Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 329, 4 November 1919 — Page 9

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. TUESDAY, ' .4, 1919.

PAGE NINE

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I UUIUHLL I UtS IU LT IN UUNIESTS NEXT SATURDAY Football teams throughout the country are now hitting their stride, with the result the final month of the great college sport will usher in conflicts bigger and better than any thus far in a a w a a nniiMium the season. Upsets have been the rule during the season and will probably continue to attract attention, but barring injuries, a fairly good line can now be grabbed from the games played. Indiana will have its attention taken up next Saturday by the ancient scrap between Wabash and DePauw. This contest, for intense rivalry, takes the cake in Hoosier circles. . But the big contest to the West Saturday will be the battle between Notre Dame and the Army at WTest Point. Notre Dame team will be facing one of the representative teams of the East. Any klnof a victory for Notre Dame will give it a certain prestige in the West which will be recognized .when the championship la dished out. Purdue is the only one of the two Hoosier Big Ten members that will get in action. The Boiler Makers will faca the toughest opposition it has gone against this season when Ohio Stat3 will be met at Columbus. Four other Hoosier teams will get in action Saturday. Earlham and Franklin battle at Richmond with the Baptist looked upon as a cinch. However, the Quakers have a strong tctem. Hanover and Valparaiso mix at Valparaiso. Rose Poly goes to Cincinnati to meet St. Xavier. Three Big Ten scraps are on the card besides the battle between PurChicago; Illinois-Minnesota at Minneapolis and Iowa-Northwestern t.t Evanston. Harvard vs. Princeton. The first contest of the seasn between the once Big Three of the East will be played at Princeton when Harvard tackles the Tigers. Harvard is looked unon as a sure winner. Pittsburgh will face a formidable eleven when Washington and Jefferson invade the camp of the Panthers. EfJGlFS' WILL PLAY EATON NEXT SUNDAY Eaton will be the scene of Englea' R2S Army Reserves' second game of the season. The game was contracted Tuesday, and will be played Sunday afternoon, according to Captain Sheridan. Eaton has an independent football team that is comparable to any in this section of the country. Their latest game resulted in a 6 to 6 tie with the Lewisburg Independents. Lewisburg held Portland to a low score and judging from this, the Reserves will have to hum. Practice for the Reserves will be held in the South Tenth Street Park, Tuesday evening, and all hands are expected to turn out. Thursday evening another practice will be held and Saturday the squad will use the plp.vprounds. From now until the end of the football senpon. th Reserves will plajr every Sunday. Manager Taylor nnlHUIJIlfU Ulill jui- HI IUI lilt- Jlt'AL weeks have been scheduled. Richmond fans will not get to witness the R?f i v i lit civ i juli, in- rriiVi. ji. v tti cio not enough interest is being taken. v ! Bowling Notes ' V . Although the exand average for both teams for the evening was only 130, the A. S. M. bowling league got nway to a successful start when the Empires, headed by Walter Boyce, look 2 out of 3 from the Hoosiers. The Empires dropped the first match by 70 points, but came back and von the next 2 games by comfortable marsrins. Williams, of the Empires, by upsottine 193 pins in the third contest, walked off with hieh score. His 156 average also enabled him to capture premier honors. The score: EMPIRES. Player 1st 2nd 3rd T'l Av. Epplns: 124 119 143 3S3 129 Kolbert SI SI 96 25S 86 Bovce 109 141 12S 378 126 Williams 126 150 193 469 156 Wells 117 170 155 432 144 Team totals.. 557 661 715 HOOSIERS. Flavor 1st 2nd 3rd T'l Av. Shissler 147 126 136 409 136 Kraigebaum ..120 99 119 338 113 Toule 120 141 129 390 130 Poof 91 134 120 345 151 Knight 139 146 158 453 151 Team totals.. 627 644 662 , High score Williams, 193. The French inventor oof an automobile driven by an aerial propeller has shaped the blades of the latter like the wings of a bird. YOU Should Use TT8 different from I others because more carer is takea in tho makincr and the materials used are oi mgaer gnuto. Black Silk Stove Polish Maxes a brfflast. tWey polish that doss not rub off or dust off.andthsshinelasts four tir'V as loos as ordinary atova polish -oied on sample stoves and sold I Dy naraware na srocery dealers. All Ira uk IS A trial. I Tan it An 9t:r nnr. mfnwm I I ixr porter tova or your gas range. If yoa I QOO I una uuj wmww kbv BMouan : the Iraat atava aolli I, yooT dealer i acthoriccd to rafdod your I I mane. Insist on Black Silk Stov-a Pi laadetm liquid or paata oas quality, BUBO, Black Silk Stove Polish Works i SterbBS, Illinois Ctaa Mac SI He Jr-Dryl Irmm Ekanl o ffrmtra. rsiiitTa, irtove- m pea Pramnta rtxtinff, Uh Black Siilc M.taJ PoUah oraUvw. nirkai

DEMPSEY PLANS FOR TWO SCRAPS IN SPRING

DENISON, Tex.. Nov. 4. Jack Dempsey will stage two fights in the United States early next year and then will take on the winner of the BeckettCarpenter fight to be put on soon in England, according to Jack Kearns, manager of the heavy weight boxer, who appeared here recently with a circus. Dempsey will close his circus en gagement Nov. 5, ana tnen will make two pictures for a motion picture concern, after that he will get down to training for his bouts in this country. Kearns said he had refused an offer of $75,000 for a match with the winner of the Beckett-Carpenter fight, to take place in England, but had made a counter offer for $250,000. R, H. S, STILL HOPES NEWCASTLE CONTEST Final drive of the R. H. S. football season will be started at the playgrounds Tuesday afternoon. Although really enjoying a successful season considering circumstances, Richmond has yet to win a game. Coach Rock has hopes for not only one but two victories for the Red and White. No word has been received from Newcastle on Richmond's inquiry about a further date, but according to Manager Vernon, the offer will stand until the close of the season. The R. H. S. football team, student body and even the whole city had their minds set upon seeing Richmond play Rose City and all efforts are being made to that end. Stivers High is confident of an easy victory when Richmond plays this team in Dayton next Saturday. The chief grounds for the claim of the Dayton school is the comparative scores made by Stivers and Richmond against the Hamilton high school. Richmond now has a far better team than the one that went into action against Hamilton in the first game of the season. REDS WILL TRAIN . AT WAXAHACHIE The Rods will return to Waxahachie, Texas for their spring training next year. This was practically decided upon Monday at a conference between President Hermann and Manager Pat Moran, of the world series team, who arrived in Cincinnati quite unexpectedly. The principal business which brought Moran back to Cincinnati was the selection of a training camp, and it did not take him long to convince the officers of the team that Waxahachie should have the call. Pat had given this important question considerable thought while on his vacation, and he had made up his mind that the championship club should not desert the town where it started its career toward tne highest honors in the baseball world. The Reds were given a wide choice for a training camp, for almost every available town in the south was anl xious to entertain the world's champions. Several places in Texas, a number in Louisiana, and 4 or 5 in Florida had sent in applications. Manager Moran was at first slightly in favor tf Miami, Fla., but on giving the subject' careful thought, decided before arriving here that it would be better for the club to go to the Texas town where the boys were well treated last spring. PIRATES BEAT HAVANA HAVANA, Cuba, Nov. 4 The Pittsburgh National league baseball team defeated Havana Sunday by a l-to-0 score. The game was close and marked by fast fielding. Cadore and Krueger formed the battery for the winners with Tuero and Gonzales doing the battery stunt for Havana. W. R. Francisco, Once City Boy, Succumbs in East W. R. Francisco of Jersey City and Easton, Pa., died on Oct. 11. The interment was at Easton. Mr. Francisco will be remembered by some of the older citizens, as he lived in Richmond during his boyhood. i and entered the Civil War from here J as a member of the 57th Regiment of ! Indiana Volunteers. He was a son of the late Dr. and 1 Mrs. L. J. Francisco, and a brother of Mrs. William H. Ross, of this city. A ift iti ifi tti A A JL A A - A A A if i A ? i Jh A Stubborn Cough Loosens Right Up This homo-made rotnedr I wonder for quick mult. KaaUy nod cheaply made. ft '?'44t4Hi Here is a home-made syrup which millions of people have found to be the most dependable means of breaking up stubborn coughs. It is cheap and simple, but very prompt in action. Under its healing, soothing influence, chest soreness goes, phlegm loosens, breathing becomes easier, tickling in throat stops and you get a good night's restful sleep. The usual throat and chest colds are conquered by it in 24 hours or less. Nothing better for bronchitis, hoarseness, croup, throat tickle, bronchial asthma or winter coughs. To make this splendid cough syrup, pour 2yz ounces of Pinex into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup and shake thoroughly. If you prefer, use clarified molasses, honey, or corn syrup, Instead of sugar syrup. Either way, you get a full pint a family supply ofmuch better cough syrup than you could buy ready made for three times the money. Keeps perfectly and children love its pleasant taste. Plnex is a special and highly concentrated compound of genuine Norway pino extract, known the world over for its prompt effect upon the membranes. To avoid disappointment, ask your druggist for "2 ounces of Pinex" with full directions, and don't accept anything else. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or money promptly refunded. The Pinex Co.. Fort Wayne.

WISE MEN DISAGREE; IS FARMER MOST OR LEAST INDEPENDENT?

By WILLIAM R. SANBORN That great mind3 may differ with relation to any given subject i3 axiomatic; they may and they do, even to Chicago editorial rooms, and eternally so at Washington. Our story of today relates to two Chicago editors, one of whom decorates the editorial page of "The Tribune," while the other gives tone and polish to the "Orange Judd Farmer." According to "The Tribune," the farmer is of all men most blessed; the most independent. The one man among us who can live comfortably. regardless of strikes or lockouts, care frp and inrtTMnlinfr with Tils nhnne his phonograph and his phord, a com-' biuation that you can't beat in a hun dred years, counting in numerous other rural perquisites and advantages. The Tribune man infers that tho farmers own the earth; that they have well stocked cellars and storehouses at this season and enough and to spare at all times. Tha Orange Judd Farmer has been viewing toe situation of the rural stockraiser and grain grower from a different angle, in connection with the price of hogs and tho slump in corn at the date of his writing. A Wayne county farmer presented us a marked copy of the Orange Judd Farmer, with the remark that "the editor was not afraid to call a spade a spade." But let us quote the Thibune

man first; next getting down to why i believes that prices cannot be permanthe price of hogs hit the toboggan, as ently depressed by mere talk, threats

the other fellow sees it. After discussing the strikes and QUAKERS HAVE A. BIG SURPRISE TO HAND BAPTISTS Results of two months football at Earlham are beginning to show. Under the guidance of Coach Mowe the squad has developed into one of the most powerful secondary football teani3 in the state. Franklin comes here next Saturday with expectations of an easy victory but Mowe, says the Baptists will receive one of the most surprises of the I season. St. Xavier of Cincinnati, handed Coach Thurber's outfit the i same kind of a shock. With 22 men of the first squad equally divided, Reid Field was the scene of a lively scrimmage Monday afternoon. Repeated gains were made by the Varsity eleven on end runs and line smashes and tha defense of the varsity line proved the undoing of the Bcrub backs. Franklin's line is reputed to be almost impregnable. Lowery and Eowen, tackles, who weigh considerably mors than 200, are said to be among the best men in their position in the middle west and the rest of the line are in accordance. Franklin held Purdue to a tie score earlier in the season and it was this line that prevented the Boilermakers from anything sensational. Also DePauw was held to one touchdown in Saturday's game. Herb Carey was out for practice Monday and although still troubled with hl3 back, got into the play. He may be in his old position Saturday. The Earlham backfield is on a par with the Franklin secondary defense and Coach Mowe will confine his attentions to drilling the light Earlham line to withstand the onslaughts of Bowen and Lowrey. A recent comparison of weights showed Earlham to be outweighed by Franklin by about twentythree pounds. With this advantage cf weight, Coach Thurber in expected to confine the attack of his eleven to straight football, while Earlham, with the record of Notre Dame in sight, will use the aerial attack and open formation of play. 18 cents a package

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troubles galore, pending or impending, under the caption, "Days of Wrath," the Tribuno man pays this eloquent tribute to the Joys and blessedness of farm life: "The boy who sits on the top of the world these days is the farmer. He is there. He can go to his dairy for his milk and the kids can gather the eggs. His potatoes are in his bins. His salt pork is in brine and hams are in the smokehouse. He can carry his own wheat to the mill. "He is a going concern if the world suspends. Sell your factory and buy a farm. The worst walkout is that of the cattle from the field into the corn. The worst lockout is that of forgetting the key. "Young man, stick on the farm. There is nothing in the west but bolsheviks and nothing east but labor conferences. Buy a phonograph and a phord, put in a telephone, get a lot

of machinery to do the work, let the ciedr harden by the insistent process of, nature, and thus live, not caring whether Mr. Gomperes or Mr. Gary has the world by tho tail. The Farmer Editor's View. In an article headlined Trying to Stampede Food Producers written by B. W. Snow, of Chicago, and printed on Sept. 27, the claim is made that the break in farm products was the result of manipulation, in a word that it was a put-up job. In introducing the article the editor of Orange Judd Farmer says: Mr. Snow points out in a striking way the fact that the recent heavy decline in prices of farm products 1 the result of a carefully arranged propaganda program, and that the law of supply and demand has bppn ignored and temporarily over-ridden. Ha and bluster. The fact that the price of hogs and corn continued to break to much lower levels, following the printing of the above, and that there has been a recent reaction from bottom figures, has nothing to do with the right or wrong of the editor's argument, or the statements of his correspondent. Snow, who wrote as follows: "Prices of farm products during the past five weeks have dropped to a point where they are probably below the real cost of production. . No products of human labor can ever sell permanently below what it costs to produce them. Their production simply ceases until scarcity brings the price back to a profitable basis. Temporarily, however, things may sell below cost. That is the case with farm products today. Supply and demand when measured by world-wide conditions and over a sufficiently long period of lime will ro-ffiilate values. "The course of prices during the past five weeks lias not been governed by the lat" of supply nnd demand. It has been the result of a wave of unreasoning hysteria, cultivated, fostered, and accelerated by deliberate governmental propaganda, and snread by the active co-onerat'on of the daily rpt! the cities. The national govAMBITION PILLS For Nervous People The great nerve tonic the famous Wendell's Ambition Pills that will put vigor, vim and vitality into nervous, tired-out, all in, despondent peopio In a few days in many Instances. Anyone can buy a box for only 50 cents, and A. O. Luken, Clem Thistlethwcite, Conkey Drug Company, is authorized by tho maker to refund the purchase price if anyone is dissatisfied with ths first box purchased. Thousands praise them for general debility, nervous prostration, mental depression and unstrung nerves caused by over-:nauigence in aiconoi. tooacco, or overvork of any kind. For any affliction of the nervous 6ystem Wendell's Ambition Pills are unsurpassed, while for hysteria, trembling and neuralgia they are Rimply splendid. Fifty cents at A. G. Luken Company, Clem Thistlethwaite, Conkey Drug Co.. and dealers everywhere Adv.

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ernment, state governments and municipal governments have combined in one effort to force down prices of farm products." Many Will Disagree. Not all farmers, by any means, will agree in all these statements, nor will numerous editors admit that what happened at the stock yards and in speculative grain circles, was the result of a "conspiracy" as witness the following: "The conspiracy has worked through prosecution and threats of prosecution under trumped-up charges against handlers of food products; through the

seizure of foodstocks in storage for next winters use and their forced sale at this time; through the sale at far below cost of foodstuffs which the gvernment bought at high prices and has been hoarding for months; through the dissemination of false reports as to the world's needs and demands upon us for food, and through the teaching of consumers that producers and handlers of foodstuffs ate conscienceless profiteers. "It has been a propagandist campaign, carefully planned and skillfully carried out. It has succeeded In reducing the price of everything the farmer has to sell, but it has not in any material manner reduced the price at which these same foodstuffs are pold to the ultimate consumer. In other words the net effect to date has been to increase the toll taken by the various middlemen at the expense cf both producer and consumer." Mr. Snow'a Argument. Mr. Snow maintains that "Agriculture is being deliberately discriminated against", and why? "In an effort to give industrial labor high wages on one hand and cheap food on the other, ' a policy, which "is not only unjust, but it is a dangerous thing to follow," because It means the stoppage of production, as Snow sees it. After citing a decline in corn of 60 cnts a bushel, and the break of 87 in the price of hogs, at the date of his writing, he concludes by stating that: "Low nrlcs for farm products cannot be maintained until we reach a time when all product, industrial as well ns farm, are forced down In price by money contraction. Tou cannot have $1 corn, and $12 shoes seJliner side by side as a permanent proposition." The article nuotd from is much too long to b riven in full, but the heart of the argument is herein contained. His statement that there is no occa sion for panic on the part of pro ducers will be generally concurred in They are not in a panic, however much the general public may hftve suffered from an epidemic of high prices, SAGE TEA KEEPS YOUR HAIR DARK When Mixed with Sulphur It Brings Back Its Beautiful Lustre at Once. Gray hairTiowever handsome, denotes advancing age. We all know the advantages of a youthful appearance. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray and looks streaked, just a few applications of Sage Tea and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundredfold. Don't stay gray! Look young! Either prepare the recipe at home or get from any drug store a bottle of "Wyeths Sage and Sulphur Compound," which is merely the old-time recipe improved by the addition, of other ingredients. Thousands of folks recommend this ready-to-use preparation, because it darkens the hair beautifully, besides, no one can possibly tell, as it darkens so naturally and evenly. You moisten a sponge or sott brush with it. drawing this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or two, its natural color is restored and it becomes thick, glossy and lustrous, and you appear years younger. Adv. Mfa W SaVrW VHaiiVld revelation 1 You may without tiring your taste! Salem, N. C

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and which still prevail. The fanner not only wishes to live himself but to see the rest of us live, and la this all classes of good citizens agree. The patriotic American, regardless of business or affiliations, in unwilling to see any craft or coterie unduly profit or profiteer at the expense of his neighbor, in any walk of life. Surely the laborer is worthy of his hire, and the manufacturer and business man is entitled to a fair profit and the farmer to due compensation. But beyond this every fair minded man draws the line.

Farm Sale Calendar Wednesday, November 6. Ott Crownover & Son. two miles southeast of Milton, and three miles south of Pershing. Catalog Sale of Big Type Poland China hogs, at 12 o'clock. Atwell and Pyle, 4 miles south of Richmond on Boston pike, near Elkhorn mill, live stock and general sale, at 10:30. Thursday, Nov. 6 J. H. Albertzart on Jenklnson farm. Boston pike. C. F. Porman, 2 miles southeast of Lewisburg. Obio.general sale at 10 a m. Clarence V. Love, on W. H. Haynes farm, lhi miles west of Carlos and 1H miles south of Modoc, general sale at 10:30. Friday, November 7 Frank E. Cook, on Calvin Middaugh place. 1 mile northwest of New Paris, and 6 miles northeast of Richmond, general sale at 12:30. Wednesday, November 12. . J. W. Noakes, 4 miles East of Richmond and 2 miles southwest of NewParis, on the National road, general farm sale at 10 o'clock. Pemmican, the staple food of arctic explorers, Is made from the flesh and fat of bisons.

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"DO YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING EARLY" is a familiar slogan but did you ever think of the photographer around Christmas time? EVERY BIT OF WORK is made to your order. He has no stock of goods ready to hand out but must make them one-at-a-time from blank plates and paper. IT TAKES TIME to produce satisfactory work even when we are not "rushed to death" and worn out. WHY NOT have your sittings now and have so many Christmas presents ready before the grand rush?

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The Richmond PALLADIUM "The Newspaper Everybody Reads."

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TAKE SALTS TO FLUSH KIDNEYS Eat Less Meat If You Feel Backachy or Have Bladder Trouble. Meat forms uric acid which excite and overworks the kidneys in their efforts to filter it from the system. Regular eaters of meat must flush the kidneys occasionally. Tou must relieve them like you relieve your bowels; removing all the acids, waste and poison, else you feel a dull misery in the kidney region. sharp pains in the back or sick headache, diziness. your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine Is cloudy, full of sediment; the channels often get irritated, obliging you to get up two or three limes during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids and flush off the body's urinous waste get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take a tablespoonful In a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine and bladder disorders disappear. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with litbia. ond has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys and stop bladder irritation. Jad Salts 1b inexpensive, harmless, and makes a delightful effervescent lithla-water drink which millions of men and women take now and then, thus avoiding serious kidney and bladder diseases. Adv. dirty and blistering mustard plaster. Mustarine relieves backache, headache, toothache, earache and neuralgia in five minutes in an hour all misery will disappear. Sore throat goes over night lumbago agony in an hour. Chest colds, stiff neck, neuritis, pleurisy, rheumatic pains and swellings all yield promptly and are speedily ended with Mustar ine, the original mustard plaster substitute, always in the yellow box. PHOTOS ST RiQtMONa XUSX

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