Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 333, 8 November 1919 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. SATURDAY,. NOV. 8, 191D.

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.

MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED rilESS Tha Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use fir republication of all news dlcpatches credited to It or rot otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.

,1

The Housing Project Success should quickly attend the efforts of the committees raising the $150,000 necessary to put across the ambitious housing project of the Richmond Home Construction Company. The project will provide Richmond with the homes it needs to forestall a serious shortage. The city will not grow if it cannot provide homes for its increasing population. Factories will not increase their capacities if they cannot obtain workers. Employes will not come if they cannot find homes. These are facts which no one can gainsay. The consummation of the project will be a

nositive Dublic irood. It is the only method ! strike at the beginning of winter without ex-

whereby a large number of houses will be erected bausting every medium at their command to pre-

vviiwvtvu C4 oiviiiuviv mvjivi.j -f-'--o y j then have sought by orderly processes to obtain! better wages and conditions, without threats of j a strike almost certain to produce a fuel famine, j Very few of us, comparatively, khow that the j miners do not have steady work, that the best' period of employment they ever have had was in ; 1917 and 1918, when they averaged 243 days of work out of 363. In 1914 they averaged 195 j clays, and in 1916, 230 days. Their demand for! a thirty-hour week is based on a desire to spread j their work out evenly through the year, and their 1 request for a sixty per cent wage increase indi- j cates their wish to be paid for forty-eight hours j of work a week. These demands represent more i than the men expected to get, but the rather I roughshod procedure of the leaders gave the pub-; lie little reason to think that the men would ac-j cept anything short of the extreme concessions: asked. j

The American public, which once accepted strikes with complacency, has become surfeited with their number and disgusted with the speed

with which they are called at the slightest pro-lPlace for a j Bill hilled ;

vocation. The people believe the leaders of the miners made a grievous mistake in calling a

THE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DAILY TALK MEDITATIVE REFLECTION It pays to think things out. Folks -who look ahead, do not have to consume much time in looking back. Those who foresee are always ready for the unexpected. Acting on untrained impulse brings many a regret. On the other hand, by acquiring the habit of meditating on your actions each day and on the things you expect to do, or see done, you fortify yourself against the time when quick decision is demanded. Meditate. Reflect. Think things out. Reason with yourself as a habit. After all, the best fellow to consult is yourself. He knows you better than anybody else and understands you better. And he Is liable to be kinder to you, too. People do not consult themselves enough. They seem to present great intlligence when giving advice to some one else but when it comes to advising themselves, they gt shaky in the knees! The best time to meditate is when you are alone and away from the activity of the day. No matter how successful you may have been during the day. ask yourself if you are entirely satisfied, if you feel that you did your best. When one faces one's self and looks into the mirror of one's self, things usually look different than expected. It is a fine thing to expect great things to come to pass and then if they do not, to get right inside of the reason why. And the real reason is always found within the man himself.

in mysterious shadowy draperies. The. hyacinth, which breathes forth its greatest fragrance at night, is Cynthia's flower. But the relationship of the flower and the name is even more closely and romantically expressed in the legend of the hyacinth's origin; the flower eprang from the blood of Hyacinthus, a beautiful youth beloved by Appolo, and killed by the latter through an unlucky throw of the discus; it bears upon each petal the letters "Ai," the Greek exclamation of grief. Emerson speaks of

j "The h acinthine boy. for whom , Morn well might break and April ! bloom." ; It is fitting, therefore, that Cynthia i should have the hyacinth, of jacinth ' for her talismanic jewel. But the maid who bears the name is more : than ordinarily fortunate, for she has another lucky gem, the moonstone. ; The deep blue hyacinth protects her ; from danger of accident or disease. ; while the moonstone with its milky i apalescence promises her true love and the power to read the future in ' relation to love, if she places the stone in her mouth when the moon is full, j Sunday is her lucky day and 3 her talismanic number.

and made available to house the increased number of workers that our industries and 'business houses will demand.

The Mistake of the Miners

vent the closing down of the mines.

The American believes in fair play and justice. He will not permit operators to work a hardship on miners. But he will not tolerate a strike that will paralyze industry, bring suffering to thousands of women and children, when

all this could have been obviated by submission!

cf the issue to federal investigation and conciliation. The machinery to prevent the strike and

Hello. Tom," sale a man from the

north who had returned to his birth-

brief visit. "I heard that

a man. is it true ;

"Sure!" replied Tom. "He chased the feller three days with a shotgun, rA V.nA r Vim n n .4

bitted him right through the lung. "And killed him?" queried the northerner, with horror. "You bet!" "Well, how is it that they didn't lynch Bill for cold-blooded murder?" "Well, the feller that Bill shot didn't have a friend on earth, so the game warden just, fined Bill $2 for hunt in' without a license."

The leaders of the soft coal miners made a great mistake in arbitrarily calling a strike instead of submitting their case to federal investi

gation and conciliation. They should have re-; to present the rights and grievances of labor was !

membered that the general public knows little of j at hand. The leaders of the miners, it seems,' their conditions of labor or their grievances, and : refused to take advantage of an orderly method ; that abrupt action could serve only to alienate ( of obtaining a redress of grievances, the result f the sympathies of the people. j being that the public lost confidence in the justice How much better it would have been to have' of the claims of the miners. i

"What's in a Name?

Facts about your name; Its history; its meaning; whence it was derived; its significance; your lucky day and lucky jewel. BY MILDRED MARSHALL

moon. Milton employs the term frequently: "While .Cynthia checks her dragon yoke. Gently o'er the accustomed oak." Since Diana or Cynthia was the virgin goddess of Greek mythology, England's virgin queen. Elezabeth, was often alluded to as Cynthia in the literature of her time. The name was therefore very popular in Great Britain as a mark of honor toward royal

ty, but its real vogue is in America ; where it has had especial prominence. j The musical quality of the. name, i combined with its poetic origin, has ' always made it popular among the j arts. One of the loveliest pictures of j the art world is called "Cynthia," and j personifies the goddess of the night j as a strikingly beautiful woman veiled !

RICHMOND MAN 1 READ ABOUT IT IN THEPAPERS The Experience of Well Known and Reliable Persons Impressed Him, so He Acted for Himself.

Now Declares He is Free From Rheumatism, Constipation, Stomach Troubles, Sluggish Liver and Nervousness, Thanks to Dreco.

IBBOU

MADDOCK GETS BACK AUTO STOLEN FROM CITY STREETS

EATOX, O., Nov. 8. An automobilo stolen last. April from the streets in Richmond, Ind., has just been recoverrd by Harvey Maddock. of near Campbellstown, its owner. The car was recovered by the police of Wheeling, W. Ya., and Maddock wont ' that ciiy and drove the car to his home. Sunday School Mcr.t. Sunday schools of Jeftt 1 .-on township will meet in convention Sunday afternoon in New Pari.-', in the Presbyterian church. Revs. Dunaway. Wellbaum and Moon, ministers of the village, will each deliver a fifteen-minute talk. A Sunday school orchestra will play several numbers and the convention will units in songs. Organize Sunday Class? Effort will be made Sunday afternoon

to organize a Sunday school class at ihe T'niver? alist church, according to announcement by Rev. Thomas M. Murray, the new pa'or. Miss Blanche Durham, of Columbus, prominent Sunday school workt r. will be in chaig-3 of organization work. Young Resigns. Mayor Edwin II. Yonn?, of New Paris, has re.-iyned as secretary and member of the district advisory committee tu the county health board. Lack ot time to look after duties of the office is assigned as the reason. A f-uecessor has not. been named. Mrs. Elsck Asks Divorce. Martha Black has filed suit in common pleas court for divorce from .lames Harvey Black and restoration in her former name of Losser. Wilful absence th la-t three years is charged. The marriage took place in July, lit";, in Eaton.

Election Expense $2,322

Total i r. of cor.

wa

taincd from C. O

eountv election board

expense are 100 new ballot, boxes and si.-itca. e-; iu which to carry ballots and supplies. Armstrong-Ercn. Miss 1I.-'!rn l'. on, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vi'ilnm H. Eson, and Glenn H. Arm. tronir. were married Friday by Rev. Hiley Baker, of ihe Christian church. Health Meet Cancelled.

Because of lack cf a quorum, a i

meeting of th d 'strict advi-ory heaith

a vote of 121 to 92. A special tax levy for school purposes was approved by the electors of Jefferson township. Miss Hart Stenographer. Following her resignation recently, because she deemed her salary insufficient. Miss Edith Hart has been reappoint d official stenographer in cuinmon pleas court by Jude A. C. Uisinger, at a salary of $1')0 a month.

The appointment is for a term of three

Mr Pettibone was t lie initial first pioneer in this section, coring here befoie anybody else. Meicyvillo (Iowa) Banner. Might as Well Swear Off. The. musical prom-am in the Piqua (Ohio) Presbyterian church last Sunday was advertised as follows: "In the morning ihe choir will sing. 'Ho, Every One That. Thirsteth.' ami

l Co pi right. JS19. by J l Wlntifr SV!idl'-ltf . Ill' ) CYNTHIA Of Greek mythological origin is Cynthia, most charming of feminine names. ( n initially it. was the rule given to Artemis, or Diana. tn moon goddess, since she and her brother, Appolo. the sun god, ate fabled to have been born upon .Mount Cynthus iu liebis. In poetic nomenclature, Cynthia becalm; thr synonym for

HAD TERRIBLE COUGH IN BED 3 YEARS

In

3 Weeks, She Was Out on Street Again, Feeling Fine.

the i

years. Miss Hart has held the posi-l'"-- mixed quartet will sing 'Quit You tion of court stenographer for a num- J Like Men." i

ber of years

Red Cross to Meet. Members of the new board of directors of the Preble County Red Cross chapter will meet Saturday afternoon in the public assembly room in the courthouse for the purpose of electing new officers for the chapter.

Memories of Old Days

I In This Paper Ten Years j Ago Today

v. J Mrs. Nancy Evans celebrated her ninetieth birthday at her home on South Eighth street.

Dedication of the Wernle Orphans' Home was postpoiifd ue.'i! May, owin to the bad wca!.-r conditions. which would prevent a luiV' attendance, it was announced.

Eliminating the Flora. Dear Roy: Speaking of roses, here is one that will bloom no more: "The rose that grows on father's nose is beautiful to -see, etc., etc" T. B.

There seem to be a few of the old-; fashioned wooden coaches on football j squads this year. I

Dinner Stories

John H. Lawler, a prominent citizen, died at his home here. Minister? of the city made a vigorOtis protest against a burlesque troupe

I which was to appear at a local theatre

Good E

icod livening

BY ROY K. MO LILT ON

Pome of the British West Indian isl-

,',,T ; ,', . landers don't want to come under the

iu ui- iuc, ( in- ... . l'-

ction in Preble county last Tuesday s .?2.::22.o:., accordinir to figures ob-' '-nme

Fisher, clerk of the

Included in th-3

administration of the United srat-i

of those boys still drink i' out

of a gourd.

In one of the southern training, camps, a profane and perspiring infantry sergeant was doing his best to pound into the Ik. ads of a squad cf ex ce-uirglv raw "rookies" the mdiment of military science. When the sergeant gave an 'order, i each witling recruit of the sqiiad tuade I a commendable effort to t. rcut e it. hut every little rookie had a movement ' all his own, wiih highly unsatisfactory results. "As you were!" bawled the sergeant.; At. this point the proceedings were interrupted by a recruit from Boston,, who before enlisting had been a Har-j vard student ' "Beg pawdon. sawgeam." said he. "but wouldn't, it be nioah propah to say. 'You will restoah the status quo ante'?" I

BABY WOULD CRY

NIGHT 1 DAY

- J

With Sore Pi rnples All Over Head. Hair Came Out. Cuticura Healed. "My baby was about a week old when his head broke out all over

with sore pimples. They became hard and red, and dried up, making scales. When I combed his hair it came out. He would cry night and day. T . r t r

Cuticura. I bought more.

and after I had used one cake of Soap and one box of Ointment his head was healed." (Signed) Mrs. Liizie Short, Kldgeway, IU. Dse?-CuticuraToiIetTrio':W3 It is so easy to prevenl skin and scalp troubles by using the Cuticura Toilet Trio for all toilet purposes. For pimples, rashes, dandruff oi irritation , bathe with Cuticura Soap and hot water, dry lightly and apply Cuticuia Ointment. At once the itching ceases, sleep and rest follow, and complete healment in most cases results in continued use. Do not fail to test the fragTant Cuticuia Talcum for powdering and perfuming your skin. Earapl Each Fr tv Mfcll. Artdrpss post -card : "Cuticura, Dept. R. Boston " Sold everywhere. Sutp :. Ui.uiriciK :.nd 00v-. Talcum Loc.

"In 19 1 0, I had la grippe, followed bv I pneumonia which left me with a Eeveie -

j cough. I coughed constantly from, j morning till night, and then would ; wake up in the night and cough and , I choke. 1 lost flesh and rny appetite1 j was very poor. I doctored with a ' i specialist for over a year, and had; I several other doctors, but got worse, instead of better, lt winter I was I I bedridden, had cnills and fever and got i I u-u.il' 1 ,m,M wt .... j. K.i K I

vf ' IV x VVJU111 nut JO. Jlj utrti minutes without fainting. "In February, 1919. I started on j Milk's Emulsion. I was then in bed.' but in 3 weeks, I was able to be up'

and on the streets. Just think of it!

'For ." years I have been a physical wreck, in bed most of the time, and

in wonderful shape. My friends all tell me how well I'm looking, for they didn't expect me to be living today." Miss M. Roussell, 1003 Opelousas St., Algiers, La. In thousands of just such case17.

I Milks Emulsion has brought the same A ..C. ( ... l.-n . .1 i

I "uiiucuui rt-iiti ami improvement, jt.

cosis noining to try. Milks Emulsion is a pleasant, nutritive food and a corrective medicine. It

: restores healthy, natural bowel action, j promotes appetite and puts the dige--! live organs in shape to assimilate food. It helps build up flpsh and strength, j and i;- a powerful aid iu resisting and j repairing the effects of wasting di--I eases. Chronic stomach trouble and I constipation are usual! v relieved in one : day '1 his is the only solid emulsion made land so palatable that it is eaten with a

spoon lik" ice cream. Xu matter how severe your ca?, voa are urged to try Milks Emulsion tinder this guarantee Take six bottles home with you, u.-e it according to directions and if not satisfied with th" lesults, your money will he promptly refunded. Price 00c and $1.20 per bottle. The Milks Emulsion Co., Terre Haute, Ind. Sold by druggists everywhere. Adv.

Jl IItand delicious J

It is a most satisfao

tory beverage- Fine flavor and aroma and it is healthful. Well made cocoa contains nothing that is harmful and much that is beneficial. It is practically all nutrition.

Choice Recipe book free

MWalterBaKer&Coltd.

j t Established JZSO. "Dorchester .Mass

J

"l read 'in the papers about ho' these folks right here at home got over 'heir sickness by taking Dreco, so I thought what would do them good, would do me good also, so 1 got Dreco

I too," said Mr. John Moriarity, a wood

worker with the Richmond Safety Gate Co., who lives at 103 North 20i-i St.. Richmond. Ind. "I've been sick for quite a while and have tried many remedies recommend-

I ed for my troubles but none reached ime: I was daily constipated; mv stomach pained me and after meals I'd : gel. nauseated, have aching pains and ! feel that a lump was choking me in mv

throat. My liver was inactive and often spots danced before my eye-. Eiddy spelis attacked me and I'd hav.3 splitting headaches. I had a dull, aching pain in my back, in the region cf my kidneys; my nerves were on edge ix I couldn't sleep. "If any one doubts what they rea 1 here, they can come to my address

1 and I'll 'ell them how Dreco gave corn-

plate relief from these troubles; I'm like a new being, full of sirengj'm energy and vitality. Dreco did the work for me." The underlying cause of most stomach troubles, such as gas, belching, indigestion, dyspepsia, our risings, foul breath, acidity, heartburn, etc, seems to be faulty or impaired nutrition of the digestive tract. It is the height of folly to try to drown a sic ; stomach with patented medicines or deaden the nerves with dope pills. Y0.1 must, use Nature's own methods bv reaching the cause of the trouble firs . Once remove the cause and see ho quickly all stomach troubles vanish. Mr. Powers, the well known Dre: o

i expert, has headquarters at the Ooii key Drug Co.. to meet the local pubi:land explain the merits of this gret i remedy. See him today. Adv.

Good Evening! Have you seen our new line of BRACELET WATCHES

For a Good Cleaner

Call 1493

All orders quickly called for and promptly delivered. Ladies' Suits, cleaned and pressed SI. 23 Men's Suits, cleaned and pressed SI. 25 Skirts, cleaned and pressed for 30c Trousers cleaned and pressed for 0c

Peerless Dry Cleaning Co. 318 Main St.

From Which We Infer He Was The Original Inhabitant

NASAL CATARRH

Though Very Common It Is a Serious Disease Worse at This Season.

It. is an inflammation of the mucous

1 membrane, causing a discharge, and is

aggravated by colds and sudden

riul 'not "'take n'.a.v. The 'hcP.rd "was ! W condition of the blood. When to meet to apr.i-.n-e the expense budget ! '.hron,,c - my tU'vf'P lnt? "sump- ' t .1, t,,iti, iwil'ion by breaking down the delicate

l-U UlUl.lU-J,. vi 11. v. 1. . i,""i .jwcw. 1 . i, r-.-n ...in tiUi

CI 1 1'. JP" COUIil... V L. .1 w L'- irl.r-u for another meeting here next Tours-

Or1! vv'il be issx;ed " '---ut-;' "u imprimis 1 rie general

dav.

Perry Pays Costs. Perry, jailed on a

forgery

i "I .. A

.' 'ut .. jai.u u.i a. . 'v: 'the disease

( narge a 10 w uu s av. aiutu in . liberty by making good 1 lie amount of the alleged forgery and paying the j costs in the case. County Prosecutor;

saji. -.. V .f 'enliven the liver

seiLieiie;ii. ii ii. tuntvi.. i'.ji.vi me . , . ...... .1. , .. t .. t . .. .1 -uv

r.arro 01 :i:.- siliu iiiki, .muh o-iiuan, in indorsir.K a (heck made payable to

Perry ?.":.!' 10 gain his freedom. His arrest vas effected in Anderson, Ind. Jackson Issue Carries. Figures obtained on the vote In Jackson township Tuesday, on a $40,000 bond issue for school purposes, carried by 111 to 126. The money will be expended for enlarging and remodeling the centralized school building of the township. A proposition to centralize the rchcols of Israel township was decisively defeated. A special two-mill tax lew for school nurnos carried by-

Begin treatment with Hood's Sarsaparilla at once. This medicine purifies the blood, removes the cause of

and gives permanent re-

Hef. It has been entirely satisfactory to three generations. If a cathartic1 is needed take Hood's Pills, they are gentle and thorough,

regulate the bowels.

I j 1 &

1

Established 18S9

DR. OSBORN THE OLD RELIABLE SPECIALIST cf Indianapolis Will be at Arlington Hotel Richmond, Indiana Thursday, Nov. 13th HOURS: 9:00 A. M. to 4 :00 P. M.

A CJIKERFI'Ij OKCOMMKXn VTION !

"Tlioy should be m every travennsr man's grip." writes Ceo. Jenner. Jlj Labor St., San Antonio. Tex., of Foley Cathartic Tablets. 'Th.-'' nre the best laxative I have taken ani 1 cheerfully recommend them to anyone suffering with constipation or biliousness." They thoroughly demise the bowels, sweet- ! the stomach and benefit tho liver.

Tliev correct indifrostion, bad breath. I

g

fpood' Clothes !

AVOID THE OPERATING TABLE DR. OSBORN'S IMPROVED METHODS ARE EXCLUSIVELY OWN, AND THERE IS NO GUESSWORK ABOUT IT. THEY HAVE PROVEN SUCCESSFUL

HIS

In the treatment and cure "Without the use of the knife" of Piles, Fistula, Fissure, Prostatic Enlargement, Rupture. Chronic Diseases ot the Kidneys, Bladder, Obstruction, Rheumatism, Stomach, Bowels and all other curable Chronic Diseases. No Matter How Obstinate or How Contracted Cured. "U'hen I say I can cure you you can depend upon it. for I know from the successful results in thousands of similar cases to yours, just what I can accomplish. Grateful patients treated by me are constantly recommending others, and this is why I possess such a large practice. Men! Women! If you do less thin you should, on vour farm, at your d-sX or n your shop, you arc in FOme way weak. If vou can't accomplish all that vrei oNpor-t or hope for. you are the silent suXferer from some hHdon di-senfe tint affects one or more of the important nerve centers of the lmdy. Thesn nesrlected, or unknown conditions, are usually diseases of the Pelvic System, which reflexlv art upon the or-e-ans of Kllmir.ation. dieestlon. and the nervous svstem, which in turn has it? influence on the brain. T have made a special study of the Nervous Svstom. and hnvr perfected methods that will cute where or-dina-y methods have failed. I will stive vou a searohin.tr and thorough examination FREE, thus determining the exact location of your trouble. HEAR IN' MIXD that I have in Indianapolis one of the most modern and thoroughly equipped offices in the state with a Specialist in charge who is ripe in years of experience, rich and mature in learning in his chosen work. That neither one of us will promise you more than we can give, and should you he unable to see me on date specified above, you can write, or better still, call at my home office, S14 Traction Terminal Buildmsr. Indianapolis. I do not use the knife, neith

Tomorrow May Never Come

-Get in Touch With Me Today.

ARE YOU RUPTURED? No ruptured man, woman or child need be told of the suffering and agony resulting from the neglect cf this awful affliction, nor of your rrany disappointments and failure to find a cure by experimenting with old-fashioned treatments, leaving you the sufferer in even worse condition than before, and mentally skeptical of ever bzing cured. Every ruptured Person In Indiana who calls to see me is Entitled to a Free Trial of the Dr. Osborn Self -Ad justing Rupture Appliance REMEMBER It required much of my time during the past 19 years also labor and great expense to perfect this wonderfully simple and effective Appliance . and make it possible to assure you relief. Know also that I ask NO MONEY UNTIL YOU ARE SATISFIED, as hundreds of others are now. I Can Help You Now, Tomorrow May Be Too Late Come and Get the Proof FREE. It makes no difference what your present physical condition may be or what you have endured in your vain hunt for relief YOU HAVE NOT TRIED DR. OSBORNC'S SELF ADJUSTING RUPTURE APPLIANCE, and you will never be satisfied until you do.

Free Lecture on Christian Science By JOHN C. LATHkOP, C. S. B. High School Auditorium MONDAY, NOV. 1 0, AT 8 P. M. All are welcome

Indianapolis Office: 3rd Floor Traction Terminal Bldg. Office Hours, 9 to 12 1 to 4. Wednesday and Saturday, 9 to 12, 1 to 4, 6 to 8 Sunday 9 to 12 only.

SERVICE MEN'S FAIR

C

oliseum

ENTIRE WEEK NOVEMBER 17TH TO 22ND See the display of gifts at McConaha Co.'s

bloating, gas, coated tinisue and other results of slURgrish bowels. No gripIhnsr; n nausea. For sale by A. G. Lu"ken Co. Adv.

I mm

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