Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 326, 31 October 1919 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

HE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, OCT. 3i, 1919.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. re.lfc.dlum Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streeta. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, aa Seoond Clasr. Mall Matter.

"In that case the man commanding the whole army would not have had properly transmitted the information he needed to direct it. Suppose the liasion officer connecting the 1st and

2nd divisions had been captured on outpost duty .

with his maps. Suppose one division found that it was losing its balloons, although they were on j

j the line where they had been ordered. Suppose :

a German had been taken with information,! which might be a lure or the truth, indicating a ,

local attack to be made in a particular place. Suppose supply movement by freight was passing through a depot under heavy fire and being demoralized and the question was whether to deflect it by motor trucks. Suppose the divisional relief was twenty-four hours late. "Suppose any or all of the administrative questions which are involved in the execution of a military movement found the administrator, the general in command, in a dugout at the front. Means of communication would be the most hazardous and devious which could txTcontrived to make transmission difficult, long delayed, or impossible. He could neither get reports nor give orders efficiently. "It is not a question of the general's personal freedom from danger that is raised here. It is his ability to be where he can do his work. Upon the direction which information makes possible depends the safety of thousands of men and the results of the enterprise. "The congressional Mr. Bland and all the other Mr. Elands think it important that a gen

eral occasionally should permit himself the

pleasure of quitting his duty and making a dash at the enemy at the head of the heavy dragoons. "Ppr shiner's hprnism is intprpsfino- nnlv r

" . , I Gear and family ... .Mr. and Mrs. M neurotics, tie was not m France to be a hero. b. McCashiand were in town Tues

He was there to command an army. His military

MEMBER OP TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS Th Associated Press Is sxclunlvely entitled t the jam fr republication of all newt dlcpatches credited to It o '.jot otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rlffhts.of republication ot clal dispatches herein are also reserved. Congressional Hat Racks "Congressman Bland, who was the member of a small congressional group in France politely dismissed by Gen. Pershing with the intimation that it was meddlesome, says that the general was not near the front," remarks the Chicago Tribune. " 'I found him 200 miles from the front on July 19, 1918, when the battle of Chateau Thierry was at its height.' "An editorial admirer of Mr. Bland's remarks says that the heroism of Gen. Pershing is the toy balloon of the American people and it is cruel to ftick a pin in it. Gen. Sherwood the other day in congress said that the civil war generals had a habit of getting killed and the A. E. F. generals did not. "The bravery of American generals can stand small slander, but these small slanders raise the question whether there ever will be any military common sense in the general possession of this country. Are we all very bland Mr. Blands, using our heads only as hat racks? "If Gen. Pershing had been at the front the largest body of troQps with those movements he could have had any intimate knowledge, except by the most devious ways, would have been a

division. He might have known something by! record does not crave a kind word for his bravery

liasion intelligence of the division on either side, but the scope of his knowledge would have been that of a division commander who is posted where he is to command a division.

THE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DAILY TALK SLOW DOWN FOR THE CURVE! The more complex life becomes, the more some think that they can take chances with it. But the opposite is true. The finer the machine, the more attention it must have; the. longer the journey, the more details there are to take into consideration. And no matter how keen your eyesight may be you cannot afford for a minute to let your mind wander, tor jt is the mind that sees. The straightest road has turns to it ofttimes, too, where you least expect them. There are literal curves to every phase of experience. And it should become a grounded habit to slow down when you see them ahead. The only folks who make curves correctly and with safety, are the alert. It is impossible to take a curve at full speed ahead. Those who have thought so, never lived to prove that it could be done. And if we are to learn, we must learn largely from those who have made mistakes, unless we are ready in advance to pay the price of making them for the benefit of others. Live and learn is all right but to learn and live is all right, too. Somehow, the curves along our day routes, keep appearing, so that it becomes us to be very watchful, and slow down that we may take them with safety and ease. Great 6peed is always full of danger. Curves appear, like quick storms out of clear skies. So always be prepared for them. Slow down for the curve!

afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Will La-1 Chile plans to have South America's fuze Mr. and Mrs. Dan Paddock I largest electric power plant, a 40,000 weree at Liberty Saturday afternoon. ! horse power installation. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Parks and ; y""""""""1"!!

daughter, Ruth, and Mr. and Mrs. I Charles McDougal were Sunday guests! of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Parks Mr. I Isaac Conner spent Saturday at Con-j nersville the guest of his brother, I Will Conner Mr. and Mrs. Oscar; Parks entertained to dinner Wednesday, Mr. and Mrs. Odin Taylor of j Dayton, Ohio, and Mrs. Emma Gear. ....George Maze and son Ivan, and! Everett Stevens spent Tuesday in Liberty. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Frank Win-; ters entertained Wednesday evening Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wintery, Mr. and l Mrs. Ray Winters, Mr. and Mrs. Os- J car Parks and family, Mr. and Mrs. Odin Taylor of Odin, and Mrs. Emma

New Garden, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Martin entertained Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Carl

Coggeshall and family of Williamsburg, Mr. and Mrs. Hulan Wilson and son, Horace, of Greensfork, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Burgess and family, of

j Modoc Miss Louise Hough of SparI tansburg, spent the week end with I her mother, Mrs. Thomas Hough....

Several young people from here assisted in the services held at Hopewell Sunday evening Robert Frazier met with a painful accident last week, when he severely cut his hand with a corn knife The Ladies Aid society will serve lunch at James Burg's sale. Friday.. .Mrs. Ross Macy spent Monday with Mrs. Henry Pitts. Mrs. Nate Hunt and Mrs. Lin

j Pike attended the meeting of the I Better Homes association held at 1 Williamsburg last week Mr. and i Mrs. Rothermel and family spent Sunj day afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Rothermel, at Webster Mr. and j Mrs. Will Rothermel entertained a ! friend from Kansas Tuesday Mr. I and Mrs. Herschel Paulson of Richi mond, spent Sunday evening with Mr.

and Mrs.and Mrs. Oscar Bailey and family Mrs. Frank Kitner of Richmond, spent Saturday and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fitts and family Mr. and Mrs. Luther Liebald entertained Mr. and Mrs.

Mahlon Bond Sunday Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Dill of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Lola Bond, of Richmond, spent Mon-

day and Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs.

Lin PHie.

NAME "BAYER" ON GENUINE ASPIRIN Safe and proper directions are in every "Bayer" package

LOCAL WOMAN SAYS RESULTS AREGERTAINTY "Trutona Will Sure Do the Work," Mrs. Heet Enthusastically Avers Describes Relief.

That is assumed of a trained officer. "What American opinion is going to beggar for is a bit of common sense. As a hat rack Mr. Bland's is some head."

"What's in a

Name?"

Facts about your name: its historv; lis meaning; whence It was derived; its Marnificiince; your lucky day and lucky jewel. BY MILDRED MARSHALL

afternoon. Play golf the remainder of the af- ; ternoon. i Don't kiss the cook or anybody else, i Shun the public drinking cups, j Keep out of crowded cars, j Now comes the most important inj struction, if you would live forever: 1 Don't die.

PHOEBE ! Phoebe, quaintest and most charm-J ing of names, was first in use among: women of Greek birth in the Roman j empire. It is derived from Phoebus, j the sun god, or Apollo, and signifies

funny temperament, warmhearted. According to Greek mythology, the original Phor-be was the daughter of Gaea. According to a tradition adopted by Aeschylus, she bequeathed the Delphic oracle to Apollo, son of her daughter Ledo. Poetic license calls the moon personified "Phoebe." "Phoebe, our sister," the deaconess of f'enchrea, was commended by Saint Paul to the Romans; but she had few namesakes except in England, where she typifies the quaint, demure, oldfashioned type so popular with British writers and poets. The Italian Febe refers only to the moon and is rarely used as a proper name. It was in reference to the noble qualities of the huntress goddoss of the moon that Spencer named his lovely Belphoebe, as he also called his o:her warlike heroine, Britomartis, an individual who later became adentit'ied with Artemis, the moon goddess. Artemis, of course, is the Italian Diana, and Diana, as the sister of Apollo, was frequently called Phoebe, so ih: relationship,, seemingly so perplexing and interwoven, is really logical. , In England, Phoebe was a favorite name for rural maidens, and the poets bestowed it upon the simple rustic charmers to whom they wrote odes and roundelays. Phoebe's virtues are extolled in -The Rural Maid." "Her homespun dress in simple neatness lies, And for no flaring equipage she sighs; Her reputation which is all her boast, In a maliciourf visit ne'er was lost;

No midnight masquerade her beauty j

wears ; And health, not paint, the fading bloom repair?." Crystal is Phoebe's tailsmanic jewel. It's clear translucent beauty is believed to intensity the purity and virtue of its wearer. To dream of it signifies true friends. Monday 13 Phoebe's lucky day and 7 her fortunate number. (Copyright. 191?. bv Tho Wheeler Syndicate. Inc.)

HARD TO BELIEVE THAT SUCH A THING CAN EXIST, UNDUE COURTESY SHOULD BE REPORTED TO THE MANAGEMENT Sign in a hotel at Akron, Ohio.

O. F. chapter for initiation of new members in honor of John Y. Cochran, of Indianapolis, who was to be made Grand Sire of Odd Fellowship in the world in 1910.

The Brooklyn man who was found with fifteen revolvers in his room may have been getting ready for a conference with his landlord about the rent.

A good many automobiles from the sins of transmission.

Buffer

Many society women now carry thermos bottles in their limousines. Don't ask us why. Use your Imagination.

The saloon free lunch, wheh was legally abolished two years ago, is about to pass away. That Mr. Marshall's sense of humor has survived two terms in the vicepresidency, proves that it was a good one to start with.

Dinner Stories

"How old is your baby brother?" asked little Tommy of a playmate. "One year old," replied Johnny. "Ah!" exclaimed Tommy. "I've got a dog a year old and he can walk twice as well as your brother." "Well, so he ought to," replied Johnny; "he's got twice as many legs."

day calling on Pierce Dye and wife. Mr. and Mrs. II. H. West, and 1'aniMrs. Clarence West and family ily were the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Minnie Remington of Indianapolis, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Will Knott for several days Mr. and

Mrs. Allie Jones and Mrs. Minnie Rem-, ington went to Liberty Tuesday morning.... Mr. and Mrs. John Bell and son Edgar went to Richmond Satur-j day afternoon. .. .Dr. and Mrs. W. C. ,

Sherman and daughter Mabel went to genuine must be marked with the Oxford Saturday afternoon Mr?.jafety "Baver Cross." Then you are Ed Hunt of Muncie, came Monday for; tu th' t world-famous Asa visit with her parents. Dr. and Mrs. 0 0 Smith, and other relatives here. i Pirin, prescribed by physicians for ! over 18 years. Within a new electric flat Iron is j Always buy an unbroken package a fusible strip which melts if the iron i of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin, which becomes overheated. I contains proper directions to safely

Ik.

"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" to be

relieve Colds, Headache. Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Rheumatism, Neuritis, Joint Pains, and Pain generally. Handy tin boxes af twelve tablets cost but a few cents. Druggists also 6ell larger "Bayer" packages. Aspirin is the trademark of Bayer manufac

ture of Monaceticacidester of Salicyl-

icacid. Adv.

"Trutona will Bure do the work," was the brief, yet convincing statement made a few days ago by Mrs. L. Heet, wife of an employe of the Wayne Works, who lives at 406 North 21st street. Mrs. Heet has manyfriends in Richmond who will no doubt be pleased to learn of her recent recovery from troubles of more than a year's duration. "Nervousness and indigestion were my ailments," Mrs. Heet continued. "My appetite was very poor seemed as though my food never tasted right I'd have severe pains in my stomach and often felt bloated, especially after

meals. I was so nervous I couldn't rest well at night. Sometimes I'd experience a stinging pain around my heart. I'd become 6hort of breath at times, too. I always felt tired and run-down and seldom felt like doing my housework. "Trutona has wonderfully Improved my appetite and the food I eat tastes as It should now. My nerves are in much better shape, too, as I'm able to rest considerably better than I have for some time. The stinging pains around my heart have disappear ed, and the shortness of breath also has ceased to bother me. I'm considerably stronger and my housework isn't a drudge as it formerly was. Trutona has improved my condition a great deal and I'm glad to recommend it." Thousands of weakened and rundown men and women have voiced similar praise for Trutona's merits Publicity brought this perfect tonif to the attention of the public, but merit, yes, merit alone, has been re sponsible for the peerless reputation Trutona has gained as a combatant of stomach, bowel and liver troubles, nervousness, sleeplessness, less of appetite and the like. Trutona la now being introduced and explained in Richmond at Clem Thistlethwaite's Drug Store. Adv.

J

"Am I to understand that there is some idiotic love affair between you and that young officer who come3 around her?" "Only you, papa, dear."

Trotzky is getting ready to do so.

Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today

i Rabbits were more plentiful than ever before in the history of the country, local game officials said.

Earlham students were ' offered a chance to win $2,000 in cash prizes by writing essays on "Economics" by Professor J. L. Laughlin, of Chicago University, chairman of the contest. Elaborate plans made by local I. O.

GREAT FOR ECZEMA AND OLD SORES

1

Guarantee My Ointment, Peterson.

Says

Good

iooa livening

BY ROY K. MOULTON

HOW TO LIVE FOREVER. Eat nothing but stewed parsnips. Drink nothing but rold water. Go to bed at S every nisht. Get up at 6 every morning. Don't smoke, chew, or play poker. Go to church every Sunday morning. Split ihree cords of wood every day. Walk nineteen miles before breakfast. Ride horseback two hours every

"If you are responsible for the health of your family," says Peterson, of Buffalo, "I want you to get a lare C5 cent box of Peterson's Ointment today. "Remember, I stand back of every box. Every druggist guarantees to refund the purchase price if Peterson's Ointment doesn't do all I claim. "I guarantee it for eczema, old sores, rtvaning sores, salt rheum, ulcers, sore nipples, broken breasts, itching skin, skin diseases, blind, bleeding and itching piles as well as for burns, scald?, cuts, bruises and sunburn. "I had 30 running sores on my leg for 11 years, was in three different hospitals. Amputation was advised. Skin grafting was tried. I was cured bv using Petersons Ointment." Mrs. F. E. Root, 2s7 Michigan Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Adv.

Brownsville, Ind. Miss Elizabeth Wallace spent the week end at Oxford the guest of her mother. .. .Mrs. Cyrus Moore and

sons attended church at Springerville Sunday morning Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kaper and son spent Saturday i morning with Mr. and Mrs. Dai His Bennett Glenn Kaufman, Ivan i Maze and Sanford Funk callpd on ' lady friends at Atington Sunday ;

evening. ... Mr. and Mrs. u-gil Lyons of Lyonsville spent Saturday ,

RICHMOND UM COULDN'T DOUBLE UPJjlS FISTS Suffered Great Pains From Rheumatism of the Joints. His Muscles Were Sore and Stiff.

Claims Great Relief Since Taking Dreco, the Great Herbal Remedy.

Itching, Scratching Skin Diseases That Burn Like Flames of Fire

Here Is a Sensible Treatment That Gets Prompt Results. For real, downright, harrassing discomfort, very few disorders can approach so-called skin diseases, such as Eczema, Tetter, Boils, eruptions, scaly irritations and similar skin troubles, notwithstanding the lavish us.? of salves, lotions, washes and other treatments applied externally to the irritated parts. No one ever heard of a person being afflicted with any form of skin diseases whose blood was in good condition. Therefore, it is but logical to conclude that the proper method of treatment for pimples, blotches, sores, bils, rough, red and scaly skin, is

to purify the blood and remove the tiny germs of pollution that break through and manifest their presence on the surface of the skin. People in all parts of the country have written us how they were completely rid of every trace of these disorders by the use of S. S. S., the matchless, purely vegetable blood purifier. S. S. S. goes direct to the center of the blood supply, and strengthens and builds up the circulation, giving a clear and ruddy complexion that indicates a healthy condition of the skin. Write today for free medcal advice regarding your case. Address Swift Specific Co., 443

Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. Adv. I him today. Adv.

When the kidaeys become weak or deranged it is impossible for them to separate the poisons from the blood

las it passes through these organs:

the kidneys are the filtering plant for the body; as the blood goes through they strain out the poisons and pass them from the system. If these poisons stay in the blood such troubles as rheumatism, catarrh, sallow skin, dizziness, headaches, etc., show up. The body requires a full supply of pure, rich, red blood, free from poisons, to keep it in a healthy condition. Dreco acts on the kidneys, keeping them strong to purify our blood supply. "The greatest relief I've known in years is since I took Dreco," said Mr Lester S. Geyer, a highly respected employe of the Starr Piano Co., Richmond, Ind. "I've been full of rheumatism, aching joints, and sore muscles for a long time, with a pain near my h -art. My forearm and shoulder were very painful from rheumatism. "My hands were so sore I couldn't double up my fists; I couldn't bend over without having terrible pains in my back. "I've taken so much medicine that my stomach was all out of order. My food didn't digest and I got nervous and weak, but I'm feeling great once more for I've never seen anything take hold like Deo did. It simply knocked out my troubles and put me on my feet again." Mr. Powers, the well known Dreco expert, has headquarters at the Conkey Drug Co., to meet the local public and explain the merits of this great remedy. See

SAVE

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MONEY

on your Clot Hes

and get the benefit also of our Credit Terms The SAVINGS we make by producing our own clothing and selling DIRECT to YOU through our 100 stores were never before so evident as this season. We are offering the BEST VALUES to be found at any store, large or small, cash or credit. YOU can PROVE this yourself by comparison, and ue icill gladly demonstrate it if you will call at our store. And what is just as important these FINE VALUES are ope-n to you on the most generous confidential and self-respecting credit terms. Ladies' & Misses'

SUITS

to

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'Ladies' & Misses' COATS to

60

oo

Plush Coats

Dresses Millinery Etc.

3

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Men's & Young Men's OVERCOATS to

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HI

Men's & Young Men's

STTTTS $

to

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A NATIONAL INSTITUTION

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Why delay buying the clothes you need, why wait till you've saved the price when you can get them here NOW at a SMALL AMOUNT DOWN, paying the balance AS YOU . CAN AFFORD.

830 Main Street

D. Kulick, Mgr.