon it, jron tonic, Vinol, and began taking it. and sometimes the snow is so deep -i have used several bottles and imthat it would be difficult to apply the proved so fast that I at once recommanure. Then at other times the ma- mended it to two friends who were nure is frozen so that it cannot be in poo,, health. My case was complihandled; yet by watching for favor- ratAd hut Vinol did wonders for me.

able opportunities to spread, much of the manure that is made in winter can be hauled and spread in that season, if not all of it. The question is often asked what is to be done in case the manure cannot be handled in the winter? That is, how it is to be kept so that its full fertilizing value will be retained until the time comes that one can haul it out. In such instances it is usually advised that the manure should be kept under cover. When under shelter, of course, the rain cannot fall upon it to leach out its valuable plant food elements. Manure that is made in sheds is of high quality; because the litter that is spread from day to day absorbs the liquids that fall upon it; and it does not often freeze and can be handled from the shed at any time during the winter when the fields can be driven upon. If packed firmly the loss of nitrogen from the manure will be less than when it is piled loosely. There are some instances, of course, where there is much litter in the manure, that exposure to the elements in the yard would be an advantage as it would hasten decay. ' It is claimed that the best practice of distributing manure is in the form of a top dressing on grass land. When thus spread in the winter it retards the speedy melting of the snow, it protects the grass to a large extend, and 'as soon as- the snow melts, the liquid manure is carried down into the soil where the hungry grass roots can utilize the valuable substances which the manure juices contain. Although fresh farm manure is very valuable as a fertilizer, its value can be increased at least one half by mixing or applying with the manure liberal amounts of low priced, very finely ground, natural rock phosphate. "This practice of applying liberal amounts of natural rock phosphate in connection with sufficient clover, or with all of the farm manure which can be made on the farm from the hay, straw and other coarse products and from the oats or other low-priced grains, together with the use of a good rotation, including plenty of clover, provides for an absolutely permanent system of agriculture, even though high-priced grains and animal products are sold from the farm. It is a system under which the land grows richer and richer and more and more productive and valuable, instead of becoming poorer and less proOTienve, as nas oeen tne witnuy far the larger part of the older cultivated lands in the United States." The Passing of Romance. The Paul Revere of 1775. To arms, ail of you, and rouse your neighbors! The British have left Boston and are now marching this way. They'll be here before daybreak! If It Happened Now. Hello, long distance! Give me One-seven-seven-six Lexington. This Lexington? Well, this is Revere. The British are coming! Tip off Concord, will you? Thanks. Goodby. Puck. Instead of From the Middle. They say this is a great detective story." "The book begins well, anyhow." -As to howr "Why, in the very first chapter the detective flicks the ashes from the end of his cigar." Louisville Courier-Journal. Provoking. Clara While I was playing whist with Mrs. Singleton last evening she Rktd me what was the trump at least six times. Maude Weren't you provoked? Clara 1 should say so! As if I knew! Puck. Terrible Suffering Eczema All Over Baby's Body. 'When my baby was four months old his face broke out with eczema, and at sixteen months of age, his face, hands and arms were in a dreadful state. The eczema spread all over his body. We had to put a mask or cloth over his face and tie up his hands. Finally we grave him Hood's Sarsaparilla and in a few months he was entirely cured. Today he Is a healthy boy." Mrs. Inez Lewis. Baring, Maine. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures blood diseases and builds up the system. Get It today In usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs. GENNETT THEATRE Wednesday. Dee. 13 THE SUPREMELY SUPERIOR SPECTACULAR SUCCESS McFADDEN S FLATS A Bevy of Beautiful Show Girls A host of Real Comedians headed by the ever popular Yellow Kids. Prices 25, 35, 50, 75. fc

Tuesday, Thursday & Saturday horning, Afternoon & Evening A competent instructor for tnose wlsnlng to lesrn

Was Sick Thirty Years Bowie, Tex. The remarkable case of Mrs. S. J. Embry who lives near here is attracting attention, on account of her restoration to health after many years of suffering. She tells of it in a letter as follows: "During the past thirty years I have

suffered greatly from nervous troubles and mv health was badly run down. Fvery woman who suffers from nerv ousness and weakness should take Vinol and recover her health." It is plain that a remedy that will overcome a chronic rundown condition like this is just what weak and sickly men, women and children everywhere need. If you want to be strong and healthy again, take Vinol. on our roitive promise to give back your money if you are not satisfied. Leo H. Fihe, Druggist, Richmond, Ind. MISS HELEN FANNING Worcester, Mass., says: "I would not ulve U1 "rtl1 but Mrs. Mason's Old English Sham poo. It is marvelous what Mrs. Mason has done for my hair in making it grow." Get Mrs. Mason's Shampoo Cream at Leo H. Fihe's and other druggists, 25c. Where Israel "Murmured." As soon as our loads were arranged and the riding camels selected we mounted and rode off across the desert or plain of El-Ka'a in a northeasterly direction, aiming for the Wadl Qebran. The wind was blowing hard and the sand stung considerably. In ancient times El-Ka'a was called the Wilderness of Sin. This was the place where the children of Israel murmured against Moses and Aaron., lusting after the fleshpots and bread they had left behind In Egypt, and this was where God, hearing their cry. sent them manna, which was supplied for the next forty years. This desert presents an awful picture of desolation, for. with the exception of some bushes that persist in growing in spite of the arid surroundings, all that the eye meets are bowlders, sand and gravel. Wide World Magazine. A Cynical Critic "Above all. I am an artist." said the actor. "From the moment I make my entrance on the stage I forget everything but my part. I leave my own personality behind me. I am Romeo. Hamlet, Lear. The theater vanishes, the audience disappears" "I've noticed that," Interrupted the critic. "What?" "That the audience disappears." Youth's Companion. Dark Deeds. There Is a man whom my husband emnlovs whfti"ir ei, toward low places and who Is noted for his dark deeds." "Why. then, does your husband em' ploy him?' "To put coal In our cellar." Baltimore American. This Life. There Is only one way to get ready for immortality, and that is to love this life and live It as bravely and cheerfully and faithfully as we can. Van Dyke. flet th Original cad Cssalst HO RUCK'S MALTED r.TILIl Tba Food-drink for All Agts. For Infants, Invalids, and Growing children. Pure Nutrition, up building the whole body. Inyigoralesthenunmgmoiandmeaged. Rich milk, malted gram, n powder form. A quick bach prepared in a miaate. Take bo substitute. AskforHORUCK'S. Hot In Any rJIiiir Trest CREAM TO WHIP H. G. HADLEY 1035 Main St. Phone 2292. XMAS PHOTOS AT PAR SOWS 714 Uata SL Phese 223

FEDERAL PARK BOARD Bureau of National Parks Will Be Agitated.

(National News Association) WASHINGTON, Dec 13. A countrj wide campaign to urge upon Congress the creation of a bureau of national parks, to. have charge of all national parks and reservations, with a view to preserving and adding to their beauty, is to be launched by the American Civic association at its seventh annual convention which began in this city today. The movement already has received the indorsement of President Taft and secretary of the interior Fisher. The convention will remain in session over tomorrow and Friday. City planning and neighborhood improvement are the chief subjects to be dealt with in the papers, addresses and discussions, in addition to the national park matter. In the city planning sessions both experts and business men will speak from their own experience on the wisdom of applying system to the development of the aesthetic as well as the practical city of today. Experts from Minneapolis, Dallas and other cities will tell of the successful work done in their communities in the way of neighborhood improvement. J. Horace McFarland of Harrisburg, Pa., is the president of the association and the presiding officer at the convention sessions, which are being held at the New Willard hotel. Chinos Complexions. A French writer has given in La Presse Medicale the results of his observations on massage in China. He remarks that the exquisite complexion of the young Chinese women is due not to enameling, as has been suspected, but to careful manipulation of the face done by expert masseuses. They begin by a gentle pinching of the cheeks between the tips of their fingers, which lasts fully ten minutes, then apply lotions on absorbent cotton, then an unguent, and finish by kneading the cheeks with an extreme delicacy of touch, always proceeding from the nose and commissures of the lips toward the ears. This Is a harmless and physiologically correct process which can be recommended In cases, rarer than they should be. where the physician is consulted concerning a faded or otherwise unattractive complexion. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. His Kind Yoa Haie Always Bssght Bears the Signature of WANTED YOUR MACHINE ' AND REPAIR WORK BALLINfiER A GIBB8 MACHINISTS REAR 220 LINCOLN STREET Phone 3040 or 3158 SAXAPHONE DANCE Given by JONES, SHERMAN & DAWSON WEDESDAY EVENING DECEMBER 13111, 1911 ODD FELLOWS HALL Program, 50c

Gold Crowns, $3.00; Full Set of Teeth, $5.00; Gcl Fillings $1.00; Silver Fillings. 50c up. AH Wcrk guaranteed. New York Dental Parte

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Don't let the Christinas stockings of your loved ones go empty slatply because you are temporarily short of money. Call on us and we will loan you the amount you may need. We loan on furniture, pianos, teams, fixtures, etc., without removal. All business is strictly confidential. We pay off loans and advance more money at our reasonable rates, and your payments will be so small you will not feel them. $0.60 is the weekly payment on a $25 loan for 50 weeks. $1.20 is the weekly payment on a $50 loan for 50 weeks. If in need of money, fill out blank below and mail to us and our scent will call on you.

Name Address Amount wanted ESTABLISHED 1895. Phone 1549 OPEN EVENINGS

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and Loganepert, over Cures Wrought by Denns Rheumatic Remedy, Sure Safe and Speedy. Rheumatism. Liver, Kidney, and Stomach diseases absolutely cured when doctors and all other means failed. Some turned in sheets and ted with a tube cured In a short time. Following are a few: John McNally. George Pence, Al. Henderson. P. B. Schwer, all of Frankfort; Miss Eads. Mt. Sella, ind.. Walter Baumhaner, Wabash. Ind. Regular site bottle while they last 25 cents, at Luken's Pharmacy, Rlsh mond. and Murray and Co.. Dublin. Health In Walking Downstairs. Not so long go men walked briskly for a mile or two. two or three times a day or oftener. and thought nothing of it. Now when we want to go a mile we ride. The elevator has taken away the exercise for the feet that used to be obtained In going up and coming down the stairs. So far as tt is of use In facilitating ascent la the high buildings It is sn advantage. It would be probably much better, however, if it were not used quite so much for coming down and If people took advantage of the descent to strengthen Important leg muscles and dissipate i certain tendencies to accumulation of fat where it is most disfiguring' New York Independent. Gold and Grfoo Stopped Quiealy Befom vow ktM taken four Pinex Cold Tablets, you will have dhv covered the best remedy you ever used. This is the quickest acting, most as res able cold cure ever devwed. Two doses gire remarkable relief, and the trouble is usually completely conquered inside of 20 hours. And yet Pinex Cold Tablets do not contain a particle of epiaSss or coal tar heart depressants. No other remedy will stop the aches and pais so quickly. These tablets are geatle, but vary prompt and positiTS. They reduce the fever, cheek the nasal discharge, restore normal activity in tba pores, and are very plesantly laxative and tonic. Don't accept a substitute on trial of this quick-ectinc remedy nill shew you that thore is nothing else "Just sa food" as Pinex Cold Tablets. Mosey refunded If disappointed. 25c per hex. If necessary, send to The Pines Caw Cough Remedy). MURRAY'S WEEK OP DEC. 11 J. F. BANNISTER & CO. la Auld Lang Syne 4 Other Foatures M CSodlaCs Makes an Ideal CHRISTMAS GIFT Everythtns In the Photo Lino Come in; let ua show you Flashlight Booklet Free W. H. ROOODK3Q OO. 804 Main ALL WORK PAIIMJESS Over Nolte's CMsUinmas LOAN . ROOM COLONIAL. BUILDING. Richmond. Ind. . UNTIL CHRISTMAS. -

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