Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 324, 29 October 1919 — Page 6

HE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 29, 1919.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Published Every Evening: Ejccept Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. TfcTIadlum Bnfldins, North Ninth and Sailor Street. -Enteral at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, aa Second Cl&sb Mall Matter.

KBMBEB OF TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS The Assootited lr 1b xclustvelr entitled t the u tor republication of all news dtcp&tchea credited to tt of no otherwise credited In this paper and also the local ttrnwu published herein. All right- or republlcatloa of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Government Cost Increasing at Alarming Rate The expenses of the federal government are increasing at such an alarming rate that, unless stringent methods are adopted to curtail the outflow of money, the burden will soon become an onerous one for the people of this country. Representative Williams of Illinois recently offered lo the House the results of an investigation rwhich he had made. W "We find that from 1877 down to 1917," fcaid Mr. Williams, "a period of forty years, the expenditures for operation of the federal governpnent have increased more than 500 per cent. ?This certainly is a most startling fact, and if the rsame ratio of increase obtains the next forty .years we will find congress appropriating annualily something like $20,000,000,000." These figures do not include the expenditures j caused by the Wrorld war. Going back to the j Hayes administration, Mr. Williams showed the country had a population of 45,000,000, while the

(appropriations of congress for the year 1877

fwere only $88,356,983.1?. The next year the appropriations increased to $172,016,809.21. The I total appropriations for the four years of the Hayes administration were $578,609,236.42. Ap

propriations in the next four year period amounted to $756,370,081.37. The appropriations in President Cleveland's first administration were $818,323,530.53; in President Harrison's four years the expenditures had increased to $1,134,331,204.87; Mr. Cleveland's second administration cost $1,226,644,157.19, an increase of $92,312,952.32 over the Harrison period. Owing to the Spanish-American war, the McKinley administration rolled up appropriations amounting to $1,902,894,744.42. Appropriations

in the first Roosevelt administration were $1,897,811,351.83, while his second term showed $2,221,931,711.46. During the administration of President Taft the total appropriations were $2,563,849,210.84, an increase of $341,917,499.38. In the first administration of President Wilson the appropriations reached $3,216,841,728.11, an increase of $652,992,512.27. These figures do not include the large sums of money spent in the last two years. During the war, the American people did not criticize the expenditure of its money. With the signing of the armistice the need for curtailment became apparent. Today the people will not tolerate a wholesale expenditure of the public funds. The time is here when economy must be practiced in the national household as it is in the private home. Government officials are inconsistent in urging the people to save and practice thrift while the public funds are being expended with no thought of the consequences. The people must pay the appropriations voted by congress. We cannot go on indefinitely spending money without providing adequate sources for the revenue, and this can come only by bond issues and taxation. The point has been reached whene the people will not favor great bond issues or submit to further taxation. The place to stop the necessity for increased taxation and bond issues is congress where the appropriations are made.

What'

s in a

Name?"

Facts ahout your name: its history; its meaning: whence it was derived: its siifiiifli;aru:e; your lucky day and lucky jewel. BY MILDRED MARSHALL

JOAN Joan la the frminine counterpart of John and yet It has never had the common vogue of that most popular of male proper, names. Joan signifies "gift of the Lord" and there is considerable question a,s to whether its origin was English or Teutonic.

At any event, the name first made !

its appearance as Joanna and is said to .have originated with Joanna, holy woman of the Gospel. She was never canonized, so it is believed that the name was adopted rather in honor of one of the Saint Johns than as a tribute to her, particularly as there are thirty feasts of Saint John on the Roman calendar and only two in honor of Joanna. In the Twelfth Century, the name "began to be used with inexplicable frequency in southern France, when ladies named Juana in Spanish, and Jehanne or Jeanne In France married into every royal family of the time. The first English princess so called, was the daughter of Henry II; indeed, almost every king had a daughter, Joan or Jhone. Joan Makepeace was the name given to the daughter of Edward II. when, the long war with the Bruces was

:partly pacified by her marriage. An-! .-tthct- f-tmniia Tn-.in wi lri'-in Poan. I UP

fnrt 1liD m'lMon mmnnfirnllv Holnvorl ' parcel

by the captive James I. as his widow, ehe so fiercely revenged his death, it will be recalled. Curiously enough, Hannah is derived from Joan through the German fav

orite peasant name, Johanna. Hanna, however. i3 purely English. For a time, Joan, favorite name of queens, lost vogue in England and descended to the cottage and Kitchen. It became the class name for domestics, and in this day of servant problems, one might well understand how it came to mean "gift of the Lord." Joan's talismanic jewel is the heliotrope or bloodstone. It is an opaque stone, deep green In color, and sprinkled with red jasper as with blood. It promises stanch affection and true love for the wearer, whose lucky day is Saturday and whose mustic number is 4.

Dinner Stories

He was going home and it was growing dark. His road from the station was a lonely one, and he was getting along as fast as he could when ho suddenly suspected that a man behind was following him purposely. The faster he went the faster the man followed until they came to a churchyard. "Now,' he said to himself, "I'll find out if he's after me," and he entered

j the churchyard. The man followed ! him. Vague visions of revolvers and j loaded clubs grew upon him. Ho

tjuvj iuuuu eL fcidvo anu ilia puiauci dodged after him. He made a detour of a family vault. Still the man was after him. At last he turned and faced the fellow. "What do you want? What are yon iollowing me for?" "Well, sir, it's like this. I'm go!n3

to Mr. Fitzbrown's house with a

and the porter at the station

told me if I followed you I should rind the pHce, as you live next door. Do you always go home like this?"

Esmeralda sat in her bower the top back bedroom and gazed at a por-

The Grip Of

Man's Hand ; Find Strength or Weakness

.What Does Your Grip Show?

you the firm, forceful power of a

man wnose mood is nch in iron the

kind that inspires confidence and wins

success or have you the feeble, hesitating clasp of a weakling

vrnose cicoa neeas iron C j uxated Iron builds 6trong, keen, red-

blooded men and women.

If you aro not strong or well, yoa owa

ii iu juuiku in start taicmg IVuxated

u" iwuaj aua waica 1U strength.

Syiag, .pbuilding effect. In two weeks

( ' . m ' rtu. V "..-., ... i

!s!

vrt.

-CvVlN. W J Vf ' VI nfe yourself A Ji&MtJt. Vf r!?i njount of

trait. It represented a very ordinary young man; but Esmeralda thought him otherwise. "But do I love him?" she asked herself. "Is this really love or merely a sisterly affection?" Just then the door burst open and her young brother arrived like a whirlwind. Without a moment's pause, Esmeralda took him by the ear and threw him out. Then she sat down before the photograph again. . "No," she said, with a sigh. "My love for Arthur is not a sisterly affair it is something higher, gentler than that!"

Good Evening BY ROY K. MOULTON

REJECTED. Over in Jersey On a car Coming down From Coytesville We sat behind Some movie people And an elderly

THE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DAILY TALK FOR NO REASON IN THE WORLD, EXCEPT It is fin that we do not have to buy everything with money. It is splendid that most of the great things in the world you couldn't buy with money if you wanted to. The desire to work intelligently and well, for instance. The real achiever works for no reason in the world except that he loves to work and that he finds a constant revelation of himself being made because of work. Lots of people are happy for no reason in the world except that they like to be happy, and because It pays everybody, including themselves, to be that way. Let the sunshine into your heart, be good, 6mile your broadest smile, put your real soul into the tasks you perform, be patient, believe, have faith be true to your ideals for no reason in the world except that it's the most natural and mo6t wonderful thing to do. How few there are that take advantage of the chance to do things Just because they are going to get nothing else out of them but pure pleasure in the end. A great marry people 6pend all their lives trying not to act human because they are afraid that it may cost them money or position or something. But I believe that the large majority of thoughts and acts may be worked out for no reason in the world except that the process is going to make us better and if we are made better, then everybody within our radius is going to be made better. Don't you think this about the right sort of philosophy to live by?

Richmond High School football team defeated Liberty 60 to 0. j Dr. Albert O. Martin, M. P. Sharkey, i Jesse Miner and H. Watson, all local j

men. were among the winners in the allotment of land in the Standing Rock and Cheyenne River Indian Reservations by the government

There are several rivers in Siberia that flow over beds of 6olid ice.

Clem "I histiethwaite's, Ricnmond, Ina

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.

Bearded man Got on and one Of the actors Got up and gave Him a seat and Started a conversation. "I'm not as young As I was." the old gent Was saying, "I'm eighty-seven." And the actor asked If he had been in The Civil War. "No, I was rejected!" He repled. "The army Doctors 6ald I had Heart trouble and Couldn't live long But here I am and They are all dead." Looks as though there wont be much left of China 5,000 years from now. A 6idelight on the servant problem is furnished by E. K.. who has sent the following want ad., discovered in the New York "Herald": "SITUATIONS WANTED by a couple as cook and butler or mouseman." We are wondering if the mouseman takes the place of the family cat.

We presume a "quiet" wedding in high society is ono without police interference. "When in Silks Our Vera Goes." You can see right through some girls when the sun Is shining. But what we started to say was that Vera Clere lives in Syracuse, N. Y. King Alfonso is visiting Paris. But it is all right. Friend wife is with him.

Walter Pulitzer says the difference between a ship seen out on the ocean and a pretty girl on a street car is that one is sighted at sea and the other is seated at sight.

Memories of Old Days

This Papep Ten Years Ago Today

In

Dr. Charles S. Bond, of this city, was elected president of the Union

R

IEUMA1

CAN NOT

BE CURED

BY

RUBBING WITH LINIMENTS AND OINTMENTS.

eortc

Sold in this city by A. G. Luken and Thistlethwaite's Drug Store

If you are one of the manythousand victims of torturing Rheumatism, make up your mind today that you will bandon your efforts to rub the disease awav with liniments, lo

tions, ointments, and local appli-jmany forms of Rheumati&m are

"A few years &go I suffered from a severo attack of articular Rheumatism that "rendered me almost helpless. By the use of tha usuaj external remedies 1 was abl to Check the paia somewhat, but did not regain the full use of my ltmba. ajid oa cloudy days or when axpoaod to dampntss or cold I would immediately suffer from stiff and aching joiuta. I besraoi to take S. S. S. and all symptoms at once began to disappear, until now I havo no fear of exposure to the worst sort of weather. I feel it my duty to recommend S. S. S. to all who wish to free themselves frora the torturing- clutohes of Rheumatism." Physicians now agree that

cations. Such treatment by itself is not only futile and devoid of results, but is a waste of time, during which the disease is getting a firmer hold on your System. Rheumatism is a stubborn disease. It is not on the surface, therefore you must not expect to be able to cure it with remedies applied to the surface. No one ever yet effected a permanent cure in this way, so why should you continue to suffer while relying upon treatment that has failed in thousands of cases? The experience of others afflicted with Rheumatism is your best guide, and by following their advice you can not only save yourself untold suffering,

but .rid yourself of a disease that

caused by a germ in the blood. The pain is not the disease itself, but merely a symptom nature'3

warning to you that you have been attacked. The only intelligent treatment, therefore, is through the blood; treatment directed toward eliminating the disease germ from the blood. For years nearly all the prescriptions used by the medical profession were those containing iodide of potash or mercurial substances, but in nearly every case these minerals are more injurious to the system than the disease itself. One reason why S. S. S. is so successful in the treatment of Rheumatism and other blood disorders is the fact that it is a purely vegetable remedy, being made from roots and herbs

aVS lveTou hd" !-n-every victim of Rheumatism has ' f sSf0acCe' ?fLa ctiJ d3" practically the same experience. j They are so impressed with the purities. S. S. S. has been on

pains ana sunermg 01 tne ais- the market for fifty years, and

ease ana are so anxious to get rid of them that they have treated the pains alone, and overlooked their cause. They have rubbed with liniments, lotions and ointments in an effort to get temporary relief, with no chance of doing themselves any permanent good. Such was the experience of Mr. Caspus Bibb, of 2424 Tenth Avenue, Bessemer, Ala., who writes to tell how he found relief from this terrible affliction.

He says;

almost every druggist has sold it ever since he has been in business. It is sold under an absolute guarantee that it is purely vegetable. Our medical department is maintained for the benefit of the afflicted, and if you will write fully about your case you will be given complete advice as to the treatment necessary for your individual case, for which no charge is made. Address Swift Specific Co., 405 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. Adv.

District Medical Society, which held sessions in Rushville. Richmond women succeeded in landing the 1910 convention of the State Federation of Women's Clubs, which Just closed at South Bend.

Many School Children are Sickly

and take cold easily, are feverish and constipated, hara headaches, stomach or bowel trouble. MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN

Used by Mothers for over 30 years Are pleasant to take and a certaia relief. They tend to break up a cold in 24 hours, act on the Stomach, Liver and Bowels and tend to correct intestinal disorders and destroy worms. 10,000 testimonials like the following from mothers and friends of children telling of relief. Originals are on file in our offices t

"I think MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POW. DERS YOU CHILrKN are grand. Thpy were recommended to my ligrer by a doctor. I m giving tberr. to n. j little three v?r oid girl who was vory Duet, and i.e it picking ua wonderfully."

'Wo bar used MOTHER GHAT'S SWEET POWDKHS iOR CHIL&P.EN a: d.fferect times for past rire yer. ard always foand them a perfect chiidreu's znedicuie and very aausfactoiy m every case."

Get a package from your druggist for use when needed. Do Not Accept Any Substitute for MOTHER CRAY'S SWEIT POWDERS.

A 4 tj

AO

tmr&.

larraiit

ed iiis

J

na

we

IHEN ADMIRAL FARRAGUT lishtened his

ships to lead them boldly over a treacherous Mississippi River bar and fight the great

batde of New Orleans, he worked without ceasing for ten nights and days, eating and sleeping when and where he could. His shaving had to be postponed. Yet no amount of physical or mental work could dull the fighting edge of the man who said "Damn the torpedoes go ahead!" and the razor that he used was like him time-tested in principle keen-tempered, dependable perfectly balanced. If Farragut's razor lacked any modem feature, it was simply the .. extra convenience . and . safety of the guarded and two-edged

A Mml Baotmade Safe

In every time-poven shaving: principle, the same as the razor Farragut rand your own falhejr used, tsith th: addition of a guard to save your face and a two-edged blade to give you double shaving mileage. This blade, furthermore. i3 the longest, srroneest.

keenest, best-tempexed blade on earth. Don't discard it when dulled. You can strop it you can hone it. Don't throw good steel away. Go to your dealer today and you'H see why seven million men have changed from other razors to this real razor made afe.

m

THESE LEADING DEALERS SELL THEM:

CONKEY DRUG CO, 901 Main J. F. HORN ADAY, 616 Mala IRVIN REED &. SON, 631 Main JONES HDW. CO., N. 1Cth & E A. G. LUKEN . CO., 630 Wain T F. McDCNNELL. 720 Main QUIGLEY'S (4) DRUG STORES W. H. ROSS DRUG CO., 712 Main TH ISTLETH WAITE'S (6) Drug Stores H. H. TOLER. 1500 Main HARRISON PHARMACY. Westcott Hotel Bldg. OUT OF TOWN DEALERS B. A. CARPENTER, Cambridge City, Ind. B. F. WISSLER HDW. CO., Cambridge City, Ind. S. T. DRUMMOND &. SON, Camden, Ohio ALBERT McFADDIN, Castine, O. W. J. SHUMAKER, Castine, O. J. M. GRISBY &. CO., Centerville, Ind. H. E. JOHNSTON, Centerville, Ind. J. C. BASKLEY, College Corner, O. MOORE & MOORE, College Corner, O. C. B. COKEFAIR, Eaton.-O. G. T. HOOVER, Eaton, O.

O. H. MAST IN, Eldorado, O. C. E. SHEWMAN, Eldorado, O. F. D. PALMER, Fountain City, Ind. A. T. PEGG. Fountain City, Ind. J. E. ENGELKEY, Greenville, O. J. H. STONECIPHER, Hagerstown, Ind. STANLEY'S HDW. STORE, Hagerstown, Ind. F. M. WH ITESELL, Hagerstown. Ind R. B. WORL, Hagerstown, Ind. L. S. BRANDENBURG, Lewisburg, O. J. A. BERTCH & SON, Liberty, Ind. O. B. MARTIN, Liberty, Ird. MRS. MINNIE PHARES, Liberty, Ind H. G. RICHARDSON, Liberty, Ind. W. R. H ALLI DAY, Lynn, Ind. J. G. MARTIN. Lynn, Ird. C. C. WILLIAMS &, SON. Lynn, Ind. W. H. BROWN, New Madison, O. L. A. ELIKER. New Madiso,i. O. C. H. HARRIS, New Paris, O. J. W. REINHEIMER . SON. New Paris, O. J. E. MILFORD, Union City, ind. TIBBETTS & FOUTS. Union City. Ind.

If you are a Durham-Duplex dealer and wish to have your name a-ided to the above list in subsequent advertisements, send your name and address to this newspaper and write the- Durham-Duplex Razor Co., for a free window display.

ONE DOLLAR COMPLETE Greatest Shaving Mileage at Any Price Ti contain a Durham-Duplex Razor with an attract! w hue hanule. safety guard, stropping attachment and package ol 3 Durham-Duplex double-edged blades (6 sharing edges) all in a haadaoxnc leather kit. Get it from your dealer or from us direct Additional blades 50 cents for a package of 5 DURHAM-DUPLEX RAZOR CO. 190 BALDWIN AVENUE. JERSEY CITY. N. J.

CANADA SO Peorl Street Torosto

ENGLAND 27 CKorcK St.

FRANCE

56 Rns oa Paradja. Pari,