Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 134, 16 April 1913 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1913
JORDAN SPOKE ON CAUSES OF FLOODS
Partially Due to the Destruction of Forests, He Says.
EQUALITY OF MANKIND
Demonstrated, Speaker Asserts, By the One Touch of Nature.
Charles W. Jordan, secretary of the Commercial Club, gave an address before the members of the Whitewater Lodge of Odd Fellows inthe I. O. O. F. hall last evening on the "Cause and Results of the Recent Floods." "The cause of the floods is partially due to the destruction of the forests and draining of the swamps along river banks which formerly tended to hold the water in check until the stream could more nearly reach its normal condition," said Mr. Jordan. During the years when the forests covered the banks of the stream floods were seldom heard of though they are now becoming more frequent" he said. "The preservation of the trees which remain with a united effort of communities to build dams and reservoirs is all we can do to afTord ourselves the protection at 6ne time afforded us by nature." Mr. Jordan made a local application of the building of the Hawkins dam which would partially afford a means of protection for the factories and homes located in the valley of the Whitewater river. The dam will take the place of swamps which originally acted as a natural protection in retaining water during floods. The speaker further said that factories located in the river bottoms will be benefitted by such projects as the Hawkins dam. As a moral lesson derived from the floods Mr. Jordan spoke of the equality of mankind which was never more clearly demonstrated than when all men were thrown together by one touch of nature. The work of the citizens of the city and the various lodges was praised by Mr. Jordan. Mrs. Slaughterback of Union City, gave several readings. Following the speaking a drill was given by the degree staff of the lodge. Dancing and card playing completed the evening's entertainment.
NEW PARIS
NEW PARIS, O., April 16. Mrs. Louie Murray of Eaton, has been the guest of her mother Mrs. James Boyle, for the last week. Miss EJsie McGill spent Friday and Saturday' In Richmond. Mr. Steven Molney of Dayton, spent Friday here. Mr. Ed. Conrad of Lima, O., Is the guest of relatives here. Miss Carrie Whitaker spent Sunday in Gratis. Miss Mary Harrigan of Dayton and
Miss Mary O'Dea were the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Weadick of Camden, Ohio. Miss Roxie Cussin of Anderson, spent Sunday here the guest of Elsie McGill and other relatives. Miss Morna Newbern spent Sunday at her home near Campbellstown. Mrs. Bailey returned to her home in Jamestown, O., after a week's visit with M. O. Penland and family. Ruth, Mildred and Herbert Crane spent Saturday and Sunday in Eldorado. Mrs. James Davis spent Sunday in Pennville, Ind. Mrs. Brandenburg and son Fred, were the guests of friends in Richmond Sunday. Air. and Mrs. Amos Black and baby were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Jones Sunday. Mrs. C. P. Kirkpatrick returned home Saturday after several week's visit with friends in Richmond. Mr. James Davis spent Sunday in Bluffton.
ROOSEVELT EATS A TWO-CENT MEAL
(National News Association) NEW YORK, April 16. CoL Theodore Roosevelt is cutting down the "high cost of living." Yesterday he started out right by eating a two-cent meal. This is the way it came about: The colonel was visiting several schools to investigate the food-at-cost price luncheons. These luncheons are furnished under the auspices of the Child Life committee of the Progressive party. The ex-president was hungry and he bought a meal. He was served with one cup of bean soup at one cent per cup and one egg sandwich, also at one cent per. He bought the lunch among pupils, children of various nationalities at an East Side grammar school at noon, like that," said the colonel. "I feel very strongly on this lunch proposition." "It was food which I wpuld have enjoyed at a first-class dinner or lunch on the round-up or with the regiment or on a picnic or anything
FLASHES FROM OTHER CITIES.
FRANKLIN A rural church exhibit is on exhibition at the college library. GREENCASTLE Temperance workers have formed a local organization. NEWCASTLE Dr. J. P. Stryker has been indicted on a charge of wife desertion. MUNCIE The authorities have ordered the immediate cleaning of every street and alley. CARLISLE A modern high school building will be erected here at a cost of about $35,000. WINCHESTER County commissioners have ordered a local option election in Union City May 7. ELKHART James Dunmire was badly injured when squeezed against a stall in his stable by a colt. TIPTON A barn on the farm of James Harper was destroyed by lire. Loss $5,000, insurance $1,200. FORT WAYNE Four hundred Red .Men are expected to attend the district meeting here Wednesday. JEFFERSON VILLE The Sunday school of Wall Street Methodist church now has an enrollment of 1,-
.002
T FOUNTAIN CITY t
FOUNTAIN CITY, Ind., April 16. Rev. James Richardson was re
turned by the recent Methodist con- j ference at Tipton to serve for another t year at the local pastorate. Rev. j Chamness was returned to Lynn and i the Rev. Zerbe to Williamsburg. i
Miss Mildred Phelps returned to Peoria, 111. Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Boren had as
their guest Sunday Mr. and Mrs. j Charles Anderson, of Bethel and Mr. S. M. Boren, of Buffalo, New York. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thompson of j Richmond, were the guests of Mr. I Clarence Boren and family Sunday, j Mr. and Mrs. Henry Clevenger gave a family dinner Sunday and entertain-' ed the following guests: Mr. and Mrs. Will Clevenger, Mr. and Mrs. j Oliver Clevenger, Miss Lavina Clevenger, Mr. Paul Stevens, Mr. and ' Mrs. Ellsworth Thomas and son, Her-', shel, all of Richmond. j Mr. and Mrs. Washington Study of I near Williamsburg, were the guests 1 of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Ball Saturday. j Mr. and Mrs. Ed Reynolds and family and Mrs. Iona Boren of Lynn, were j guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Cheno-; weth over Sunday. j Mr. and Mrs. Albert Durham of I Cambridge City were here over Sun-! day the guests of Mrs. Rebecca Nicr-
man. Mr. Mart Thorne of Richmond was in town yesterday.
Miss Virginia Cements of Richmond !
was visiting relatives here last week. Mrs. Lucy Bogue and Miss Charotte Durfee will return home this week from Orange City, Eorida, where they have been spending the winter. Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Cox of Amboy, Indiana, have moved to the Axeina Hampton property. Mr. Cox comes to Fountain City to take a position in the Fulghum drug store. Mrs. D. O. Brown of Lynn, has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Charles Arnett Mr. Brown being at Portland for a few days relieving the G. R. & I. agent at that place.
Miss Martha Cranor, of near Marion, is here on a visit with relatives. Miss Freda Reynolds, teaching at Middleboro, and Miss Nellie Overman, at Boston, were home over Sunday.
GARY The new city directory gives Gary a population of more than 40,000, an increase of about 30 per cent. JONESVILLE Injuries received in a fall from a hay mow have resulted in the death of John Albrandt, 65 years old. LAFAYETTE William E. Woodj has resigned the position he has held for the last fifteen years in the local postoffice. BAINBRIDGE The high school commencement will be held next Saturday evening. There are eleven graduates. WINCHESTER Boys of the Presbyterian Sunday school have "struck" because they are forced to sit on the front seats. NOTRE DAME Frank Adkins, 15 years old, of Chicago, who left the university to make a home visit, has disappeared. COLUMBUS The Rev. Harley Jack son has resigned as pastor of the Central Christian church. He goes to Pullman, Wash. BURROWS The Farmers State Bank has been organized here, with $25,000 capital. There are more than eighty stockholders. SHELBYVILLE Increased demand for its product has forced the Monte Glove Company to plan a big addition to its factory. COLUMBUS J. D. Leisure has been elected president of the Columbus Sunday School Association and James Eddleman secretary. BICKNELL Work on two new plants, an ice factory and the lighting plant, is progressing much more rapidly than was anticipated. FRANKFORT John S. Loudermilk of Tipton, 27 years old, fell beneath the wheels of a L. E. and W. train and was instantly killed. UTICA The temperance folk of this place have won another victory, the commissioners refusing to grant a license to the only applicant. SOUTH BEND Marius Hansen, Lake Shore fireman, injured in a wreck near Mishawaka, died in the hospital from his injuries. BRAZIL Five men, who indulged in a free-for-all fight in a saloon, in which all were severely injured, paid heavy fines in police court. WARSAW When Judge F. E. Bowser sentenced Harry McDonald to serve three to fifteen years for horse
stealing the prisoner thanked him. ROACHDALE After fifteen years of mysterious absence, Grover Jeffries has returned tohis home here. He gave no explanation of his absence. CLAY CITY Frank Preston has been returned from Terre Haute to face robbery charges. He was arrested while trying to pawn a watch. TERRE HAUTE The county commissioners paid Former Sheriff Jeff Walsh $3,926 said to be due him for in-and-out fees, etc. Now the state accounts board says he owes $6,500 to the county. He paid $1,325 and says they will have to sue him for the rest. IBRAZ1L With "lower taxes" as their slogan the Republicans and Progressives have united to nominate a municipal ticket. COLUMBUS Arthur W. Mason, supervisor of school music, has been reelected on the board of the National Music Supervisors' Association. ELWOOD Charles Dundley was given a heavy fine and a jail sentence for the theft of an overcoat. The jail term v suspended pending good behavior. HYMErtA Thornton H. Bach, former editor of the Vindicator, pleaded guilty to obtaining money under false pretenses and was given ten days in jail. NASHVILLE Dr. William Parsons of Indiana State Normal will deliver the address to the high school graduates next Friday. There are nine in the class. FORT WAYNE A man giving the name of Alex Shultz tore up $43 in bills and threw the bits into a sewer. He is held pending an investigation as to his sanity. HARTFORD CITY High school seniors have voted to wear cap and gowns at. commencement exercises. Superintendent Greathouse will deliver the address June 6. SOUTH BEND In seeking a divorce Mrs. Agnes Hertsch says her husband set fire to their home after having saturated her clothing with coal oil. She thinks he is insane. SULLIVAN While holding George Hanford, a coal dealer, at bay with a revolver an unidentified man loaded a wagon with coal from a car and drove away in the darkness. MUNCIE Soft roads, washed out bridges and water have caused a cessation of activities in the oil field. It is possible that drilling will be resumed within two or three weeks. SOUTH BEND Despondent because of ill health, J. D. Carlin, a locksmith, tipped his hat to a crowd on the river bank and jumped into the water, drowning in a few minutes. NEWCASTLE The jury found Ross Strock not guilty of kidnaping John Murray from the Epileptic Vil
lage. The case against Nelson Hamilton will probably be dismissed. SHELBYVILLE The R. A. Lemcke Realty Company, of Indianapolis is suing Albert C. Pearson of Indianapolis in circuit court here, demanding $500 as unpaid rent on rooms in the Lemcke Annex.
SHELBYVILLE Suit has been entered in circuit court here by James G. and Hugo Prager against Leslie R. Brooks and Chauncey Bassett for $15' on an account. The parties reside at Indianapolis. SHELBYVILLE Judge Blair refused to dismiss the case against Genevieve Parker, charged with assault with intent to kill, but because of the absence of witnesses continued the case until the May term. ADAMS The Woman's Baptist Missionary Society of the Flatrock Association has ended its regular semiannual meeting. Mrs. George Shepherd was chosen president and Mrs. Hanley of Columbus secretary. SHELBYVILLE A conference of the Smifhland, Hope, Lewis Creek and Chapel Wesleyan Methodist churches will be held at Smithland Saturday and Sunday. In charge of the Rev. Jacob Hester of Arlington. SHELBYVILLE Dot tie Taylor, 13 years old, white, has been taken from her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Taylor, and made a ward of the Gordon Children's Home. It was shown the family was living with negroes. CORUNNA Two clubs, composed of men and women respectively, who belong to no church, have been formed here. The members go from church to church as they please and contrib
ute where they will, but agree to join the boys away and finally fired a
SHELBYVILLE When
revolver at them, killing Marhek.
Horace U,. . v i , .
agner fell from the mow of his barn ! a heavy signet ring caught on a nail, icharse of komieide.
leaving him suspeuded by his finger.
The ring was broken and his finger
I Korean waters are rich in whale this
j lacerated, but he was able to save him- ear. The boats of one company
self by grasping a ladder. j caught a dozen of them in one day.
HENRY MURRAY DEAD
j U'a'Li.lium Sieci;il I HAGERSTOWN. Ind.. April 16 The funeral of Henry Murray, aged ! 70. was conducted this morning at the ; residence. Fouth of town. lVath was due to tuberculosis and dropsy. Two , ions, Kr d and Alonzo and the widow i survive. The burial will be at Now i Paris, Ohio.
CHOCOLATES BY MAIL
LAD KILLED AFTER ANNOYING LARORER
I i National NVws Association CLEVELAND, O. April It?. Frank Mashek, 15 years old, was shot and killed late yesterday by Henry Bendome, 41. who says that the lad and his playmates annoy?d him while at I work. Bendome says he tried to. drive
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A ditch eleven miles long, and from eighty-five to 110 feet wide, has been completed in Clay county, South Dakota. It will drain nearly seven thousand acres of valuable lands. About one million seven hundred thousand cubic yards of earth were removed.
G0LDSB0R0 HEARD FROM K Lady Who Lives in Goidsboro Joins in the Chorus or Praise for Cardui, The Woman's Tonic.
Ooldsboro, N. C "A physician treated me for many distressing symptoms," writes Mrs. Etta A. Smith, "but gave me no relief. "I suffered with neuralgia around the heart and was troubled at times with my head. I had pain in my left side, bowels, left thigh, shoulders and arms. "After taking Cardui, I am now well and can recommend it to other suffering women." Just such doubtful symptoms, as those from which Mrs. Smith suffered, are the ones for which it will pay you to take Cardui, the woman's tonic It is at such times, when there is nothing to show, for certain, the real cause of Ihe trouble, that you need a tonic, to give the body strength to throw off the illness that evidently threatens. Take Cardui, when you are ill, with the ailments of your sex. Take Cardui as a tonic, to prevent illness, when you feel it coming. .Your druggist keeps it 1? LAdies' Advisory fpt. Oiitta-IVJjfl"?.-nJ -Ve booO Home Treatment
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Is it possible to nourish, strengthen and Rebuild the Brain by Food? Every man who thinks uses up part of the brain each day. Why doesn't it all disappear and leave an empty skull in say a month of brain work? Because the man rebuilds each day. If he builds a little less than he destroys, brain fag and nervous prostration result sure. If he builds back a little more each day, the brain grows stronger and more capable. That also is sure. Where does man get the material
Is it from air, sky
When you
to rebuild his brain ?
or the ice of the Arctic sea?
come to think about it, the rebuilding material must be in the food and drink.
That also is sure.
Are the brain rebuilding materials found in all food? In a good variety, but not in suitable proportion in all. To illustrate : we know bones are made largely of lime and magnesia taken from food; therefore to make healthy bone structure we must have food containing these things. We would hardly feed only sugar and fat to make healthy bone structure in a growing child. If we desired to keep brains strong and healthy we would use food known to contain the things Nature uses for the purpose.
True, Nature provides these elements in a variety of edible things. We submit the following facts for those who care to know something definite on the subject : Analysis of brain by an unquestionable authority, Geoghegan, shows of Mineral Salts, Phosphoric Acid and Potash combined (Phosphate of Potash) 2.91 per cent of the total, 5.33 of all mineral Salts. This is over one-half. Beaunis, another authority, shows "Phosphoric Acid combined" and Potash 73.44 per cent from a total of 101.07. Considerable more than one-half of Phosphate of Potash.
Analysis of Grape-Nuts shows Potassium and Phosphorous (which join and make Phosphate of Potash) is considerable more than one-half of all the mineral salts in the food. Dr. Geo. W. Carey, an authority on the constituent elements of the body, says: "The gray matter of the brain is controlled entirely by the inorganic cellsalt, Potassium Phosphate (Phosphate of Potash). This salt unites with albumen and by the addition of oxygen creates nerve fluid or the gray matter of the brain. Of course, there is a trace of other salts and other organic matter in nerve fluid, but Potassium Phosphate is the chief factor and has the power within itself to attract, by its own law of affinity, all things needed to manufacture the elixir of life." Further on he says: "The beginning and end of the matter is to supply the lacking principle, and in molecular form, exactly as Nature furnishes it in vegetables, fruits and grain. To supply deficiencies this is the only law of cure." The natural conclusion is that if Phosphate of Potash is the needed mineral element in brain and you use food which does not contain it, you have brain fag because its daily loss is not supplied. On the contrary, if you eat food known to be rich in this element, you place before the life forces that which nature demands for brain-building. Mind does not work well on a brain that is broken down by lack of nourishment. A peaceful and evenly poised mind is necessary to good digestion. Worry, anxiety, fear, hate, etc., etc., directly interfere with or stop the flow of Ptyalin, the digestive juice of the mouth, and also interfere with the flow of the digestive juices of stomach and pancreas. Therefore, the mental state of the individual has much to do (more than suspected) with digestion. Brain is made of Phosphate of Potash as the principal Mineral Salt, added to
albumen and water. Grape-Nuts contain that element as more ' than one-half of all its mineral salts. We must remember that nearly 95 of the brain is composed of water and albumen, but the little worker Phosphate of Phosphate must be present in order to blend the more bulky materials into useable form. So with Grape-Nuts. The Phosphate of Potash is more than one-half of all the mineral salts, but the total volume of those elements is exceedingly small as compared with the greater bulk of other food elements contained in Grape-Nuts. We should also remember that this small ingredient should not be put into the food in the form it might come from a chemist, because man cannot produce these elements in as digestible a form as Old Mother Nature, when she puts them in the wheat and barley from which Grape-Nuts is made. A healthy brain is important, if one would "do things" in this world. A man who sneers at "Mind" sneers at the best and least understood part of himself. That part which some folks believe links us to the Infinite. Mind asks for a healthy brain upon which to act, and Nature has defined a way to make a healthy brain and renew it day by day as it is used up from work of the previous day. Nature's way to rebuild is by the use of food which supplies the things required. Brain rebuilding material is certainly found in a very natural and perfect form in
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IRE AIL, E STATE Friday, April 18fi, 1913 2 O'CLOCK P.M. ON THE PREMISES Being part of lots 1 8 and 23 in John Smith's Addition to City of Richmond located at No. 37 South Fourth Street Consisting of an excellent two-story 10 room brick house, arranged for an upper and lower flat, each flat supplied with water, gas, electric lights and bath room; good heating plant; brick barn, lot 84 feet front. Being the residence of the late Catherine Hoerner. TERMS OF SALE: One-third cash in hand; balance in two equal installments in 1 and 2 years; notes to bear 6 per cent interest,, secured by mortgage on real estate sold. For further information see Dickinson Trust Company Executor Estate of Catherine Hoerner. Gardner, Jessup & White, Attorneys.
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