Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 14, 26 November 1919 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 26, 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 Poet Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Sec ond Class Mail Matter MEMltGR OF THE ASSOCIA Hf.D PKES9 The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the i use for republication of aM news dicpatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication or special dispatches herein are also reserved.
Work More; Save More Stated in a few words the caption above this
editorial summarizes, in the opinion of many
students, the solution of an irksome condition
The world lacks commodities ; there is a shortage
of almost everything we need. And on the other hand, we are indulging in a spending spree that
is consuming more than we produce and we are wasting the money we should save to be used for investments and credit. The admonition to work more does not mean that men are expected to stand over the lathe and bench for long and weary hours, undermining their health, decreasing their physical resistance to disease, and presently leaving them physical wrecks. It implies this, however, that there is a decreased production in the commodities which all of us need, and that this deficiency in goods must be made up by speeding up production in some manner so that the abundance of euDolies will restore nrices to a fair level. The
day is far gone when civilization will tolerate the long weary hours that formerly were the vogue in industry. But the fact also remains indisputably true that the nation which is first able to produce sufficient goods for its own consumption will experience a decline in the price level. The need of conserving money was never
hard earned savings in wild speculations, both
of them creating an unhealthy condition and contributing to an unsettled state of affairs. i We must readjust our production to keep apace with consumption. This is possible by applying our working power efficiently and saving our surplus. An intelligent application of these principles, it is believed, will solve the situation. A student of financial affairs has said: "The solution of the difficulties represented by the hign cost of living lies in earning more by increased production and in conserving these earnings by better distrbution and by increased thrift, prudence and foresight."
The Muncie Case Most Hoosiers will say well done after reading the sentences pronounced upon the Muncie men found guilty in the federal court of swindling by means of "fixed" fights and wrestling matches, races, and other dishonest schemes. The Muncie gang worked with reckless abandon, seemingly believing itself outside the pale of the law and powerful enough to resist its application. The jury in the federal court, however, believed sufficient evidence had been introduced to convict the men and Judge Anderson saw no reason why leniency should be exercised. The hope is expressed that persons with money to invest will learn from the example of the ease with which the Muncie swindlers collected their toll that it is impossible to make money by dishonest methods and that the safest place for money is in investments recommended by conservative bankers. The victims of the Muncie gang lost their
money because they foolishly hoped to
THE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DAILY TALK
PICTURES
How bare would the walls of the world be without pictures! What would life seem like without its trees and sunsets and cloud changes and storms and snows and rolling acres and mountains? For these are the pictures which furnish the world thru which you walkl Anyone who has ridden for miles and miles across the barren desert can understand. It's like living In a great room with plain, white walls and no pictures. Pictures are to the home in which you live what all the beautiful touches of nature are to the out-of-doors. Teach your child early to love beautiful pictures. They do not have to be expensive ones. A few pennies will purchase copies ot some of the great masterpieces of the world. Scattered thruout all ot our great cities are free galleries with priceless gems upon their walls. Go to see them whenever you have the chance. Study and try to feelwhat the artist himself put into his colors. I remember the remark of a great painter "I put MYSELF into what I paint!" Nothing calms and soothes the tired mind and body like a beautiful picture. Nothing contributes to clean thinking and generous acfc ing, like the picture ot some matchless spot of the earth or the reproduced imagination from the depths of some great artist's mind. Wherever you live, be 6ure that there are pictures to look into your heart and talk to you.
rant has labeled his place "The Over coat Exchange." ; A RENOVATED COUPLE. Girard Avenue Owner will rent 3 rooms and bath to refined young couple newly painted and papered. We don't hear much about the ultimate consumer any more. Perhaps the poor old skate has gone to bis reward. I have always admired beautiful women. The wife has always admired intellectual women. We have seldom admired the same woman. SAYS THE BATTLESHIP: My .sides aVe all a-glisten; I'm ready for to christen, But something will be missin', For the country's dry. Now that the club lockers are begin-
mnleo ' nine to show a deficit, it mav safely be
. . , , , . .... , said that prohibition is upon us.
j . j t-j i One editor wants to know if women avarice got the better of their judgment, and ' are inferior to men. The way for him the gang got the money. Swindlers will find a I to "nd out 18 to gf mar!";ed" A t . , , ( One man says he can't understand field of operation so long as men and women per- j the Browning guns. We have always
i j i i i ITT! 1 J J. A. i- - ' j.1 11 i i 1 a ' hn.l tho uamo trnllhlp with that, fel-
more apparent: inan louay. vvim speculation un; lisl in enienainuig ine aejusion mai you can use:
the stock market and riotous spending have con- j a short cut to obtain- riches.
mond visitors Saturday Mrs. Lon Beeson is visiting in Columbus. .Mr. and Mrs. Walter Highams went to Pendleton Sunday to see her brother who is very ill. Mrs. Highams will remain for a few days.... Mrs. Iona Mori and daughter, Margaret, went to Anderson Sunday to attend the funeral of Mr. Kennedy a brother-in-law of Mrs. Summers George Klemm and family will move Into the Kerber property this week....Ott Crownover and family and Willard Williams went to Hamilton Sunday. Mr. Williams will stay for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Huddleston spent Sunday with Mr. Mercier and family of New Lisbon Mrs. Dayton Warren has returned from a visit with
relatives at Dayton .Mies Mary Sills entertained the Jolly TwentyFour Saturday afternoon. The afternoon was spent in needle work. The hostess served luncheon. The dining room was nrettllv decorated in keen-
I ing with Thanksgiving. Miss Lamb,
; Mrs. fcimer Bertsch of Indianapolis, Miss Frances Boomer and Miss Helen DeBolt of Muncie were club guests. j Mr. and Mrs. Willard Lamb and son Roger were guests o his father and mother at Spiceland Sunday Oscar Kerlin spent the week end , with his wife and daughter at Martlnsjvllle. Janet returned with him IMiss Ruth McCormick was the guest f Miss Mary Sills Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Roach are with his J mother who was overcome with coal
iui weex. airs. Koach has almost recovered and will return home with her eon to stay for the winter. ....Mrs. Joseph Kinney spent Saturday with relatives In Richmond John Baker and wife of Indiananolia.
were the guests of James Baker and
wire Sunday Mr. and Mm Tr
; Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bcrtch and
aaugniers, visited relatives at Richmond Monday Miss Nellie Jones and Mrs. Alice Gresh enjoyed Thanksgiving dinner at the home of Mrs. Ella Hubbard at Indianapolis Sunday Mr. and Mrs. James Murphy and Mrs. Sarah Beeson motored to Martinsville Sunday. Mrs. Beeson will remain there for a few days Mr. and Mrs. Linville entertained with a turkev
dinner for Lester E. Donaker. who has Just returned from overseas. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Donaker and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cope-
muu ana aaugnter, ana Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Ferguson and Mrs. Swain attended the funeral ot Mrs. 81316 Floyd, of Dublin, last week.
Watch Your Blood When The Iron Runs Low
YouArelnDanger Thm Sum As Whin Th Mtrrarr
Cm Down You Kixnr Tbmrm Will b o Froat Haw To Malm Tho Teat That Telle
Actual Hood tMt (how la
tributed to the financial stringency. The desire for luxuries is closely akin to a desire to risk
The experience of history has been all to the contrary.
that's in a Name?"
Facts about your name; its history; its meaning-; whence It was derived; lt elg-ntficance; your lucky day and lucky jewel. BY MILDRED MARSHALL
day is Thursday and 6 is said to be her mystic number.
Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today
(Copyright, 1919. by The Wheeler Syndicate. Inc.) CLAUDIA One nf the nnnnlar names of modern
times with a certain aristocratic class !
is Claudia, meaning famed. The name has a distinguished origin and is fitted to grace the most queenly. It fomes from the Caludian pens of
Rome, and going still further back, is !
derived from the Greek word meanin
famed.
Though the Claudia were a family of evil fame who figure in most of Rome's tragedies, there is no denying their imperious will and attainments. The reign of Emperor Claudius gave his name vogue in both the masculine and feminine form. The first Claudia known was one who sends her sreetines to St. Timothy in St. Paul's Epistle. She is believed to have been the daughter of a British prince and the wife of Prudens. The epigrams of Martial speak of a lady of the name of Claudia as British, and thus Claudia is marked by two very dissimilar authorities as one of the first British Christians. Claudie is popular in France. Louis XII. who pave both his daughters masculine names, called the eldest Claude and when she was the wife of Francois
I. la Reine. Claude plums were
termed in her honor.
Considerable complaint was lodged with police officials because of the brutal way the junk dealers of the county treated their horses, and the formation of a county humane society was predicted. Prosecutor Charles Ladd filed suit against Italians who were charged with starting a riot on a local interurban car. Miss Marion Cook, noted lecturer and traveler, addressed a meeting of
citizens at the Y. M. C. A. on "Sicily
I and the Greek Islands. ! Miss Mabel Gaines, daughter of ; Mr. and Mrs. Burton Gaines, of East I Main street, died at the home of her
parents.
In depressed silence he tore up the letter that he had just written and dropped the pieces to the floor. "Two weeks!" he said. "I won't be out of here in three years." "You say you are a lifelong democrat?" "Yes, sir. That's what I am." "But just what do you mean by 'democrat'?"
"There's no cause to worry in particular about the meaning. . 'Democrat' is sort of part of my name, same as 'Bill'." "Do you think marching in a parade helps a movement?" "We don't always see immediate results, perhaps. However, I consider it better than running round in circles."
low's poetry.
The trouble with the average "representative Bolshevik" is that he doesn't represent anything. The shortest step in the world is from hero to zero.
Milton, Ind. Miss Francis Boomer and MIsb Helen De Bolt spent the week-end with Miss Mary Sills Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Harmeier spent Sunday with his mother and sister Mrs. Harmeier and Marie Albert Ferris and Harry Caldwell spent the week-end at Purdue Ed Beeson and wife, Mrs. Hazel Cole, Robert Beeson and family were Rich-
A DBSCOVERY THAT DENEFITS MANKIND Two discoveries have added greatly to human welfare. In 1 835 Newton originated the vacuum process for condensing milk with cane sugar to a semi-liquid form. In 188S Horlickat Ractne.Wis., discovered how to reduce milk to a dry ponder form with extract of malted grains, without cane sugar. This product HO RUCK named Maltad Milk. (Name since copied by others.) Its nutritive value, digestibility and ease of preparation (by simply stirring in water) and the fact that It keeps in any climate, has proved of much value to mankind as an Ideal tood-drink from infancy to old age. Ask far HOMJCK'S Avoid Imitation
tfously larre Dumber of people who ere weaia and ill lack Iron ia their blood and thai taeji are ill for no other reason than lack of iron. Iron deficiency paralyse aealthj-, forceful action. Dull down Xhm wliole organism and weakens the entire ayitem. A pale face, aerront irritable disposition, a lack ot trenfth and endurance and the inability ta cope with the strong ricoroas folks in the race of life these are the sort of waraitif signal that Nature f!et when the blood ia vetting thin, pale watery and literally starriag foi want of iron. If yon are not sure of
Sturwell and family of ConnersviUe. I storesAdv.
Jour condition, to to your doctor and bare im take your blood count and aee where yon stand or else make the following test
Iourseif: See hosr long you can work a ow far yon can walk without beeomina tired; next take two five-grain tablets si Kuxated Iron three times per day after sneak for two weeks. Then test your trenrth again and see hew much you ham gained. By enriching the blood and creating new red blood cells Nuxated Iron strength ens the nerres. rebuild the weakened tissue and help to instill renewed energy nl power into the whole system. Unlike the older inorganic rest products tftutated Iron is easily assimilated, doe not Injure the teeth, make them black nor upset the stoma oh. The manufacturers guarantee onociosful and entirely satisfactory results to every purchaser os they will refund rout money. It Is llpensd In this city by
I A. G. Luken and Thistlethwaite's Drug
No Hope of Relief For Catarrh Victims
Unless Old-Time, Obsolete Treatment Is Discarded. The coming winter offers lit
tle hope to the victim of Ca-noyance and a constant handi
ing to discard this makeshift treatment, and use a little intelligence in an effort to get rid of this disease that is such an an-
tarrh. In fact very shortly yu cap?
win . Degrn to once more know You must accept the teachings the real annoying and disagree- of science, which shows that to
aDie ieatures of the diseases get rid of any disease, you must which always make their appear; treat it at its source, you must
ance with cold, raw and windy
weatner. Doubtless during the mild summer months you have enJoyed some relief from the disease, because there is always less
direct your efforts toward removing its cause, instead of being satisfied with slight temporary relief from its symptoms. You must rout out from your
blood the millions of tiny germs
fwai
Dinner Stories
A doctor came up to a patient in a lunatic asylum, slapped him on the back and said: "Well, old man, you're all right. You can write your folks that you'll be back home in two weeks as good as new." The patient went off gaily to write his letter. He had it finished and sealed, but as he was about to affix the stamp the latter slipped through his fingers to the floor, alighted on the back of a cockroach that was pas-
so , sing, ana stucR. i ce patient naan t
vtor Hnnrhton seen the cockroach. What he did see
Good E
looa evening
BY ROY K. MOULTON
Somebody said to Frank Lynch the other day, speaking of antiques, "We have an old family knocker on our front door," and Frank replied: "We have one inside." One proprietor of a chain restau
carried the name Claude into th'3 House of Lorrnine. From there it passed into Switzerland, where it became Claudine. The Italians immediately adopted it and termed it Claudia. France clings to Claude, Claudine and Claudie. Claudia's tailmarn'c jewel is th cats-eye. which is surrounded by more
superstitions and legends than almost any other stone. It is used by the natives of Cevlon, where most cats eyes are found, as a charm against evil spirits and it ha the same value to tlf people of India. It become? elmost a hypnotic stone to some i people and i said to provide its wearer j with unfai"ng magnetism and attra;-! tion. But to dream of a cats-eye signifies treachery. Claudia's lucky
was his escaped postage stamp zigzagging aimlessly across the floor, and following a crooked trail up the wall and across the ceiling.
Try MakinaYour Own
Cough Kemeay Ton can eave about S3, and hare a better remedy than the ready-
made kind. Kaauy done.
HOW TO GET RID OF YOUR GOLD
The quick way is to use Dr. King's New Discovery
MRS. FRAf KLIN GAINS 20 POUNDS TAKING TA;LfiC
Eats Anything, Sleeps Soundly and Can Do All Her Work With Ease, Now. The following statement of the remarkable recovery of his wife after she had taken Tanlac was made by James B. Franklin of the Franklin Transfer Company, at his place of business, 212 West Thirteenth street. Kansas City, Mo., and who resides at Eighty-third street, Terrace and Brooklyn avenue, recently. "My wife had suffered the worst sort for two years with stomach
trouble and nervous indigestion," he j continued. "She had a very poor appetite and could hardly eat a thing j
and when Ehe did manage to force down a little something, gas would form and press against her heart so she could scarcely breathe. She would have the worst sort of headaches, and at times would become so dizzy it
fI1Th1s Pincx and Syrup preparation gets I falling. She also suffered with the r;;rht at the cause of a couch and gives worst sort of pains across the small
If rou combined the curative propertie of every known "ready-made cough remedy, you probably could not get as much real curative power as there is in this simple home-made cough syrup, which is easily prepared in a few minute?. Get from any druggist ounces of Tlnex. nour it into a nint bottle and
' f:M the bottle with svrup, using either plain granulated sugar syrup, clarified molasses, honev. or corn svrup, as dered. The result is a full pint of pally better cough svrup than you could buv readv-made for three times the :nonev. Tastes pleasant and never
nm
Nuiol is sold onlv in
Sealed bottles bearing the Nujol Trade Mark assWnhere Beware of products represented to be the same as Nujol Tfbu may suffer from substitute Nui ol Kie.u. a. pat. of. For Constipation
0
l Sickness Prevention Illllliuul UII HIM
lnnammauon ol tfte membranes which cause Catarrh, so that
during the summer, but do not there can be no more inflammamake the mistake of thinking tion of the nose and throat, and that your Catarrh is gone, fori choked up nasal passages that the very first raw, damp, wintry , make breathing difficult and day, the delicate linings of the painful. membranes will begin to again1 S. S. S., the fine old blood become irritated and sore, the remedy, has given splendid reair passages will begin to clog suits in the treatment of Caup, and soon you will find that j tarrh, and you will be delighted your old enemy is still with you, j with its effect to your case. It
wun a iienaisn intention of mak- so purifies and cleanses the
ing the winter as full of discom
fort as ever. What are you going to do about it? If you have had the
disease for any length of time, the chances are that you have
blood, that disease germs are eradicated, hence when the germs of your Catarrh are eliminated from the blood, you are on the right road to permanent
riddance from the disease. Go
used enough local remedies to 'to your drug store, and get a
convince you that there is no bottle of S. S. S. today and begin cure for you in this method of , the real rational treatment that treatment. Are you going to i will give real results, drag through another winter j If you will write our medical hawking and spitting and spray- department, we will take pleaing constantly in an effort to sure in giving instructions reunclog the stopped up air pas-'. garding the treatment of your 6ages so that you can get your ; own particular case. Address breath for awhile knowing that; Chief Medical Adviser, 153 these accumulations will imme- Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. diately reappear or are you go-1 Adv.
DON'T put ofT until tonight what you can do today. Step into your druggist's and buy a bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery. Start taking it at once. By the time you reach home you'll be on the way to recovery. This standard family friend has been breaking colds, coughs, grippe attacks, and croup fir more than fifty years. It's used wherever surefire relief is appreciated. Children and grownups alike can use it there is no disagreeable after-effect. Tour druggist has it. 60c. and S1.20 bottles. Give it a trial.
Bowels Begging for Help Torpid liver pleading for assistance? How careless to neglect these things when Dr. King's New Life Pills so promptly, mildly, yet effeo tlvely come to their relief I Leaving the system uncleaned, clogged bowels unmoved, results In health-destructive after-effects. Let stimulating, tonic - in - action Dr. King's New Life Pills bring you the happiness of regular, normal bowel and liver functioning. Keep feeling fit doing the work of a man or woSJuTwfib finds relish ia It, All druggists 25c .
nlmost immediate relief. Jt loosens tno ; phlejrm, stops the nasty throat tickle ' ;inii heals the sore, irritated membranes so gently and easily that it is really astonishing. A day's use will usually overcome the ordinary cough and for bronchitis, croup, hoarseness and bronchial asthma, there is nothing better. Pinex is a most valuable concentrated i compound of genuine Norway pine extract, and has been used for generations I to break up severe coughs. To avoid disappointment, ask your druegist for ounces of Pinex" with ! full directions, and don't accept any j thin? else. Guaranteed to give absolute 1 satisfaction or money promptlv rei "unded. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne,
Who is The Miracle (Ulan
of her back and became so weak and run down at times she was unable to do her housework and was so nervous she could sleep but very little. "She had taken a lot of different
kinds of medicines, but none of them did her a particle of good. At last my father, who had taken Tanlac with fine results, advised her to try it. The very first bottle gave her relief. Her appetite got better and she was not troubled with gas. She continued taking it until she had taken five bottles, and the change in her condition for the better is simply remarkable. She can eat anything she wants and enjoy it, and never has any bad after effects. She never has the head-
i ache or those dizzy spells and more
and can do all her own housework with the greatest ease. In fact, she. is in better health in every way than she has been for years, and has gained twenty pounds in weight. She sleeps well and gets up in the mornings refreshed. After what Tanlac has done for her it is a pleasure for me to tell others about it." Tanlac Is sold in Richmond by Clem Thistlethwaite ; in Greensfork by C. D. Sornine; in Cambridge City by Mr. Dean House; in Pershing by Sourbeer & Rodenberg; in Centerville by Centerville Pharmacy, and in Miltcn by W. L. Parkins. Adv.
BANK STATEMENT JESSE T. DRULEY, President WALTER F. PARKS, Vice-President O. M. WHITMIRE, Cashier Report of the condition of the Farmers State Bank a State bank at Boston, in the State of Indiana, at the close of its business on November 17, 1919 RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts 5115,722.45 Overdrafts 1,232.88 U. S. Bonds 35,831.68
Banking House 4,234.59 Furniture and Fixtures 3,500.00 Other Real Estate 1,500.00
Due from Banks and Trust Companies 6,924.71
Cash on Hand 1,878.50 Current Expenses 3,112.48 Taxes Paid 612.74
Interest Paid 1,797.60
Total Resources
LIABILITIES Capital Stock paid in Surplus Undivided Profits Exchange, Discounts and interest Demand Deposits J106.918.35 Demand Certificates 7,085.43 Certified Checks Bills Payable .. .
$176,347.63
f 25,000.00 500.00
1.029.57
6,814.28
$114,003.78 1.000.00 28,000.00
Charter No. 8625
REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE First National Bank
iotio',1IIamsbUrg' ,n the State ot Indlan at tQe close of business on Nov. 17th,
RESOURCES
Loans and discounts, including rediscounts, (ex
cept those shown in b and c) Overdraft, secured: unsecured
U. S. Government securities owned:
Deposited to secure circulation (U. S. bonds par value) 5 25,000.00 Owned and unpledged 12,300.00
lotai l,. &. government securities Other bonds, securities, etc.:
Securities, other than U. S. bonds (not Including
slocks ), ownea anri unpledged 15,713.73 Total bonds, securities, etc.. other than IT. S
Stocks, other than Federal Reserve Bank stock.
tock of Federal Reserve Bank (50 percent of subscription) Furniture and fixtures 'mm Lawful reserve with Federal Reserve Bank ...." Cash in vault and net amounts due from nationalbanks Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer and due from U. S. Treasurer Interest earned but not collected approximate on Notes and Bills Receivable not past due
S4.0SS.0S 170.42
C7.300.Oj
Total
LIABILITIES Capital stcok paid in Surplus fund Undivided profits Less current expenses, interest, and taxes paid... Interest and discount collected or credited in advance of maturity and not earned (approximate Circulating notes outstanding Demand deposit (other than bank deposits) subject to Reserve (deposits payable within 30 days) : Individual deposits subject to check
4.02S 69 1.S2C.55
Total Liabilities
$176,347.63
State of Indiana, County of Wayne, ss.: I, O. M. Whitmire, Cashier of the Farmers State Bank, Boston. Indiana, do solemnly swear that the above statement Is true. O. M. WHITMIRE. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 25th day of November, 1919. CLARENCE M. PARKS, Notary Public. My commission expires Dee. SO, 1822.
Total demand deposits (other than bank deposits) subject to Reserve, Items, 34, 35, 36, 37, 3S, and 39 $ 140.S76.81
IS, 1 13. 4 3 1,500.00 900.00 1.000.00 10.212.94 35.941. 2S 1.25O.0') 1.500 0') $ 195,576 43 $ 25,000.0.1 l.OOO.On 2,202 14
1.500.0.) 24,997 5'J
11S.713.80
$195,576.45
Total
State of Indiana, County of Wayne, ss: I, Wilfred Griffith, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. WILFRED GRIFFITH, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 22nd day of November, 1919. MILTON H. WOOLLEY, Notary Public. My commission expires June 7th. 1923. Correct Attest : WILLIAM A. LEWIS. J. W. MEREDITH, L. J. CRANOR, Director!.
V
