Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 70, 2 February 1920 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, FEB. 2, 1920.
FARMERS START ' -DRIVE FOR AGENT
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. Feb. 2. A letter has been Bent out from the headquarters of the Indiana Federation of Farmers' Associations to the various county associations urging the members of the organization to write to their respective congressmen at - Washington, calling attention to the importance of an increase in appropriation for the county agents and home demonstration agents. It Is pointed out by officers of the federation that during the war congress made an appropriation which was used in furthering extension work, a portion of this fund being used in Indiana in paying the salaries of these agents, amounting to $90 a month. The fund received from the government was used to supplement the funds appropriated by the' state and made it possible to give the agents a fair salary, to employ stenographers and meet other expenses., Last year, however, congress reduced the appropriation so that home demonstration agents were largely lost to this state, only five being retained, and the government allowance for county agents was reduced to f 20 a month. A majority of the counties, especially where the Indiana Federation of Farmers' Associations are well organized, are contributing at least in part and in other ways meeting the expenses of the county agent's office.
LEAVES LAW WORK TO BECOME PRIEST
Indiana News Brevities
LAFAYETTE A movement has been launched by the Rotarlans of Indiana to take the Purdue University Military Band to the international convention of Rotary clubs to be held .at Atlantic City during the coming summer. COLUMBUS At a meeting of the directors of the Bartholomew county Farmers' association, it was voted to admit women to membership into the association on payment of the same dues as the male members. MtlNCIE -Mrs. Hamilton Beall, 48, wife of a former local captain of police, and well known in this section, is dead at her home here of paralysis. PETERSBURG 'Immediately following the withdrawel of Governor Goodrich from the presidential primary preference race, the friends of Senator Harding, of Ohio, started a Harding boom in Pike county. JONESVILLE The town board of Jonesvllle will appoint a marshal at the session Monday night, and notwithstanding the job pays but $120 a year, there are 14 applicants. There has not been an arrest made here in two years.
James R. Mur.hy,
James R. Murphy of the former law firm of Murphy & Crown, Chippewa Falls, Wis., and his law partner will be ordained priests in Chippewa Falls next May. They pave up their law practice in 1916 and entered the Holy Ghost Fathers' college at Norwalk, Conn. The two have been chums all their lives.
Ohio News Flashes
NEWARK Newark Real Estate Company will carry second mortgages on property to encourage working people to build own homes. There is a scarcity of houses here. MARION E. C. Sites, 25 years old, police say, confessed having struck Clyde Cook, 20 years old, with the butt end of a revolver. Cook suffered a fractured skull, but, physicians say, will recover. TOLEDO The Metropolitan five-to-fifty-cent store wa3 destroyed by fire. The loss is $75,000. TOLEDO Ardis McCurdy, 4 years old, engrossed in her play at the home of neighbors, fell into an open fire place and burned to death. NEWARK This city has been without a Health Board for a month. Council, opposed to the present health officer, Dr. W. H. Knauss, reused to appropriate money to operate the Health Department. Jesse Baldwin, sanitary policeman, has sued the city for wages.
350 ARE EXPECTED AT MISSIONARY MEET
Preparations are under way at Earlham college to entertain 330 registered students from Indiana colleges and universities who will gather at the local college Feb. 12 to 15 for the ninth annual missionary conference of Indiana students. Over 200 Earlham students will, be engaged. Many other educational Institutions of the state have asked to send additional delegates who will be
cared for it possible. The pastors of the city are co-operating in arrangements to house the delegates. All meeting of the conference are to be held in Earlham chapel in Lindley hall. The conference banquet will be served Saturday evening in Earlham hall dining room. Meals will be served in the West Richmond Friends' church Saturday and Sunday noon, and Sunday evening. Some of the speakers are: S. G. In-
man, J. Lovell Murray, author of "Call
cf the World Task;" Dr. Paul, Ray
mond Holding, Dr. Capen, W. W. Mendenhall, Dr. Soper, Miss E. Hazlett and C. H. Haas, former medical missionary to Asia.
"What's in a Namtf"
Facta ab'out your name: its history; Its meaning, whence it was derived; tta Imlfleance; your lucky day and lucky jewel. BY MILDRED MARSHALL
Mrs. Austin to Address Fountain City W, C. T. U. The W. C. T. U. of Fountain City will hold the February meeting at the home of Mrs. O. C. Thomas, Wednesday, Feb. 4. Mrs. Mary Austin of Richmond will address the meeting, giving an account of the National W. C. T. U. convention held in St. Louis. Mrs. Austin was the delegate from Wayne and Randolph counties. It will also be guest-day and each member is expected to invite some friend. Fol-
lowing the address, light refreshments will be served and a social hour en- ! joyed. In order that Mrs. Austin may reave on the 3:12 train, the meeting
vill begin at 1:30. p. m.
You flatter a woman iy telling her she looks prettier every day, a man by telling him he looks healthier.
Nobody likes to bear another's burden if the other acts like he expects him to bear it.
If you can't obey orders, you'll never be able to give them.
Use
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veeo Your Fvm
Clean - Clear Helth
(Copyright, 1919, by The Wheeler Syndics, ta. Jnc.)
HARRIETT Harriett, by all right of significance, should belong td Ireland since it means "tiome rule." But In reality. It has its origin in old Norse mythology where there was a porter of Valhall called Helmdall, who watched the further end of the rainbow bridge Bifrost to guard the Aesir from the giants. His name is explained by translating the "heim" as home. It was through this Haimdall that all the Henry's and Harrys came to be. The feminine of the name was invented in the first century. It is thought to have originated in France since Henriet Stuart appears in the House of Stuart d'Aubigne in 1588, and there were a number of Henriettes to watch the Henris of the court of Catherine de Medlcis. England received the name from the daughter of Henry IV, Henriette Marie, whom the prayerbook calls Queen Mary, though given the French pronounciation, which is Hawyot, and that became a separate proper name. Harriett is also pronounced in that manner by those who are excessively given to propriety. In England Henrietta is as great a favorite as Harriett. Another spelling of the latter is Harriot. Hattle, Hetty, and Etta are diminutives. Henriette is purely French and Henrietta and Jette are Teutonic. Italy has an Enlighetta which is the equivalent of
Harriett. Spain has evolved the musical Enriqueta. The moonstone Is Harriett's talismanlo gem. Through some mystic connection with India and her sacred colors. It Is said that Harriett's color is yellow. If she wears this and a moonstone, she will have- good fortune and attract the love of men. Monday is her lucky day and 4 her lucky number.
Carl Ackerman Goes to
Europe for PubUc Ledger Carl W. Ackerman and Seymour B. Conger, two of the correspondents who will represent the Public Ledger in Europe, sailed Saturday on the Royal George to help organize a new foreign service for the Philadelphia Public Ledger. Immediately previous to the entrance of the United States Into the war. Mr. Ackerman was Berlin manatter of the United Press. Part of this time he was, with the German and Austro-Hungarian armies on all of their battle fronts, from Russia to Belgium, also in France and Rumania. During the war Mr. Ackerman visited 20 countries and came' within 20 degrees of encircling the globe. Early
In 1917 he forecast a political revolution In Germany, in his book "Ger-
fmany the Next Republic?"
While in Siberia as New York Times correspondent with the allied armies he cabled to America the first authentic account of the last days of the Czar and returning eastward obtained the c-lv interview which the Chinese
president has' ever granted to a for
eign correspondent. While representing the Times he traveled with the Czecho-Slovak, Japanese, English, French and American forces.
If you are a fool you might as well be an out-and-out one. Cut off a mule's ears and he'd still be a mule.
You may have the reputation of being a good sport and still not make
much of a hit with the grocer.
CHILDREN . should not be "dosed'1 for colds - apply the
outside" treatment
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"ONLY ONE THING BREAKS MY GOLD!
PREVENTION IS BEST CURE FOR INFLUENZA SAY PUBLIC AUTHORITIES
A wagon tongue has its place, but
a waggin' tongue hasn't.
Eyes Inflamed? If your eyes are inflamed, weak) tired or overworked; if they ache: if picture shows make them feel dry ' and strained, set a bottle of Bon- ; Opto tablets from your druggist, dissolve one in a fourth of a glass of water and use as an eye bath from two to four times a day. Bon-Opto allays inflammation, invigorates, tones op the eyes. Note: Doctofmr Bon-Opto Btrenitbent ere ifht so in a week's tima in many taitancca
Every Possible Effort Is Being Made In Affected Localities To Stop Further Spread Of Disease.
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That's Dr. King's New Discovery for fifty years a cold-breaker' NOTHING but sustained quality and unfailing effectiveness can arouse such enthusiasm. Nothing but sure relief from stubborn old colds and onrushing new ones, grippe, throat-tearing coughs, and croup could have made Dr. King's New Discovery the nationally popular and standard remedy it is today. Fifty years old and always reliable. Good for the whole family. A bottle in the medicine cabinet means a short-lived cold or cough. 60c. and $1.20. All druggists. Regular Bowels Is Health Bowels that move spasmodically free one day and stubborn the next should be healthfully regulated by Dr. King's New Life Pills. In this way you keep the impurities of waste matter from circulating through the system by cleansing the bowels thoroughly and promoting the proper flow ot bile. Mild, comfortable, yet always reliable, Dr. King's New Life Pills work with precision without the constipation results of violent purgatives. 25c. as usual at all druggists.
OUNCE OF PREVENTION WORTH POUND OF CURE Persons Who Catch Colds Easily and Who Are In Rundown Condition In Greatest Danger. Influenza continues to spread; and the disease is now prevalent over many sections of the country. It has baffled the medical skill to an unusual extent, and although it has been held in check in most localities it has gotten beyond control in others. The germ has eluded bacteriologists, and medical men now agree that the best cure is prevention. The surest prevention is to build up the bodily powers of resistance, and to get the system into the best physical condition possible. It is now universally agreed that it is possible to perfect the powers of resistance of the human system so that it can throw off almost any infection, not excepting Influenza. It has been observed that persons who are weak and run-down are more susceptible to the disease than persons who are in robust health, and if you are in a generally run-down condi
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germs. This is a statement of fact and is supported by the recognized authorities and reference works including the IT. S. Dispensatory, the Encyclopedia Brltanica, and also by standard text books used in the schools of medicine. This statement is further proven by the fact that millions of persons who have actually taken Tanlac have testified to its extraordinary merit as a medicine and by the fact Tanlac Is today having the largest sale of any tonic on the American market. Tanlac is also an ideal strengthening tonic for persons who are suffering from the after-effects of colds, influenza, ordinary Grippe, and bronchial troubles, and hundreds of thousands are using it daily with most gratifying results. In connection with the Tanlac treatment it is very important to keep the bowels open by taking Tanlac Laxative Tablets, samples of which are enclosed with every bottle of Tanlac. Tanlac is sold in Richmond by Clem Thistlethwaite; in Greensfork by C. D. Corine; in Cambridge City by Mr. Dean House: in Pershing by Sourbeer & Rodenberg; in Centerville by Centerville Pharmacy: in Milton by W. L. Parkins and in Dublin by E. R. Money. Adv.
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