Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 328, 3 November 1919 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, NOV. 3, 1919.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Second Class Mail Matter. XEXDER Or THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication ot all news dlcpatches credited to Jt or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication ot special dispatches herein are also reserved.
The Red Cross Membership Drive Not so much for money, but for a great, sympathetic, interested membership that is the purpose of the Red Cross drive that is to take place from Nov. 2 to Nov. 11. The activities of the Red Cross did not cease with the end of the war, and it would be a real pity if we were to forget that the needs of peace time are nearly as insistent as those of conflict. The Red Cross is always on guard to render service to humanity in the event of epidemic, earthquake, flood, or other disaster. Every year in this country we have accidents bringing death to 100,000, and disability to half a million, and on all such occasions the Red Cross stands ready to do everything within its power to help the injured or bring relief to distressed families. The fight against disease goes on all the time. We can only estimate the lives that have been saved from tuberculosis by reason of the efforts of the Red Cross. To give an idea of the immense tasks to which the Red Cross addresses itself, let it be said that
450,000 children under the five years died during the eighteen months in which we lost 70,000 men in the war. The deaths from influenza were as ten to one, compared with American deaths on the field of battle in the German war. How useful this great agency of mercy can be evidenced by the figures bearing on the activities among families of our men in the service. In 500,000 such homes assistance is still being given. The Red Cross is helping nobly to lift the pall of gloom from the homes of the very poor. The census bureau is authority for the statement that
one-fifth of our people do not have enough proper, food to eat, and in all such homes the blight of malnutrition is found as a matter of course. Onethird of the young men examined under the first draft proved to be defective because of lack of proper nourishment. The home service of the Red Cross is combatting the evil of malnutrition, and is constantly engaged in teaching mothers how to keep their children well and sturdy, and how to choose nourishing food for them. Ninety per cent of the persons helped in this way are reached by no other social agency. In these days of reconstruction, with so much of strife and unrest, while hundreds of thousands are looking forward with apprehension to the coming winter, it is a privilege to find one unselfish work in which all may join. The Red Cross, with its call to all that is best in us, deserves twenty million members, and more. The fee of a dollar a year is small, and the opportunity to share in the satisfaction of a fine benifi- , cent work is one not, to be neglected.
he was finished with this one he wrote for another and still another. Then he wrote, "How much do I owe you?" The bartender said that was all right because he didn't charge deaf and dumb men. The customer 6poke up: "I I'm not deaf and dumb; I'm from Nebraska and was so dry I couldn't talk." After trying in vain for months to get a house Brown set out one day with a find-a-house-or-die look on his face. He wandered about all day without being successful, till at last his steps led him to the river. "Ah!" he said in utter despair, "how tempting it looks!" He was almost inclined to plunge in and end it all. All of a 6udden he heard a splash
and, looking around, he saw his friend Green struggling in the water. Without attempting to save him he rushed off to the local house agent. "Quick!" he gasped. "Green has fallen in the river. Can I have his
house?" "Sorry," said the house agent. "I've already let it to the man who pushed him in."
Good Evening . BY ROY K. MOULTON
cently.
for $20,000.
He sued the director-general j DANCING TEACHERS SEEK
He got $150.50.
Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today
v ' Dr. TV. "W. Zimmerman, elected mayor for the third time by a majority of 1.215 votes over Pettis A. Reid, the democratic candidate.
IT'S DIFFERENT NOW He stayed out each evening Until it was late; It was his ambition To celebrate.
He had costly dinners, Played poker a lot, And didn't care much Whether school kept or not, When his wife was away For the summer. Now he's working the lawn mower, And sticking 'round home; He's very discreet and does Not care to roam. He's mild and he's tame. And he's walking the chalk. And he's not bossy or Gay in his talk, For bis wife is at home. Trousers sure do come high in Oklahoma. If you don't believe it, ask Director-General of Railroads HInes. James Wllkins, of Oklahoma City, lost a pair of pants in a pullman re-
Concerning an attraction at the opry bouse an upstate newspaper says: "A gentleman named Romeo will commit suicide in our midst this week. The reason, we believe, will be a disappointment in love. Bonehead!"
Rich and Unscrupulous are Worst Citizens Rae
BAN
"Success is the fulfilment of self; it doesn't make any difference whether the successful person has acquired 10 cents or a million dollars" said the Rev. J. J. Roe of the First
Presbyterian church at his morning , service Sunday, speaking on "Sucesn. ' "The most unsuccessful and most: dangerous persons in the United States today are those who have at-j tained riches and are without char-j acter." - Sunday evening Dr. Rae showed charming views of Canada given him j
by a Canadian raidroad company. Several of the slides were tinted by a Chicago Art institute student. A short sermon followed.
COLUMBUS, O.. Nov. 3 Decrying all efforts to introduce dancing or music which tends to degrade or sensualize dancing, and asserting that dancing soon will be elevated to such a high plane of technique that neither state nor church can consistently obifft in it as 1 f . ei t i m ft t (-Yfrclkt nr.rt
j art, the Ohio Association of Teacher
of Dancing will go before the next general conference of the Methodist Episcopal church at Des Moines, la., with a formal request that the amusement paragraph of the church's book of discipline be altered, and that the church lift its long standing ban upon dancing. Resolutions to this efrect. just adopted by the Association, will be forwarded to leading Methodist Episcopal clergymen of the nation by W. E. Goodfellow of Springfield, secretary of the Association.
ASK FOR and GET IHloirDDck's The Original Malted Milk For Infants and Invalids Avoid lmitatiops and Substitutes
I HE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DAILY TALK
PUSH UP THE SHADES. The greatest giver of life and health In the world is the light. People who live In darkened houses, with the shades pulled down, soon lose their elasticity and their desire for romp and frolic which, by the way, is the sum and substance to those, who In alertness, furnish the action of the universe. If you are living in a darkened house push up the shades! Let the sunshine in. Look out upon the streets and among the walkers and passers. And when you note a need, get up quickly, go to where the call is most urgent and give of what you are. Then you are sure to come back to the home of your heart at night time, with soft music in your veins which is sure to sing a sleep 6ong to your tired nerves and muscles and take you Into lands of pleasant dreams. Push up, the shades. Prove to the world that a SOMEBODY lives inside your house. Walk about. See all sides of what is going on. But unless you are ready and willing to pull up your sleeves and pitch In and help keep your suggestions to yourself. We are all born criticisers. But if we saw more if our shades were always pushed up we would live by example more and less by the finding of fault. For the more one sees, and adequate understands, the less is one inclined to look for that which is ill. The biggest argument for the loving of Gpd is that you see Him doing business. Get out and into things. But when you sit in meditation be sure that the shades are pushed high and that the light streams in!
of the domestic science department of the East Chicago high school. Officers elected at the first meeting of the Ionian society last Thursday evening include: President, Sumner Mills; vice president, Paul Whitely; recording secretary, Edwin Teale; corresponding secretary, William Jones; critic John George Baker; vice critic, Hurford Crossman; marshal, Clyde Caldwell; vice marshal, Leslie Pennington. Book committee Cecil Collins, Everett Pennington and Dolan Loree. Program committee Hurford Crossman, Mahlon Harvey and Julius Tietz.
A movie, "We Can't Do Everything" was shown at the college Saturday night.
Dinner Stories
Arrangements were made for tho Hon. John W. Foster, one of the foremost diplomats the country ever produced, to address a big meeting at the coliseum the first week in December.
it
What'
XT
s in a lName.-1
Facts about your name; Its history; Its meaning; whor.ee it was derived; its significance; your lucky day and lucky Jewel. BY MfLDRED MARSHALL
Earlham Notes
i Copyright, 1919, by The "Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.) ALICE Alice, curiously enough, is a man's name, not a woman's. Originally it was given to the sons of the family, and is without doubt, derived from the Anglo-Saxon Adelights, of which the feminine form was Adelgisa. It means noble; in both its masculine and fern inine form. It is clear that Alice represents Adelgis and not Adelgisa and that the proper feminine form would be Aliza. Some believe that the Eliza, generally thought to be a derivative or Klizabeth, is this missing form. For proof of Aliza as the representative of Adelgiza, the Liber Vitas of Durham records the changes in Adelgiza from the first noble lady of that name who laid her gifts upon the altar. By contraction, it becomes by steps, Adeliza, Aaliza. and Aliza. Adliza is still given to daughters of noble families in Europe. Adaliz, Adliz and finally Alis. are other contractions. Alicia is a derivative which represents an effort at euphony lacking in Alisa, but Alison is not so derived, as is popularly supposed, but has a completely different origin. Alice is purely English with a slight Teutonic flavor, since another explanation of its origin is that the name is derived from the feminine Adalhert or Adelchen, signifying "daughter" in Frankiand. Alix or Alisa in Lombardy was naturalized in England when Aix la Belle married Henry. I. Alexandrite is the tailsmanic stone of Alice. It is found in the emerald mines of Russia, and its splendid
green, which changes pulsatingly to columbine red, makes it representative
of the Russian national colors and is tberefored honored as a national stone. The Russians believe that it brings great good fortune. It denotes hope when dreamed of; indicates much to look forward to. Monday is Alice's lucky day, and 7 her lucky number. Her flower is the white bawthorne, which means hope. Alice has been traditionally surrounded by all the virtues and simplicity which man is supposed to resire in woman. Indeed, the name is poetically synonomous with "true blue." It has been immortalized in the old song "Ben Bolt": "Ob do you remember Sweet Alice, Ben Bolt; Bweet Alice with hair so brown; Who thrilled with delight when you gave her a smile And trembled with fear at your frown?"
Portugal now has a woman bull fighter named Juana Matestel who at her first appearance In the arena at Oporto killed three fierce bulls.
Miss Agnes M. Hollister of Cleve-
anld, O., has been obtained by Prof.
Samuel L. Garton to take charge of
the department of piano during the leave of absence granted Miss Laura
Gaston, who is resting at an Indianapolis sanitorium. Miss Hollister comes to Earlham highly recommended. She has studied under Madame Julia Rive King. James H. Rogers and Johnneson in Berlin.
A man from Nebraska went into a saloon in Kansas City and wrote on a piece of paper, "A glass of whisky, please." The bartender did as he was bid and gave the man a drink, and after
THIS WOMAN SAVED FROM AN OPERATION
By taking Lydia . Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, One of Thousands of Such Cases.
Five Earlham degelates including' Leslie Pennington, '23; Margaret Timberlake, '22; Esther Rhodes, '22; Herbert Carey. '21; and Kent Morse, '20, were selected by the Young Men's and the Young Momen's Christian association cabinets last week to represent the students of Earlham at the student's convention in Des Moines, la., Dec. 31 to Jan. 4. Dr. Dean will go as faculty member and Dr. Purdy as college pastor. A campaign to raise funds to finance Earlham's part of the convention expenses will be launched soon.
Miss Grace Edwards, president of the state union of the Student Volunteer movement went to Muncie Friday to speak in behalf of the Des Moines convention at the Normal school. Milton Hadley, president ot the state union, has returned from Crawfordsville where he spoke in regard to the convention.
Dr. John H. Janney, '13 has arrived in the United States with an English bride whom he married while head of a convalescent hospital in England, during the war. They are living for the present at BrookvKle, Md.
Black River Falls, Wis. "As Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
saved me trom an operation, I cannot say enough in praise of it. I suffered from organic troubles and my side hurt me so I could hardly be up from my bed, and I was unable to do my housework. I had the best doctors in Eau Claire and they wanted me to have an operation, but Lvdia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound cured me so I did not need the operation, and I am telling all my friends about it." Mrs. A. W. Binzee, Black River Falls, Wis. It is just such experiences as that of Mrs. Binzer that has made this famous root and herb remedy a household word from ocean to ocean. Any woman who suffers from inflammation, ulceration, displacements, backache, nervousness, irregularities or "the blues" should not rest until she has given it a trial, and for special advice write Lydia E. Pinkbam Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
ifcjlll II & ' -
MRS. D. D. CAMP COULDN'T LEAVE HOME IN MONTHS Was All Run-Down But is Well and Strong After Taking Tanlac. "Of all the people who have taken Tanlac I believe I have as much cause to be thankful as anyone," was the statement made to a Tanlac representative recently by Mrs. D. D. Camp, living at 961 Jenks St., St. Paul, Minn. "For years, I Just can't remember how many," continued Mrs. Camp, "I have been troubled with a bad case of catarrh, and every morning when I
got up I would be so choked up and stifled that I could hardly breathe and I would have to cough for an hour or more before my head and throat fell cleared up and relieved. My stomach got out of order and after I had eaten something I would suffer terribly with indigestion and gas, and I had such an awful pain in my right side I thought I had appendicitis, and at times I had to lie down before I could get relief. I was so nervous that some nights I didn't sleep over an hour, and I was so constipated that nearly all the time I suffered with dreadful headaches and dizzy spells. I had a pain just about all the time right across the mall of my back and bteween my Moulder blades, and I got so weak and run down that for months I wasn't able to get out of the house. "It hardly seems reasonable that only a short time ago I was in this awful condition, almost a wreck, you might fay, and now today sincel have taken Tanlac I haven't an ache or pain in my body and am in the very best of health. I can eat anything I pleas? without any bad effects n the least from gns or indigestion, and the pain in my fide has completely disappeared. My nerves are in as fine condition a3 they ever were and I am sleeping '-'ound'y every night and when I gt up T don't have tho;-e cughinsr. gagging pnplls, for the catarrh has left me entirely. I am not troubled with constipation any more, and the headaches and dizzy ppells ars all a thine of the nast. The pain across the small of my hack and between my shoulder blades has disappeared and in fact nothing at -11 ever troubles me. I am gaining back mv lost, weight and strength, am floins all niv housework, and can get out of the house and go down town whenever I please and never feel one Ht tired. I am certainly pleased with Tanlac and am only too glad to recommend it." Tanlac Is sold in Richmond by Clem Thistlethwaite: in Greensfork by C. r. Corine, in Cambridge City by Mr. Dean House, in Pershing bv Sourbeer tnd Podenberg. in Centerville by Centerville Pharmacv. and in Milton bv
V 1j. Parkins. Adv.
a package before the war
a package during the war and a package
THE (FLAVOR LASTS
SO DOES THE PRICE!
Four Earlham graduates including Lawrence Hadley, 20; Gordon Graves '05; T. Earnest Raiford; '14 and Claire Reed, '18 are now members of the mathematical department of Purdue university.
Edna Kellum, ex-'14, is now head
DRIVE AWAYHhADACHE Rub Musterole on Forehead and Temples A headache remedy without the danEPxs of "headache medicine." Relieves headache and that miserable feeling from colds or congestion. And it acts at once! Musterole is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. Better than a mustard plaster and does not blister. Used only externally, and in no way can it affect stomach and heart, as some internal medicines do. Excellent for sore throat, bronchitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, all pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). 30c and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50,
, r i H. C. HASEMEIER CO.
EM
H. C. HASEMEIER CO. z -j
3Me
This J he Last Week Sv. . ery Need In Coats, Suits, Dresses, Furs, Dress Goods, Silks, Blankets, Underwear, Hosiery, Gloves, Domestics, Notions, Etc.
1
THE STORE WITH ONLY ONE PRICE
i
