Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 60, 20 January 1916 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, JAN. 20, 1916.

DERTSCH FIRM PICKS OFFICERS FOR NEXT YEAR

CAMBRIDGE CITT, lad., Jan. Tbe stockholders of Bertaeh & Com' pan? have re-elected the officials of last year. The business of this concern for 1916 showed an increase of fifteen per cent over that of tbe previous year. Their present contracts indicate that 1916 will be the most prosperous year of their history. A proposition was submitted to the company not long since to manufacture machinery for making munitions of war, which, while attractive from a financial point of view, was promptly rejected. ... Miss ' Florence Webb, city librarian, is quite 111, and her position Is being filled by Mrs. Tweedy, th assistant librarian... . A. N. Wiseman was called to New Castle Wednesday on account of the death of Miss Maggie Cunningham of that city.. .. .Miss Ada Bertsch is at home after a month spent with friends in Richmond Ora Huddlestofe has entered a sanatorium at Milwaukee, where he will be treated for defects of speech.... Lee Pitman has a force of men engaged in filling his Ice houses. The ice is of excellent qaullty, and seven inches In thickness. ....Miss Eva Toms is spending several days with friends at New Castle. Miss Bertie LaFevre has gone to Indianapolis to take a two years' in the Indiana Teachers college.. . ..Mr, and Mrs. F. M. Whittlinger returned from a visit of several days, with friends in Cincinnati.. Miss Helen Filby has gone to Connersvllle to spend the remainder of the week with relatives.

SCHOOL ARRANGES LITERARY PROGRAM

NEW PARIS, Ohio, Jan. 20. The program for the Friday afternoon

meeting of the Jefferson township high

' school, to be held at the school build

ing, follows: Oath of office to be taken by the new officers: President, Evelyn Aker; vice president, Helen Reid; secretary, Trafford Boyd; monitor, Cecil White;

inaugural address, Evelyn Aker; piano

duet, Helen Kessler and Golda Hill; spelling match, Nettie Sinck; Lois ' Hughes; character sketch of high . school pupil, Francis Oates; round table talk, Thomas Melody, Forrest McGill, Everett Shinkle; current events, Janice Hahn? symposium, Dorothy Pence; original composition, Cecil White; quotation contest, Frank Hawley, Howard Campbell; humorous clippings, Mabel Ken worthy; high school i statistics, Hester Nelson; short story paraphrase, Simon Cunningham; debate: negative, Emmett Haris, and Ben Richards; - affirmative: Holbert Murray, and Clyde Ashman; current events. Claude Collins; autobiography, Miss Nunnmaker; medley, Supt. B. S. Davis; symposium, Leona Smith; humorous essay, Carl Moore; biography, Lois Cail; original story, Hazel Barney; recitation, Olive Marshall; sophomore and junior statistics,. Irene Clingenpeel ; dialogue, Mabel Barney, Vera Bevington. Ferne Marshall, Lorena . Miller, Kenneth Middaugh, Robert Mitchell; instrumental solo, Fred Burtch ; sophomore prophecy, Evelyn Northrop.

CITY BUILDS FIRES.

INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 20. It used to

, be when a fellow wanted to go skating

he had to build his own fires on the

, banks but the city park board is plan

ning to furnish stoves in tents for the skaters here. Pretty soft.

Nerve of Giant Nooded for This Worker's Task

Must be in Pink of Condition

to Turnout Flawless. Work, Says Daytonian. -

pay Mr. and

"Tanlac put me back on the roll," said T. J. Downs yesterday, Downs is a sheet metal worker lives at 43 Krug street, Dayton.

my worK, wouia tax the nerve

strength of a giant," suggested Mr. Downs, "as it requires the strictest attention to turn it out flawless. It is

just line naving to see with your nerves,, for when my nerves went to

the bad I couldn t catch the flaws. "I got off all around," complained Downs, "and I couldn't eat or sleep.

So I just asked for a layoff and start-

. ed a fight for my health. "After I lost a lot of time with

worthless remedies a friend asked me

why I did not try Tanlac. I had

heard much of the medicine, but his

advice was the reminder I needed,

"Tanlac went to work on me at once and before the first bottle was half

gone I was feeling pretty spry. Ev

ry does gave me a boost and held me

there. I began to eat and sleep. Ner

vous neadacnes ana I parted company,

and by the time I had taken the second bottle my old form was with me and I long for the dinof the shop, something that I had not done for months. "I'll be back at the bench in a few days and will tell the boys that I probably would never have been with them again if it hadn't been for Tanlac." All of the nerves of the hnman anatomy center In the human stomach. Inside this organ lies the great pneumogastrlo nerve. All others are its tributaries and are dependent on this great storage plant to supply them with virility. Nerve weakness begins in the stomach. Teniae is delicately adapted to the needs of this organ. Tanlac is a vegetable stomach food and Its nutritive properties build up stomach strength on f which nerve strneglh will be restored. A good .stomach guarantees nerve security. - Tanlac is for sale at the four Thistlethwaite drug stores. Adv.

HARRISON'S

(Westcott Pharmacy.) Westcott Hotel Bldg. Richmond, Ind.

Drawn from a Photograph of Miss Spencer and the Edison.

He

Proof

Some people have felt that our clai mwas exaggerated when we stated that the Edison Diamond Disc Phonograph would actu- - ally re-create music exactly like the original. After the perform- . ance described below, such doubts will entirely vanish. Last Monday night at a recital in the Riley Room of the Claypool Hotel, Indianapolis, Miss Elizabeth Spencer, the famous concert soprano, stood beside an Edison Diamond Disc Phonograph and sang. At intervals she stopped and tfie Edison continued the song. Only by looking could that audience of critical music lovers tell when Miss Spencer was singing and when it was the Edison's re-creation of her voice. Their ears could not tell the difference. She sang a duet with a record of her voice on the Edison, stopping occasionally to let the Edison continue alone. The tone was exactly . alike in every way. ' ( During Miss Spencer's rendition of "Silver Threads Among the Gold," the lights were suddenly turned off. When they flashed on again a great chorus of surprise arose from the audience. Miss Spencer had left the stage; her voice re-created by the Edison was singing, and not a single person in that audience of 2,000 knew the difference! I was one of the 2,000 stop in and let me tell you about it. Could any stronger proof be possible? Could you conceive of a more severe test of tone quality? The New Edison Diamond Disc Phonograph has proven conclusively all we have claimed for it,-- -that it is the one instrument which

actually re-creates music. a Mr. Edison has achieved perfect re-creation of music through a Diamond Stylus reproducer and a new method of recording. All the delicate overtones, all the finer shadings are recorded and reproduced, giving the re-creation the same warmth, richness and mellowness as the original. r, Incidentally, the fact that there are no needles to change on the Edison and that the records never wear out will increase your pleasure in the Edison.

free

Concerts

Baily

Public concerts are given in our Edison Section every day, from 1 to 9 . m. Come in and hear thi marvelous new instrument for yourself. You are always welcome.

is

mm is -sjjjb- "sssaaaB2

The Official Laboratory Model.

HARRISON

WESTCOTT PHARMACY Westcott Hotel Building

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