Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 90, 2 March 1916 — Page 4
uiCin.xOirirMnaiOIX-ANlJUNriELEGRAM, THURSDAY, MCH. 2, 1916.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TgLEGRAM
Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Sts. R. G. Leeds,, Editor. E. H". Harris. Mgr.
In Richmond, 10 cents a .week. By mall. In advance one year, $5.00; six months, $2.60: one month. 45 cents. Rural Routes, in advance one year. $2.00; six months, $1.25; one month. 25 cents. '
Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Second Class Mall Matter.
Confidence. . The railroads want the confidence of the public. The days when public rights and wishes were ruthlessly ignored are gone. Today the transportation lines are pleading to know the wishes of the people. The Pennsylvania railroad has been very active in this movement. Robert C. Wright, freight traffic manager of the Pennsylvania railroad, addressing the Traffic club of Baltimore, recently, said in part : "Some time ago the Pennsylvania railroad displayed on bulletin boards all over its system large posters asking the people to give the management the benefit of their advice. The responses to that bulletin were very interesting. A great many, of course, dealt with some personal' grievance, butfor the most part they showed a most helpful spirit on the part of the public. The
railroad issued that poster in all seriousness, and
it was met in the same vein. This shows that the public is tolerant if it understands. "We want the people along our lines to know that the Pennsylvania railroad is doing everything it can to give the best service possible and to encourage the business of the territory through which it operates, and of the country at large. We want all the advices, and assistance we can get from our people. We want the public
I to understand, and to believe in, the manage
ment of this railroad. We . think they will, because the management of the Pennsylvania
railroad believes in the public.
"The thing that is needed in our business life, and which I might say has been lacking the last few years, and the thing which is particularly necessary in the relations between the carriers and the public, is confidence. "The railroad companies have been urged to take the public into their confidence, but , they can't take the public into their confidence until the public has confidence in them. I have tried it and I know. "You tell a man your cards are all on the table and try to take him into your confidence, but unless he has confidence in you he suspects that there are some aces up your sleeve. "The first step in mutual confidence between the carriers and the public is to restore the public's confidence in the carriers. I realize perfectly that the public's lack of confidence in the railroads has been more or less justified in the past, due to the practices of the carriers, but let
by-gones be by-gones. We must look ahead, not behind. It is unfair , to refer continually to the abuses of times gone past, in an effort to keep alive hostility toward the railroads. 'There is still oo much of an effort to make personal capital out of throwing rocks at a railroad ; it is a cheap amusement, and often it wins the plaudits of the multitude, but is it fair ? Is it conductive to that restoration of mutual con
fidence, which, I believe, is so necessary in solving the railroad problem?" ; A Good Word for the Hyphens. The Chicago Tribune has steered a sane course in its opinions on international and national affairs of the last few years. Its attitude toward alien born citizens has been eminently fair. Capt. Henry J. Reilly conducts a department in that paper in which he answers questions pertaining to military and naval affairs. Here's a question and his answer: C. E. H. writes: "Can you give me some information which I could use in a talk on the
loyalty and patriotism of the foreign American?
REPLY. It is difficult to get any statistics with respect to the numbers of men of foreign birth who have fought in our army and navy during our various wars. The number, however, has always been considerable, starting with our revolutionary war. History, of course, tells of some of the prominent men such as Kosciusko and Baron von Steuben. There were in addition a considerable
number of men of foreign birth who fought in the ranks of both our army and navy during the revolution, while many of the ancestors of some of those Americans who today are accusing the so-called hyphenated Americans of a lack of loyalty because they disagree with them as to
the present European war, were entertaining the British officers occupying New York and other
points. In the civil war practically the whole of the Eleventh Army corps was made up of GermanAmericans. Meagher's brigade was wholly Irish. A large part of the Iron brigade, so-called because of the splendid determination it displayed in the
battles, was made up of men who today would be called hyphens. Throughout the army and navy at this period could be found citizens of foreign birth by the thousands. It is unfortunate that no exact record has been kept of their numbers. The highest test of patriotism is a willingness to risk one's life for one's country. The only way to prove this willingness is to do so on the battlefield in times of war. The man of f oreicrn birth !
who does this proves himself a better American than the one whose ancestors came over on the Mayflower, but in time of trouble does not take this risk. Actions should speak louder than words. At the present time in this country the chief criterion of patriotism seems to be ability to abuse those who do not agree with you on the European war.
Tanner Daily Puzzles
SUPPER PROCEEDS GO TO GOSHEN CEMETERY
MIDDLEBORO, Ind., March 2. Middleboro and community and every one interested in the Goshen decoration are invited to attend and help at the Middleboro school bouse Saturday evening, March 4, with a basket social rnd oyster supper. All young women are especially asked to bring baskets. . . . .Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Cook spent Sunday afternoon with friends in Richmond.... Mr. and Mrs. Will, Duke visited with Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Thomas and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Thomas Sunday afternoon Will Duke moved his family Tuesday to his farm southwest of Centerville Mrs. Nancy Hawkins of this place, who is spending the winter with her son Oscar, in Elwood, is very bad sick Isaac Brook, Jr., Is sick Mr. and Mrs. Norman Kirkman and daughter, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Patti and family, all of Richmond spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Russell Clark Mr. and Mrs. Joe Reid .and daughter Halcia. were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Reid, of Whitewater, Sunday.
KRUPPS ARE BUSY.
THE VACANT CHAIR. , Dear girl, we'd whisper in your ear, The one you wait is hidden near. And if a stouter chair were shown ' We think he'd make his presence known. Then take our tip, it's offered free Go get another chair and see; Most any-kind or style will do. Just so its strong enough for two. Find her lean. ANSWER TO YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE. Upside down at right shoulder.
Philomath Events
By Gertrude McCashland.
Mrs. Daniel Plankenhorn spent Tuesday with her sister, Misses Nettie and Cora Shadel, near Centerville Word was received here Thursday of the birth of a son William Otis to Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Manley in Richmond. Mrs. Manley is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. B. McCashland Mr. and Mrs. Roy Rodenberg spent Sunday with the latter's parents Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Garrett near Milton. Mrs. Rodenberg remained this week to assist them in moving to their new home near Robinson Chapel.. . . .M. B. McCashland and daughter Gertrude, were shopping in Liberty Tuesday Henry Plankenhorn and Mrs. Lizzie Waiting left Thursday for a visit with their brother Joseph .Plankenhorn, in Illinois, who
is ill Ora Hendrix made a business trip to Centerville Wednesday Willard Rodenberg and son Charles, spent Sunday with John, Mary and Laura Rodenberg.
Government meat inspection costs
each resident of the country 4 cents a
year.
PETR'OG RAD, March 2. German prisoners say the Krupps have established, a branch at Shavli, 125 miles west of Dvinsk. They are employing
there men of the neighborhood and many French prisoners, who are
forced to work.
VETERANS WANT HALL . IN COURT BUILDING
EATON, 0 March 2. Planning the preservation of relics of the Civil war period, members of Mulharen-O'Cain Post, G. A, R., have asked the commissioners to provide quarters in the county's new $250,000 courthouse. The Post seeks a room for meeting pur. poses and the proper display of r el tan now in ias possession. A committee representing the organization was given an audience by the commissioners a few days ago.
Proper Treatment for Biliousness. For a long time Miss Lulu Skelton. Church vilie, N. y was bilious and hal sick headache and dizzy spells. Chamberlain's Tablets were the only thing that gave her permanent relief. Obtainable everywhere. Adv.
Leather waste enters into the com
position of much of the best wall pa per. ,
GRAY HAIR BECOMES
DARK, THICK, GLOSSY Try Grandmother's Old Favorite
Recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur.'
: Women at War! !
Snapshots of New Paris
Miss Osa Kordel of Hamilton, O., at- . tended the meeting of the B. G. I. C,
Friday evening and was the guest of
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Reid, returning hone Saturday.... .Paul McPherson was the Saturday and Sunday, guest of his cousin, Harvey Wilson, at Richmond Mrs. C. E. Guild of Wheelins;, W. Va., came Saturday and returned homo Tuesday, being the guests of Mrs. XV. L. Hahn and Miss Carrie Whitakcr. Mrs. Guild , was enroute home from a visit with her father and sister at Elwood, Ind Word has been received from Chris. E. Markey stating that he h:js made a most pleasnnt visit to the Hawalan Islands, and speaks of viewing the great crater of the volcano, Klleauea. which covers i eight acres, and which at the time he saw it was a seething mass of hot lava Local friends will be interest-!
ed in knowing of. the marriage of Miss Gladys Irene Duffield, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James F. Duffield.
to Andrew J. Smith. Rev. C. A. Hunter
performed the ceremony Wednesday
evening Miss Mayme Smith of
Richmond, spent the week-end with local relatives and friends P. F. McNeill traveling salesman spent the week-end with his family Curtis Baumgardner, Sr., has made the purchase of the W. W. Aker property on Lincoln f-treet.. .Lorrene, small daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Reid. is seriously 111 with pneumonia Mrs. W. L. Hahn entertained Saturday in honor of Mrs. C. E. Guild of Wheeling, XV. Va., the guests being Mrs. Charles McGuire-nnd Miss Ora White of Richmond, Mesdames Edward R. Clark, John W. Cook and A. J. Murray and
Miss Carrie Wbitaker. .Telegrams of regret were road from Miss Frances Means of Kokomo, Ind., and Mrs. Fan
nie Wright of Indianapolis, who were unable to be present at the luncheon which was arranged without the guests having knowledge of the presence of the honor guest, Mrs. Guild. A most delightful day was spent by the ladies, who were school mates and girlhood friends and have continued their friendships through the years which have intervened Misses Helen and Katherine Davis, Elma and Margretta Horner of Richmond, attended the regular meeting of the B. G. I. C. Friday evening, the voune ladiPR
being charter members of the club.
her father was 89 years old. One of her sisters died at the age of 100 and another at 102.
One Spoonful Gives : Astonishing Results Richmond residents are astonished at the QUICK results from the simple mixture of buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., known as Adler-i-ka. This remedy acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel and is so THOROUGH a bowel cleanser that it is sued successfully in appendicitis. ONE SPOONFUL of Adler-i-ka relieves almost ANY CASE of constipation, sour or gassy stomach. ONE MINUTE after you take it, the gasses rumble and pass out. C. Thistlethwaite, Druggist. Adv.
We do not mean the Amazons, the
dynamiters, nor the militants.
But those good women so dear to
our hearts who make our homes for us. These wholesome folks have a treaty
with cleanliness that keeps them ever
at war against dirt and uncleanliness
in all its forms.
Soap, if you work hard enough with it, will make things clean, but it won't
kill germs!
Borax mixed in proportion with soap
will make the soap work better and your work easier. Also borax kills germs. ' -
So that by using borax soap chips you get things clean with less work than by the old methods and you also
get tnem antiseptic.
25c worth of "20 Mule Team Borax
soap Cnips" will give you more clean
liness with less work than 50c worth
of bar soap or washing powders. Adv,
USE COOPER'S BLEND Cofifiee COOPER'S GROCERY
FAMILY LIVES LONG.
FOR fLAND, Ind.. March 2. Mrs
Lydia Simmons, 80, is one of the few
living real daughters of the American
revolution. Mrs. Simmons is the
daughter of William Clin, a revolution
ary soldier, who died in 1853, at the
age of 106. At the time of her birth
DRINK HOT TEA FOR A BAD COLD
OUCH! BACKACHE! RUB LUMBAGO OR STIFFNESS AWAY Rub pain from back with small trial bottle of old, penetrating "St, Jacob's Oil."
When your back is sore and lame or lumbago, sciatica or . rheumatism has you stiffened up, don't suffer! Get a small trial bottle of old, honest "St.
Jacobs vju" at any drug store, pour a. little in your hand and rub it right on your aching back, and by the time you count fifty, the soreness and lameness is gone. Don't stay crippled! This soothing, .penetrating oil needs to be used only once. It takes the pain right out and ends the misery. It is magical, yet absolutely harmless and doesn't burn the skin. 4 'Nothing else stops lumbago; sciatica.
bnckarhc or rhcumst ism so pro: -tly. i
Get a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea, or as the German folks
call it, "Hamburger Brust Thee," at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling water upon It, pour through a sieve and drink
a teacup full at any time. It is the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores,
relieving congestion. Also loosens
tne ooweis, thus breaking a cold at
once. It is inexpensive and entirely vege table, therefore harmless. Adv.
mm
MBIT
RELIABLE HOME TREATMENT Thousands of wives, mothers and sisters are enthusiastic in their praise of ORRINE, because it has cured their loved ones of the "Drink Habit" and thereby brought happiness to their homes. Can be given secretly. ORRINE costs only 1.00 per box. Ask for free booklet. A. G. Luken & Co., 630 Main street
HOW ARE YOU FIXED?
hi& lumiL njrfcwv a, Boalt Cdwwtib. If you want to buy a home it is best to first have enough money piled up in the bank to buy it. Then you can buy it, and it will really belong to you. You must have money in the bank to support any enterprise you may undertake. BANK WITH US We Will Keep Your Money Safe for You WE PAY 3 PER CENT INTEREST ON SAVINGS. SccdDidl Nation "Richmond's Strongest Bank."
Almost everyone knows that Sage
Tea and Sulphur, properly compounded, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when fad 3d, streaked
or gray; also ends dandruff. Itching
scalp and stops falling hair. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome.
, Nowadays we simply ask at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound." You will get a large bottle for about SO cents. Everybody uses this old, famous recipe, because no one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, and after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark thick and glossy and yea look years younger. AC-.
A Medicine That Overcomes Most Obstinate Kidney Troubles About 1904 I was bothered about two years with a severe attack of kidnev trouble. My condition was such that I was hardly able to drag around the house and do my work. I did not have any appetite and could not rest at night and I felt more tired in the morning than I did on going to bed. My doetor treated me for about one month; he said that I bad kidney trouble, but he did not give me any relief. By chance one day my husband was in
town and noticed Dr. Kilmer's SwampRoot on a druggist's shelf and decided to bring some home for me to try; the first bottle gave such relief that I continued the use of Swamp-Root until I was restored to good health, and I have good health for the last ten years. I cheerfully recommend Swamp-Root to others who have kidney troubles, Yours truly, - MINNIE DOROUGH. Antlers, Okla. Personally appeared before me this first day of March, 1915, Minnie Dorough. who subscribed the above statement and made oath that the same is true in substance and in fact. y Ed. Brown, Notary Public. In and for Pushmatha County and State of Okla.
Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co, Binghamton N. Y.
Prove What Swamp-Root WT1I Do Foi You Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer. A Co., Binghamton, N. Y.. for a sample size botUe. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable Informa
tion telling all about tbe kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and
pnention the Richmond Daily Palla
dium. RegvJjr fifty-cent and one-dollar
kize bottle, for sale at all drug stores. Adv. . 1
DR. E. J. DYKEMAN, DENTIST
10th & Main
New painless method of extracting, etc All work guaranteed. Every ings by appointment.
I . m i , i i VEGETABLE CALOMEL
Vegetable calomel, extract of the root of the old-fashioned may-apple plant, does not salivate. As a liver stimulator, it's great. It's a perfect substitute for ordinary calomel (mercury); in fact, it's better, because its action is gentle instead of severe and irritating and it leaves no mean, disagreeable aftereffects. Physicians recognize this and prescribe may-apple root (podophyllin, they call it) daily. Combined with four other standard, all-vegetable remedies, mayapple root may now be had at most any druggist's in convenient sugarcoated tablet form by asking for Sentanel Laxatives. If you forget the name, ask for the box that has thepicture of the soldier on it. These tablets are small, easy to take and are really wonderful little performers. They quickly clean out the poisons that are causing you headache, constipation, sour stomach, biliousness, dizzy spells, bad breath and coated tongue. They are mild. They never gripe. And they are a bowel tonic as well as a cleanser and liver regulator. A 10c box should last one several weeks. A Physician's trial package (4 doses) will be mailed you free if you write mentioning this advertisement. The Sentanel Remedies Co., 802 Madison Ave., Covington, Ky.
i
J dentist yy twice yearly. JY UseSenreco r twice daily " and keep
your teeth
and mouth
in
health
Get tube today, read tbe folder about the Boat general disease in tbe world. Start the Senreco treatment tonight. 25c at your drasgista. For ample send 4c stamps or coin, to Tbe Sentanel Remedies Cft CI nrlnoatl. Ohio.
A
dentists Formula
C
Mrs. Mary Hennegan Opens Ladies' Cloak and Suit Parlors Mrs. Mary Hennegan for over four years head fitter at the Palais Royal, wishes to announce that she has opened a new Cloak and Suit Parlor in Rooms 404-405, the Colonial Building. New Spring samples are now ready and Mrs. Hennegan would be pleased to take your measure for your Spring Cloak or Suit,' and guarantees a perfect made garment at the price you would pay for a read-made. Alterations are made at a reasonable sum. A call at any time would be most appreciated. MRS MARY HENNEGAN Rooms 404-405 Colonial Building.
i a
V1
' - 1 i-l ml
Good teeth are an absolute necessity, and we make their possession possible. All our work Is practicality painless. Highest Grade Plates $5.00 to (3X0 Best Gold Crowns ..........$3X0 to $4X0 Best Bridge Work $3X0 to $4X0 Best Gold Fillings $1X0 up Best Silver Fillings ..fxo up We Extract Teeth Painlessly. NEW YORK DENTAL PARLOR " Over Union National Bank, Eighth and Main streets. Elevator entrance on South Eighth street. Stair entrance cn Main ftreet.
It r.evci' ClSLji.ctM . '. Adv-
