Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 298, 23 October 1913 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, OCT. 23, 1913.
EXECUTIVES URGE
IL THRIFT Governors of Several States to Attempt to Halt Prodigal Way TO ELIMINATE WASTE Thanksgiving Proclamations Will Contain Advice Given By American Society. CHICAGO, Oct. 23. The governors of several states, in their annual Thanksgiving proclamations this year, will turn the spotlight of discussion upon the national lack of individual thrift. They have enlisted on the Advisory Council of the American Society for Thrift, to help bring the prodigal spirit of he times to a halt by Inquiry concerning thrift, discussion and education. Governor VVoodbridge N. Ferris, of Michigan, and Governor Lee Cruce, of Oklahoma, were among the first who notified the society of their active cooperation. This was to aid the society In pointing out that stupendous changes may be expected In the progress of the nation and particularly in community thrift if the public comes to understand better the nature of thrift, Its principles and its rewards. Chairman S. W. Straus, at the initial conference of the organization committee of the society, said: "If this society by education can bring but the discussion o fthe thrift habit before the people, it will have made a better people. Thrift does not simply mean that one shall deny himself food and clothing; no, the thriftier he Is the more money he and his family will have for these purposes. Thrift aims at cutting out the useless and senseless expenditures that there may be more money for the things that are sensible and useful, and thereby makes for a better people and government. "You cannot have national thrift until you have individual thrift. Live Up Every Cent. "We have seasons of unusual prosperity, and yet find so many people no better off. We boast of our prosperity, but when we examine to see how much better off we are, we are pained to find that we have lived up to our last cent just as we did in less prosperous times, and then we turn and blame the whole system of things. We are swayed by the agitators and demagogues strikes and hard times result. We yell for a condition which does not demand thrift. We want a Bystem which will enable us to become spendthrifts to satisfy every whim and follow every fashion, but we will never get it the world and life is not built on these lines. Thrift is not a mere forced rule. It is a virtue. It is a principle. "Thrift is not an affair of the pocket but an affair of the character. Thrift is not niggardliness, but wisdom. Thrift is not so much a matter of money as an attitude of mind. "Our people, the community, our government, all will be better by the practice of thrift. Little by little was this country built little by little was the wisdom of he world conserved. tLitle by little did the structure of science grow. Little by little did wealth accumulate thatis thrift. Loose Habit of Mind. "A spendthrift does not need much money to be a spendthrift,1 because that fault isg the result of loose habit of mind. He may be as much of a spendthrift with a dollar as with a fortune and thrift does not require a great deal of money, but only wisdom In using it. W'Why not have thrift taught In the public schools beginning with the primary grades? We teach the children all the crafts and sciences and fit them for the reign of government. Then why not the A B C'c of thrift? If, that be done the national,state and country and city waste we now complain of will be materially lessened in our future generations. "Another matter I want to dwell on for a moment is an example of shiftleBsness caused by the get-rich-quick schemers who have taken such vast amounts from the people. Seek Safe Investments. "If this society could devise some plan to safeguard our people against ional government the thought of perhaps urging municipalities to offer bonds for public subscription and in amounts of $20 or convenient denominations, it would go a long way towards ameliorating this condition. In the public mind bonds have always had a suggestion as being something for the large financial institutions, and investments for the immensely rich. If our people be taught to seek safe and sound Investments instead of get-rich-quick ones, I believe the knowledge will encourage them to continual thrift and better citizenship and a more enlightened ballot. First IF HAIR IS TURNING GRAY, USE SAGE TEA Here's Grandmother's Recipe to Darken and Beautify Faded Hair. That beautiful, even shade of dark, glossy hair can only be had by brewing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray, streaked and looks dry, wispy and scraggly, just an application or two of Sage and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundredfold. Don't bother to prepare the tonic; you can get from any drug store a 50cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy," ready to use. This can always be depended upon to bring back the natural color, thickness and lustre of your hair aud remove dandruff, stop scalp itching and falling hair. Everybody uses "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur because it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody an tell It has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair has disappeared, and after another application it becomes beautifully dark and appears glossy, lustrous and abundant. CA.dvartla.mtB 11
INDIVIDUJ
Armored Cruiser Montana, United States Navy
i 4 V 'AY M ' v,(Jv - ' ' l ih- Molilalia is an armored mpnt with a five inch armor belt a 22 knots an hour. the little by little becomes a home next the little by little becomes a bank account and then the view point changes the betteremnt of our neighbor and the community at large. "Thrift is a creative economy--and as Emerson says 'Creative ecmc is the essence of magnificence" and now that we have the high cost of living to contend with, I believe this the psychological time for the promulgation of thrift by this society." CLASS ATTENDANCE INCREASES BY 67 "Y" Bible Organizations Make Big Gains Over Last Year. With an increase of sixty-seven in attendance over the first week of last year, the Y. M. C. A. Boys' Bible classes bid bair to a successful year. The first week's attendance in 1912 was 171, while this year it was 238. A large increase is expected this week by Boys' Secretary Pettijohn. Tonight's meetings include the first and second, divisions of the Spartans, the Mohawks and the Cherokee's. Some of the classes were late to organize and elect officers, and four classes turned in the following list of officers to Secretary Pettijohn. . Ionian Arthur Johnson, president, and Carl Ashberry, secretary and treasurer. Dorians Earl Keisker, president, and Willard Morgan, secretary and treasurer. Beroens Cecil Cureton, president, and William Eggemeye. secretary and treasurer. Kenneth Dowlin was basketball captain. "i Athenians Paul Allen, president, and John Evans, secretary and treasurer. Harold Sinex was elected basketball captain. KEEVER HAS SMALLPOX Every Effort Made to Prevent Epidemic. Every effort is being made by County Health Officer King and the physicians of Cambridge City to prevent an epidemic of small pox. Harry Keever, living near that city, has been quarantined for several days after showing marked symptoms of the disease. It was pronounced smallpox by Dr. King today. All persons known to have been with Mr. Keever last week, are being vaccinated. Seven persons in one family -have been inoculated. Thirty-two per cent of the seven million working women in this country are under age. S. E. JONES INVITES COMMERCIAL HEAD SHARON E. JONES. Charles W. Jordan and E. M. Haas went to Indianapolis today to extend a personal invitation to Governor Ralston to attend the annual banquet of the Richmond Commercial club. The date for the banquet has not yet been fixed, but will be arranged for the convenience of the governor. Sharon E. Jones went to Chicago yesterday to invite Harry E. Wheeler, president of the commercial organizations of the United States, to attend the banquet.
AS" V . , "3d
I "I
1 Ulal 1' Mli.r i.tr! 4.-.. ill.U UUW11 111 nd carries nine big guns. Her h;r $25,000 BEQUEST IS LEFT TO Late Mordecai White's Donations to College Total More Than $200,000. A bequest of $25,000 was left to Earlham college by Mordecai Morris White, Cincinnati banker and patron of Earlham college who died September 30, increasing the amount of Mr. White's gifts to the college to more than $20,000. The will was probated yesterday at Cincinnati. The estate was valued at fifteen or twenty million dollars. Mr. White and his brother Frank were among the first pupils to attend the Friends' Boarding school, now Earlham college. He came from a family of Friends, prominent throughout the country. Mr. White first gave Earlham money in 1880 when he and Frank White gave $12,500 each to start the J. F. White endowment fund of $25,000 in honor of their father. Since that time, the aggregate gifts of both have been more than $400,000. Before their deaths the White brothers gave $112,500 to the endowment fund which they started. In addition to this each gave about $75,000 to Earlham building and other funds. Besides leaving $25,000 to the college, Mordecai White provided in his will that a fund of $5,000 left to the Cincinnati Monthly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends shall be left to the Indiana Yearly meeting should the Cincinnati monthly meetings of Friends be discontinued. To his widow, Hannah Amelia White, he provided an income of $25,000 a year. Mrs. White was formerly Miss Hannah Amelia Coffin, daughter of Elijah Coffin, who lived in this city. One of the oldest acquaintances of Mr. White is Benjamin Johnson, of this city, who met Mordecai White in 1854 when Mr. White was in the grocery business in Cincinnat. The marriage of Miss Coffin and Mr. White took place in 1S5S. Mordecai White was born in Perquimons county, North Carolina, the son of J. F. White, February 3, 1830. Shortly after his birth the family moved to Washington county, Indiana. Mr. White and his brother entered Earlham in 1847, the year of its establishment as the Friend's Boarding school. They graduated and completed a business course at Cincinnati in 1850. Both went to Philadelphia and entered the wholesale grocery business. Their ambition to become members of the firm for which they worked could not be realized and they returned to the farm of their grandfather. Shortly after this they entered a wholesale grocery firm in Cincinnati and were soon admitted as members of the firm. They progressed rapidly and on September 28, 1863, they and GIRLS! THICKEN AND BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR Bring back its gloss, lustre, charm and get rid of dandruff. To be possessed of a head of heavy, beautiful hair, soft, lustrous, fluffy, wavy and free from dandruff is merely a matter of using a little Danderine. It is easy and inexpensive to have nice, soft hair and lots of it. Just get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine now all drug stores recommend it apply a little as directed and within ten minutes there will be an appearance of abundance; freshness, fluffiness and an incomparable gloss and lustre, and try as you will you cannot find a trace of dandruff or falling hair; but your real surprise will be after about two weeks' use, when you will see new hair fine ami downy at first yes but really new hair sprouting out all over your scalp Danderine is. we believe, the only sure hair grower; destroyer of dandruff and cure for itchy scalp and it never fails to stop falling hair at once. If you want to prove how pretty and soft your hair really is, moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair taking one small strand at a time. Your hair will be soft, glossy and beautiful in just a few moments a delightful surprise awaits everyone who tries this. f Advertisement! SPACE FOR STORAGE OR MANUFACTURING PURPOSES We are equipped to handle all kinds of storage. Space with plenty of light for manufacturing purposes. RICHMOND MFG. CO West Third and Chestnut Sts. Telephone 3210.
EARLHAM
.llt- lr ul it. -' HiUs ..:., ..nf-
se power is 25.000 and she can do others opened the Fourth National bank at Cincinnati, the ninety-third national bank to be given a charter iu th country. Frank left and went to New York, Mordecai remaining in Cincinnati where he soon became a leader in financial circles. He lived to see the bank he helped found, pass the fifty year mark on September 28. 1 ft 1 :i . Most Dangerous ot Minor Ailments. Of the minor ailments a cold is by far the most dangerous, not in itself, but the serious diseases it so often leads to. Pneumonia and consumption always start with a cold. When you have a cold you are much more likely to contract the infectious diseases such as diphtheria, scarlet fever and whooping cough. Colds are easily cured, in fact, Chamberlain's Cough IJemedy is famous for its cures of this most common ailment, .md is pleasant and safe to take. Why take such desparate chances when so reliable and trustworthy a medicine may be obtained for a quarter. For sale by all dealers. (Advertisement) ! CITY STATISTICS . 9 I Births, j Mr. and Mrs. William C. Holliday, 319 North A street, girl, third child. ! Mr. and Mrs. John Helmich, 714 ; South Eighth, boy, fourth child. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schroeder, 823 South E street, boy, fifth child. ! Mr. and Mrs. William Burden, 554 i North Thirteenth, boy, fifth child. 1 Deaths and Funerals. ! O'MELIA The funeral of Mrs. Catherine O'Melia, 75, who died in Indianapolis, yesterday, will be held in this city Friday morning at 10 o'clock. The ! body will arrive Friday morning and will be taken directly to St. Andrew's j church, where Father Cronin will conI duct services. Interment will be in i St. Mary's cemetery. She was the w idow ,pf tha late Patrick O'Melia.
Nurse Proclaims Skin Cure
Myrtle Halm Says D. D. D. Prescription is Worth Rockefeller's Millions to Her.
"Ten years I suffered with eczema three years of that time I could not appear in public. My entire body was covered with the disease. I could not eat. I could not sleep. I could not live. 1 have at last found the great Prescription D. D. D. My body is clean, smooth. If there were one bottle only of D. D. D. in the world and I had it, Mr. Rockefeller's millions could not buy the golden fluid." Worse Myrtle Haha (In care Old Ladles' Home, Durham. N. C.) How about you?
D. D. D. Prescription for 15 years the Standard Skin Memedy.
The Game's Up Gentlemen You can't hand a man a lump of coal and tell him it's pink. When a man buys a Suit or Overcoat and expects to get it hand tailored right here in Richmond, he is apt not to forget it when he finds out it was made in a factory out of town like handme downs.
You
who want real hand tailoring made right at home, not only the outside appearance, but the inside perfection. Come In, See Every Stitch from basting to buttonhole; then you know you'll not be fooled. Swagger Suitings and C.00 Overcoatings at . . . vpJ
GATZE
Exclusive Men's Tailor. Honest Value, Regardless of Price. 532 MAIN ST.
Made In
APPOINTS BERTSCH IN FOULKPS PLACE
Governor Names Cambridge City Man As Delegate to Conservation Congress. To fill the place vacated by Wi lliam Dudley Foulke, Governor Ralston has appointed Lawivr.ce Bertsch. of ! Cambridge City, a on-' of the fifteen delegates from Indiana to the National Conservation Congress which will convene November 1, IV and 2u. at I ashington, I C. Mr. Foulke vus unable to accept the 'appointment as delegate because of the nnua! meeting of the National 'Municipal league, of which he is presi- ' dent. The league convention will be 1 held November 13. 14 and 15. at To- ' ronto. As Mr. Foulk" Is obliged to ! attend a number of committee m'-t-i ings. he will go to Toronto on No- ' vember 11. Among the important niat- ; ters to be discussed win be the initia- ' tive, referendum and racall. Several hundred delegates will attend from all tactions of the country. I Indiana will play an important part ! in the conservation eoneress. Thomas li. Shipp, of Indianapolis, executive secretary of the congress, estimates that l,5oo delegates will attend the convention. The congress this year will revert to the consideration principally of forestry and water power .projects. It is expected that President Wilson will deliver an address on the opening day. Among other speakers will be Franklin K. Lane, secretary of the interior: David F. Mouston. ; secretary of agriculture; Lindley M. j Garrison, sec retary of war. and Senators Burton, Newlauds and Hoke Smith. E. E. M'CALL NAMED MESSENGER BOY Edward E. McCall, Democratic candidate for Mayor of New York, who is accused by the impeached Governor Sulzer of having acted as the bearer of orders sent by Murphy to Sulzer in Albany, the refusal to comply with which is alleged to have caused Sulzer's impeachment. If you have any skin blemish or a little rash, do not let it develop into something more serious. Remember I). D. t. Prescription has been recognized for fifteen years as the standard skin remedy. It always helps, and if used according to directions, it should cure in a short while. All druggists sell this standard remedy, but if you come to us. we will offer you the first full size bottle with the guarantee that unless it stops the Itch at once we will refund the purchase price. Ask also about the equally efficient skin soap. Thistlethwaite drug stores. Eighth nd North E, Eighth and South E and ;ixth and Main. M en s Richmond
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Fire Risk Controls Rate of Insurance The studv of fire insurance rates. ' equipment, occupancy and tructur! according to Attvood Jenkins, i baf- qualities of the buildir.R i used in fH r.g in its lomplcxity for the layman urtng all Individual rates from the Corporations who sell fire insurance , basic rate. like firms handling other line of mer-; .. . , . -
chandise. depend upon middle man lor information concerning the desir- i When the busiiuss man goes to Dun or Bradstreet for a statement of the financial standing of a customer, the tire insurance company, instead of going to a credit rating bureau, j go-s. to a bureau prepared to give ex- j pert information concerning the risk j itself No company determines the ' rate it -a ill charge for certain kinds! of risks, for the sump reason that the ' merchant finds it preferable to go to a c redit ratina agencv for the informat'on he desire Eailc Rate Rule.. The basic rate for the city forms the foundation upon which the individual rate is huilded If a city is poorly equipped to light fire, if it has a large number of factories, if its streets are , in poor condition, or its buildings are exceptionally high, the fire insurance 'rate will be raised accordingly l No precaution that the individual builder may take can affect this basic ! rate. The desirability of his building as a fire hazard is figured upon the i basis of the immunity of the entire I building from fire. i The Dean schedule, which shows the 1 percentage of the basic rate that shall be added or deducted according to the RAILROAD PERSONALS E. O. Brown. Pennsylvania through j passenger engineer, is enjoying his I annual vacatio. E. C. Scott, Pennsylvania engineer, is visiting in Cincinnati.
Every Pay
FINNEY
From 11 a.
IRogiTLnllaiiP OfliniinicBiPS Extra Special Dishes Served besides those mentioned in menu below.
LUNCHEONETTE
Home Baked Beans .... 5c Buttered Toast 5c Roast Beef 10c Fried Ham 10c Eggs 10c Shredded Wheat Biscuit. .10c With Milk, 10c; Pickles, sweet or sour oc Sardines
BEVERAGES
Hot Coffee 5c Tea, per pot 10c Half and Half, per glass. .10c
BOUILLONS
Beef Bouillon 5c Chicken Bouillon 5c
DESSERT Pie, per cut 5c Pie, a la mode 10c Sliced Peaches
Sliced Oranges Served with plain Sliced Pineapple or whipped cream j Sliced Bananas ) ' SANDWICHES
Ham 5c Minced Ham 5c Swiss Cheese 5c Roast Beef 5c Roast Pork 5c
OYSTERS Half Dozen Fry 25c Stew Ovster Cocktail 15c Raw
Our aim is to please the public with anything in good and delicious cookery, just like you would get at home the kind like mother used to cook. Everything new, modern and sanitary, at a moderate cost.
FINNEY9 919 Main Street
'EES
Syrup Will Surprise You Cot I.iUl, but there ith ln( nettr tiy Price 1 1 Here is a homemade rrmeJv t'iat takrs hold of a conh almot intantiy, und will usually conquer n ordinary i cough in Z hour. ' hi recipe make a ' pint enough for a whoU- familj . iou ! couldn't ;"h, n.MUe vougu H' Mix one runt et tranulated sugar with watvr. and stir 2 .i twiil in n a i in minutes. Put ounces o! t inex i tlttv r. nt' worth i in a pint bottle, and add tUe Susrar Svrup. Thi keep perfectly and hali a pleasant taste children like it Braces up the appetite and is flight 1 laxative, which helps end a cough. You probablv know the medical value of pine in treating bronchial asthma, bronchitis, spasmodic croup and whooping coiiih. Pinex i a most valuable concentrated compound of Norwar white pin "tract, rich in guaiacol ani other natural healing pin elements. Other preparations will not work is this combination. The prompt results from this Inexpensive remedy have made friends for it ia thousands of homes ia the United States and Canada, which explains why tht plan has been imitated often, but never successfully. A guaranty of absolute satisfaction, or money promptlv refunded, goes with this preparation. Your druggist has Pinex jor will ret it for you. If not, send to The Pinex Co.. Ft. Wayne, Ind. at m. to 2 p. m. Potatoes 5c Bread and Butter 5c Roast Pork 10c Ham and Eggs 20c Eggs on Toast 20c Maple Flake 10c with Cream, 15c. Olives 10c 10c Hot Chocolate 5c Milk, per glass 5c Fresh Buttermilk 5c Tomato Bouillon 5c Clam Bouillon 5c ,10c Tongue 5c Peanut Butter 5c Pimento Cheese 5c Egg 5c Ovster 10c 25c 25c
