Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 150, 5 May 1914 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1314

The Richmond Palladium

AMD 8UN-TELBORAM.

Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. MmMcie Building. Ninth and Nrth A Street R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr.

la BUbmmt, It eanta week. By Mall, in adraacemm ywr, $S.0; wtx moot. IM; cm aoaftk. 45 cento. Rural Routes, In aaraaee year, 9.'. ate moatka, 1Mi on aseath IS eaata.

Bntered at the PNt Office at RlehmoneV IneJs ond Class Mall Matter.

The Dairymen's Objections. The main objections offered to the proposed new dairy regulations by the dairymen were theoretical rather than practical. Instead of consulting those who had long experience in the use of the methods provided for in the ordinance,

they hazarded guesses as to what might be or could be. That is not a business-like thing to do. Business men don't guess. They get hold of the facts. If those dairymen, who have made such extraordinary statements regarding the proposed regulations, would consult those who have experience and knowledge, such for instance as the experts in charge of the Federal Bureau of Animal Industry, they would feel very much chagrined at having made such remarks. An objection to the tuberculin test was made to the effect that one inspector could not do all the testing locally required. That objection is easily disposed of by the fact that inspectors in other cities ARE inspecting not only as many but more cows than we have in all our dairies. In one winter, Dr. Gillie, while inspector at Fort Wayne, tested 1,600 head. While here he said an inspector could not only do all the dairy work required by the ordinance but all the food inspecting and the city's veterinary work as well. J. S. Batchelor declared the Fort Wayne tuberculin test a "fake and a sham." In support of this assertion, he offered not the slightest proof and for the simple reason that he could not. It was not a sham. It was such a success the Fort Wayne health officer was called to New England health and dairy conventions to explain their methods and the Fort Wayne dairy inspector, as a result of the tuberculosis prevention due to the tuberculin testing, was called to the national convention at Chicago to read a paper on "Bovine Tuberculosis." Mr. Batch'elor also declared the test could not be done. Fortunately again we do not have to depend on a mere assertion but can refer to what actually has been accomplished, all theories to the contrary notwithstanding. If Mr. Batchelor is right, the achievements and the reports of the Federal Bureau of Animal Industry are illusions and the reports made by boards of health in hundreds of cities are tissues of deception and the

SIX CASES PENDING Fire Marshall Rounds Up Arson Suspects.

At least six caseB of arson will be brought to trial next month as a result of the efforts of the legal department of the Indiana fire marshal's office. In every Instance where a fire of suspicious origin is brought to his attention, the fire marshal is planning to make a thorough Investigation and push active prosecution whenever evidence can be obtained. "Probably the greatest obstacle standing in the way of the successful conviction of agents of Incendiarism," says the Indiana state fire marshal, "is the lack of co-operation obtained by the fire marshal department in local communities. "There is too . much sympathy for

the man who has a fire. The people of the United States should adopt the attitude now common In Europe, that a fire, in itself, is almost a crime. They should naturally hold the owner responsible. He should have to prove his own innocence rather than require a public officer to definitely prove him at fault." The fire marshal estimates that at least' 65 per cent of all fires that occur in Indiana are due to carelessness. He feels that if owners who are responsible for conditions which lead to fire were regarded as guilty of criminal negligence by tha community, the number of losses would be materially lessened.

CAMBRIDGE CITY

work done through the state experiment stations are moonbeams of fraud. : 4 The unfortunate thing about the dairymen's opposition to the tuberculin test is that they are "cutting off their nose to spite their face." The test will be even more protection to them than to their patrons because it will protect their families as well as their horses, pigs and poultry. One or two of the dairymen have made the remark that "they have never died of tuberculosis, though they had never had a test made." That is begging the question. Bovine tuberculosis is as slow a process in the infected person as it is in the infected cow. No dairyman can tell whether his children have been infected or not. They themselves may not know it for years to come. Indeed, they may be suffering from a localized tuberculous infection and die without ever having discovered what the source of. their disease was. Bovine tuberculosis is a dairy disease. The larger dairies become, the more there is of it.

The older dairies grow, the worse it becomes.

Even if it could be shown that there is not much infection now due to bovine tuberculosis in Richmond, that would be absolutely no reason for not taking precautions against this source of so deadly a disease. The Pulmotor. When the pulmotor was first marketed by its German inventor, the medical authorities of

the Fatherland gave scant heed to its claims to;

resuscitate the apparently dead. We may be very thankful its plucky inventor refused to be discouraged by this negligence because his device has now become one of the world's great live saving agencies. Persons choked by diphtheria, asphyxiated by gas, overcome by electric shock, prostrated by temporary paralysis or severe emotional shock, those that have been ''downed," and even babes "born dead" have been re-animated by this magical machine. The whole appartus is not much larger than a suit case and contains an oxygen tank, a bellows, tubing, face mask, etc. After the mask is carefully adjusted, oxygen is released into the tubes. By its own pressure, it forces itself into the lungs and expands them. When the pressure within the lung has been raised to a fixed point, a valve closes and the lung empties itself. Thus the machine and lung exhale and inhale alternately and a natural breathing rhythm is established. The pulmotor was first put into use by large private concerns, especially gas and electric corporations, and proved so successful cities are now beginning to install an apparatus as a piece of necessary equipment. It is a pleasure to report that certain of our own energetic local physicians are advocating that Richmond purchase ji nnlmntnv Tn vinw r-f thp livpa if wniilH save

., . . .,, , ... , ,, 1 Sunday in New Cast'e. the guest of it IS impossible to think Of any other way $150 , the Rev. "Father Spellman, formerly

could be so well spent.

Richmond Sunday and spent the day with Leo Gard and family. Mrs. Simeon Kuster. spent Sunday with Mrs. James Boggs of Pennville. Harry Thalia and family and Mrs. Catherine Thalia of Hagerstown spent Sunday here with Mr. and Mrs. Orvllle Thalls. Miss Elizabeth Whelan was In Richmond Sunday on account of the illness of her father, T. II. Whelan. Mr. and Mrs. Mont Williams and Curtis Williams of Indianapolis, spent Sunday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Williams. Mrs. Jennie Males and daughter of Richmond, were guest of Mrs. Lydia Huddleston Sunday. The anniversary of the Epworth League will be observed next Sunday at the M..E. church. Mrs. L. J. Flanders of Indianapolis has been very sick the last week at the home of her mother, Mrs. N. J. Crossley.

Mrs. John Gehring visited relatives

in Connersville last week.

Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Frazer of New Castle were the guests of friends in this city Saturday. Mary, the young daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Devon, is seriously ill with scarlet fever. Miss Myrtle Jameson died Monday at her home in German town. Funeral arrangements will be announced later.

J. W. Judkins was in Rushville Saturday in attendance at the district Progressive convention. Raymon Lowrey was taken to Reid Hospital Saturday for treatment. He was accompanied by Albert Ohmit and two physicians. Mrs. Bertram Berger of Kokomo is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Steele. Mrs. M. H. Gaar and children have returned home after several months spent with Mrs. Gaar's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wright, in Florida. Robert Beard will entertain the Epworth league this evening at his home on Maple street. N. H. Ogelsbee was in Cincinnati Saturday. Mrs. R. D. Steele will go to Liberty Wednesday to spend a few days with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Verborg will soon go to Mansfield to reside. Mrs. Myrtle Higgs of Kansas City, and Mrs. Pearl Jones, en route from Brookville to the home of the latter in Centerville, spent Saturday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Lester. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Whelan and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sherry at Hagerstown. George Hebble, a blind organist of Indianapolis, who is visiting relatives at Germantown, lent an added interest to the services at St. Elizabeth's Catholic Church Sunday morning, and at the Me 'ist church in the evening, by the jition of voluntaries. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Morris, after a short time spent in Marion, will return to Cambridge City to reside. Mrs. John Dillon and daughter. Miss

Mary, and Miss Mary Metts spent

FAIRBANKS SAYS BUSINESS SUFFERS

BY LEASED WIRE ST. LOUIS, May 5. Former Vice President Charles W. Fairbanks, accompanied by his son, Richard, arrived at the Hotel Jefferson last night from Indianapolis on his way to his farm in Green county, Illinois. Mr. Fairbanks missed connection with his train and was compelled to remain in St. Louis until this morning. When asked concerning the Mexican war and policies, the former vice president declined to discuss them. "I think the country is in the midst of a period of depression," he said. "The depression has partly been caused by manipulation of the tariff. The whole west and the Mississippi valley and other parts of the country have felt it." He would not suggest that a change was necessary in the tariff, but let rt be inferred from his remarks that a change is necessary in order to put the country and business generally on a more solid footing. He said the Panama canal will help business conditions, and especially commerce in the Mississippi valley.

Is Your Public Library on the Job?

By LEO L. REDDING. Comparatively few men appreciate the public library and its possibilities. That is why the library so infrequently accomplishes its best purposes.

Probably you are one of the sub-

library thrust upon my attention a new volume of stories written by a popular author of the present day. I was assured that the stories were "most interesting and so instructive." The author in a long preface told

KILLS WOMAN. MILWAUKEE, May 5 An unidentified man this morning leaped from an automobile at Tenth street and

of this city, and Miss Delia Griffin

George Ford of Richmond, and Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Marson and children were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marson at dinner Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Adams of New Castle were guest of Mr. and Mrs. Will Pike Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Joslin of

North avenue, drew a revolver and

fired two shots in rapid succession in- Cleveland, O., were guest Sunday evento a handsomely dressed woman who ! ing at the home of Ernest and Elizawas passing. As she dropped dead on beth Whelan. Mr. Joslin went to Mun-

scribers to the library fund: or maybe I now well he is succeeding in preserv

you are a member of the board of ing the true atmosphere of the great ,11 - i 1 1 i . . . i i . . ........ Z . l " . i r . l.

uiieciors. iuu Know an auouc me uioappcanug vv esi. gave me j library, or you think you do, and when names of other authors who have aidany complaint is made, you regard ited in the same commendable work.

as a bit ot numauageon ana give no , Jret riarie s name was not among

serious attention to it. I them.

Turning

the street the man drew a razor, cut

ting his own throat, falling dead across her body.

1 795,509; cotton-seed, $48,519,681.

A method has been invented in Germany for spinning Kapok fibre into yarn so that it can be woven into

Aren't the shelves filled with books, and isn't the librarian ready to accommodate all comers? Well! What more can any one want? That is the usual attitude and a mistaken attitude it is in all cities great and small. A few days ago one of the assistant librarians in New York's great public

THIS WOMAN'S SICKNESS Quickly Yielded To Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Baltimore, Md. "I am more than glad to tell what Lydia E. Pinkham's

Vegetable Compound did for me. I suffered dreadful pains and was very irregular. I became alarmed and sent for Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I took it regularly until I was without a cramp or pain and felt like another person, and

it has now been six months since I took any medicine at all. I hope my little note will assist you in helping other women. I now feel perfectly well and in the best of health. " Mrs. August VV. KoNDNER, 1632 Hollins Street, Baltimore, Md. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotic or harmful drugs, and to-day holds the record of being the most successful remedy for female ills we know of, and thousands of voluntary testimonials on file in the Pinkham laboratory at Lynn, Mass., seem to prove this fact. For thirty years it has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has restored the health of thousands of women who have been troubled with such ailments as displacements, inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irregularities, etc. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co, (confidential) Lynnt Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence.

the leaves at random 1

came upon the story of a plainsman who lost himself in the open and rode round and around in a circle, thinking all the time that he was traveling due south. The west has changed since my boyhood days. But let me get back to the library in time to say that the assistant who thrust the book into my hands is only a part of a mistaken system. . I know of no other worth-while library that is so far off its job as Is that of New York. It is the business of the library to take care of the best that is in print, index it and so arrange it that it will be easy of access to all inquirers. The library is a great almanac and encyclopedia combined. You may want to know something about what is being done in some other city to improve a department of public work in which you have a personal interest. Your library should furnish the information. And it should be ready for your inquiry when it is made. If it is not ready, your library is not on its job. In print somewhere are all or nearly all of the secrets of business progress; of city management; of political advancement and in short, of all the achievements of the world. They should be fairly well at hand in the library of this Town. If your library is on the job it will have good fictisn for all varieties of minds. It will have a well regulated reference room. It will have a newspaper and periodical room, and an index will be maintained of the more important news articles. In the most modern libraries are books for the blind. The Newark, N. J. public library a splendid institution maintains a monthly publication devoted to the best interests of the city and of the library. One of the bigger cities of the west has made a direct connection between its public library and its public schools, to the great advantage of both systems. The better books of its library are better read than ever before, and the demands of the school children keep the library on the job. There is or should be close relationship between your public library and your Chamber of Commerce. And the closer touch you keep with each the better it will be for you and for this Town.

cie Monday, and Mrs. Joslin remained for the day with Miss Whelan. Miss Alice Medearis has returned to Centerville after several days spent with her neice, Mrs. May Boden. Her sister, Mrs. Catherine Myers joined her in this city. Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Paul and children and Mrs. Elizabeth Paul motored to

It is stated that typhoid and typhus, which in the past years had appeared in Prague frequently in epidemic form have now been practically stamped out with the installation of sewerage and water system according to to the latest scientific methods.

CAST

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HOW THIN PEOPLE CAN PUT.ON FLESH A New Discovery Thin men and women that big, ; nearty, filling dinner you ate last night. What became of all the fat-producing nourishment It contained? You haTen't gained In weight one ounce.- That food passed from your body like unburn ed coal through an open grate. The material was there, but your food doesn't work and stick, and the plain truth is you hardly get enough nourishment from your meals to pay for the cost of cooking. This Is true of thin folks the world over. Your nutritive organs, your functions of assimilation, are sadly out of gear and need reconstruction. Cut out the foolish foods and funny sawdust diets. Omit the flesh cream rub-ons. Cut put everything but the meals you are eating now and eat with every one of those a single Sargol tablet. In two weeks note the difference. Five to eight good solid

pounds of healthy, "stay there" fat should be the net result. Sargol charges your weak, stagnant blood with millions of fresh new red blood corpuscles gives the blood the carrying power to deliver every ounce of fat-making material n your food to every part of your body. Sargol. too, mixes with your food and prepares it for the blood in easily assimilated form. Thin people gain all the way from 10 to 25 pounds a month while taking Sargol, and the new flesh stays put. Sargol tablets are a scientific combination of six of the best fleshproducing elements known to chemistry. They come 40 tablets to a package, are pleasant, harmless and inexpensive, and Leo H. Pihe and all other druggists in Richmond and vicinity sell them subject to an absolute guarantee of weight increase or money back.

Note, in the illustration, the oven thermometer and the cabinet

top with roomy warming shelf. The space back of the burners keeps

food hot. there is a special broiler, and an extra capacity reservoir with

a glass gauge. Patented burner construction concentrates beat. No waste.

This newest PERFECTION range with the THERMOS oven equipment can be seen at yourdealer's. Look for tho Triangle TradeMark. He has other Perfection models' also, each as efficient as any coal range, without the heat, dirt and trouble. The Standard Oil Company CHICAGO. ILL. AN INDIANA V CORPORATION

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MY CATARRH BALM OPENS UP NOSE AND HEAD COLDS GO

Breathe Freely! Clears Stuffed-up, Inflamed Nose and Head and Stops Catarrhal Discharge. Cures Dull Headache.

Try "Ely's Cream Balm." Get a small bottle anyway, just to try it Apply a- little in the nostrils and instantly your clogged nose and stopped-up air passages of the head will open; you will breathe freely; dullness and headache disappear. By morning! the catarrh, cold-in-head or catarrhal sore throat will be gone. End such misery now! Get the small bottle of "Ely's Cream Balm" at any drug store. This sweet, fragrant balm

Can You Use $10, $25, $50 or $100? If you need money call on us. We loan any amount from $5 to $100 on household goods, pianos, teams, Stock, & Etc., without removal. If you are unable to call write or phone and our agent will call at your house and explain our LOW RATE. Private Reliable The State Investment & Loan Company Phone 2560, Room 40 Colonial Bldg., Richmond, Indiana.

dissolves the heat of the nostrils; pen-! etrates and heals the inflamed, swol- j len membrane which lines the nose, j head and throat; clears the air pas-j sages; stops nasty discbarges and aj

feeling of cleansing, soothing relief comes immediately. Dont lay awake tonight struggling for breath, with head stuffed; nostrils closed, hawking and blowing. Catarrh or a cold, with its running nose, foul mucous dropping into the throat, and raw dryness is distressing but truly needless. Put your faith just once in "Ely's Cream Balm" and your cold or catarrh will surely disappear. Advertisement)

Its wholesome, pure of that you're sure, For each ingredient's selected; No dirt or dust can touch the crust, For every loaf is wrapped protected. Golden Cream Mothers and Butter-Krust Made by Richmond Baking Co. Try Raisin Bread Sold by Ail Grocers i

ICE Half Price By Using the Kalamazoo Ice Blanket It prevents the waste that going on because the surface of the ice in the refrigerator comes In contact with outside air. PRICE TEN CENTS "KALAMAZOO"

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NUQSECY

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Non-conductor of heat and cold. A

Price 15c Each.

W. H. ROSS Drug Co. The Place for Quality. Phone 1217. 804 Main Street.

Ross' Straw Hat Cleaner 10c.

Loan

At Legal Rate 2 Per Cent Per Month on Household Goods. Pianos, Livestock, Etc.. from $10 to $250. Home Loan Go, 220 Colonial Bldg. Phone 1509, Richmond. Indiana.