Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 84, 18 February 1920 — Page 11

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 18, 1920.

PAGE ELEVEN

SOW BRINGS $2,010 AT JONES AND PIKE OFFERING OF HOGS 1 By WILLIAM R. SANBORN. Grandview, Missouri, and Lake , Geneva,' Wisconsin, captured. the two principal prizes at the Jones and Pike Bale , of Big-Type Polands at Centerville on Tuesday, the third choice of the offering falling to an Indiana man, R. E. Henley, of Straughn. The fourth fortunate visitor at the Hawthorn piggery was Earl M. Larsh of Eaton, Ohio. The Jones and Pike ' offering con

sisted of 50 head of the female per

suasion, among which were 17 yearling and fall sows and IS spring gilts. Of this number 49 were sold and 1 donated. The average on the 49 head

was 1273.20. the top S2.010 and the

grand total $13,652.60. Sow Sells for $2,010. The cream of the offering, "Hs Pet Giant," one of a litter of 12 and dating from March 1, 1915, brought the outside figure of the sale. The buyer, I H. Glover, of Grandview, Mo., captured her in a spirited contest at his bid of $2,010. William Wrigley, of Chicago, who has a great stock farm at Lake Geneva, Wis., paid an even $1,000 for his choice of sows', and R. E. Henley of Straughn, Ind., gave $555 for "Clansman Maid," a daughter of the Clansman, for which Mr. Wrigley recently paid $15,000. These three sales were the outstanding features of the day. The sale opened at 12:30 in a comfortably warm pavilion, in the presence of representative Big-Type men from several states. Four well known U fleldmen from the various swine jour- " nals were also present with commissions to buy for a number of breeders , who could not attend the sale, as is usually the case, and the offering was quite widely distributed. Joe Flescher, of Dunkirk, Ind., conducted the sale and -Tom Conniff, of Richmond, and Eveiett Button, of Knightstown, assisted him. It was admitted that the attendance - was cut by the prevailing flu, but even

so the number present was considered satisfactory, as evidenced by the average price and the total netted. The sale was strictly cash and Thomas I. Ahl, of Centerville, handled the records and made all settlements. The Ladies' Aid of the Friends church at Centerville, served a most enjoyable lunch.

PESONETTE, AND STEHPEL HONORED One Richmond man, George Stempel, is in the list of 115 Indiana sailors who lost their life during the world war, and for whom French memorial certificates will be presented to their next of kin, made public by the American Legion headquarters at Indianapolis, Wednesday. . The name of Hugh W. Personette, of Cambridge

City, Is also contained. Local posts of the Legion will present the certificates with others for relatives of dead heroes at special services Sunday. y Relatives who do not receive a certificate should notify L. R. Newgent, at the Hume-Mansur building, Indianapolis.

Farm Sale Calendar

The complete calendar will be printed Monday. Thursday, February 19 0. J. Oler, 3 miles southwest of New Madison, 7 miles northeast of New Paris, 4 miles northwest of Eldorado, general sale. Sale by the administrator of the esate of Moses Henry, deceased. 1 miles south of Hagerstown. Farm nd all personal (roods. Friday, February 20. H. A. Scott, Va mile north of Hagerslown, on the Dalton Pike, at 10 o'clock. Stock sale. Stanley Campbell on the Thomas Clevenger farm, east of Brouch Chapel 2 miles southwest of Centerville, at 10 o'clock. Clean up sale. 1. D. Koonts and sons, three and onehalf miles north-west of Glen Karn,

Ohio, four miles south-east of Spartansburg, on what is known as the Mahlon Slick farm, three miles east of Crete.

I Monday, February 3.

:ert Higgins, John Maderas, Ollie

tin and Denver Harlan, 2 miles

west of Centerville. Horses,

Itie, hogs, feed and implements, at

f o'clock.

fceed Mikesell, 4 miles northeast of

w Paris, Ohio, V3 mile south of

jraffetsville, Ohio, R. R. 1; At 10:30

fl'clock. Stock and implements, jf Burt Jennings, 2 miles north of Richmond on the Chester pike. General sale at 9:30 sharp. Edwin Duke, i miles north of Campbellstown, O., and mile south of the Greenwood school house on the Dayton and Richmond traction line, stop No. 101, 10 o'clock. General sale. Frank Southard and R. E. Chenoweth, at he Southard farm, located on the county line road, two miles east of Arba: two and one-fourth miles west of Glen Karn, Ohio, general cleanup' sale.

TRAINED NURSE SAYS

- WOULD MAKE

(Continued from Page One) were brushed aside and it was rarely that he seemed to get out of sorts. But little by little as the cares and burdens of the white house began to weigh heavily upon him, Mr Wilson allowed his passions to get the better of him. Frequently he showed to the correspondents assembled before him a certain impatience end at times real anger. He didn't like to be questioned closely or catechised about matters that were agitating the country. Particularly did he seem to allow a fierce gleam to enter his face as anybody suggested that perhaps there might have been some inconsistency

cn the part of himself or a member of his administVation. He would tolerate no criticism in the queries of correspondents. And his cabinet officers found the same thing true. They did not dare to cross him. He didn't like it. Secretary Garrison tried it and soon found himself out of the cabinet. Cabinet Was Subordinate. No. Mr. Wilson's idea of government by cabinet is that a cabinet officer is merely a general counsel or adviser subject to the authority and instruc

tion of the president, and as such, necessarily subservient to the presidential command. When Mr. Bryan resigned, the president, who had been writing notes to Germany and handling foreign affairs, made no secret of the fact that he wanted a counsellor and not a secretary of state, and Mr. Lansing had no doubts about the position in which he would be place by taking the office. The president has from time to time shown a disposition to re'ard cabinet meetings as superfluous. Time and again, when newspapers would print stories saying he didn't

think cabinet ' meetings were necessary, he would issue vehement denials through administration officials, but there is no question In my mind that Mr. Wilson's conception of cabinet government is decidedly different from those held by some of his predecessors. He feels that cabinet officers are advisers and subordinates, who are to give advice when asked for it, and to take orders and carry them out according to the wishes of their chief.

"Peeved" at Little Things. The war has unquestionably had a

depressing effect on Mr. Wilson's spirits. Little things provoke him. For instance on the boat going over to France, he took considerable offense because the George Washington carried a number oj minor officials of the state department staff. He held Secretary Lansing responsible for this and fretted the first two days out at sea and wouldn't receive the secretary of state, simply because his instructions about keeping the number on the boat down to the minimum, had not evidently been carried out. Just wiry Mr. Wilson wanted the whole boat to himself, people could not understand, nor was it comprehensible why the president allowed only a handful of people to accompany him on the return journey, and left lots of space in the vessel which it had been thought would be occupied by returning troops, but tiie boat was only half filled when it started from Brest, and the only explanation which anybody

could deduce from the strange demeanor of the president was that he wanted to be all alone and did not want to be annoyed. Public Life Wore Him Down. Instances, trivial indeed, could be cited to show that the president was

weighed down by official burdens to j

an extent that the public has little known, and that gradually he developed an irritability which has not been known except to the inner circle. Twice on the western trip which

he took immediately after his return

from Europe, the president showed his temper. In St. Louis, just as he was about to begin hi. speech at night, a photographer took - a flashlight. Now Mr. Wilson has had that happen to him many times before,' but on this occasion he blurted out angrily, "We ought not to care how we look but how we act," and the crowd which had been amused as it always is by a sudden flashlight picture, stopped its laughter abruptly and wondered. Again, at Salt Lake, a fortnight later, the president was talking about Article X and asked a rhetorical question the kind that the crowd is not supposed to answer, but Mr' Wilson's delivery was so forceful and he had been getting such enthusiastic applause at the endt of almost every sentence that somebody applauded at the wrong place. I am sure it was unintentional. The president stopped short and issued an angry rebuke in that direction from which the applause had come "Better wait till you hear

it all, before you applaud," was his reprimand and the crowd wondered. Once Schooled He Temper. ' Time was when Mr. Wilson schooled

himself to repress his temper. Once or twice when delegations visited him at the white house he got his dander up, but usually the stenographic record of what was said never was Issued and '- th , public was nono the wiser, it was noticed, however, that

in the last two ears, the president has been given every now and then to intemperate expression. ' In a 'nutshell his duties and his burdens got on his nerves.' They are still on his nerves. Woodrow Wilson three years ' ago would never have done what .Woodrow Wilson is doing today. Cabinet members have led him astray and gotten him Into worse difficulties and uncomfortable moods than did Secretary Lansing's adventure in protecting the president from adverse criticism when he was nuable to discharge the duties of his office.

The man who has long stood for

the inefficiency of the post office department and the public criticism of Secretary , Baker, Secretary Daniels, and others in the senate and house, whom he has been accustomed to support without regard to public opinion, is not the same who dismissed Robert

Lansing as secretary of state. He

a man upon whom the burdens, of the

war and peace jobs have left a residue or nervousness, irritability and in

tolerance that will be repressed with

difficulty as Woodrow Wilson servee

the remaining 12 months of his term-, (Tomorrow's article the Jast of theii

series will deal with Secretary Lansing's policies and the probable significance of the episodo from, an international as well as a national point of view.)

ST. PAUL WOMAN GAINED 21 POUNDS IN A FEW WEEKS

DRUGGIST SAYS PEPGEN HAS MADE SENSATIONAL RECORD; MRS. HALLEY CRAIG TESTIFIES

"For more than a year I suffered intense misery caused by a disordered stomach," says Mrs. Halley Craig, 123 South 14fla street, Richmond. "My liver was also out of order. All I want to say is that people who have trouble with their stomachs or livers had better try Pepgen if they wish to experience prompt relief." Pepgen is now the sensation of the drug trade in the United States. In the history of proprietary medicines, there has never been a record worthy of comparison with Pepgen. The enormous popularity of Pepgen is due to its meritorious effects in stomach trouble, indigestion, dyspepsia, headaches, constipation, backache, kidney and liver ills. No medicine of less merit could

pile up the huge sales record that -has Pepgen, nor gain as has Pepgen, the unqualified endorsement of men and women by the thousands who stand for ttie best of their various communities. Pepgen Increases stomach action and quiet6 the nerves. It cleanses the blood. It encourages the kidneys and liver and the absence of alcohol and sugar make it a safe medicine for people with kidney ills to take. Whenever there is pain Pepgen Liniment, made from mustard, pepper, sassafras, menthol and amonia, should be used in connection with Pepgen Tonic. It penetrates but does not blister. Sold by the Thistlethwaite drug stores and other first class druggists everywhere. Advertisement.

Every Family Needs Hull's Superlative Compound for Colds, LaGrippe or Influenza Dayton. Olilo, The A. J. Hull Medicine Co., FIndlay, O. Gentlemen: For the benefit of thousands of people who are suffering from LaGripjje or Influenza, I feel it my duty to tell others about your wonderful remedy. Hull's Superlative Compound, so that they may g-et quick help in time of need. It was through this remedy I became Interested in medicine and nursing and 17 years ngo entered the City Hospital at Indianapolis, Ind., from which I gradu

ated and became a registered nurse of Indiana. I continued nursing until I became a wife and mother of two children. I believe Hull's Superlative to be the most all-around family medicine on the market, as it never failed in my family and many others to whom I have recommended it, to break up Colds, La Grippe, Tonsilltis, Influenzae Billious fever and Acute Indigestion, and I found it also to be a splendid blood builder. Kvory family in the country now. especially needs Hull's Superlative for by having this remedy in the home and beginning to take it upon the first symptoms of chills it will ward off the severest part of the disease. I received the best results by taking 1-3 tea spoonful every two hours for about 5 -doses, following with from 1-2 tablespoonful, of castor oil or epsom salts, then continue the medicine by taking 6 to 10 drops three times a day. The patient goes into a heavy perspiration and should be kept under cover, not allowing draft to reach them, although plenty of fresh air should be In the room. 1 must say I never thought I would relish the idea of having my name used for advertising but I feel it my duty in this crisis of the dreadful disease of Influenza, which is proving do fatal to so many, to recommend it to others for their help, and wish I could tell thousands of mothers of the merits of this wonderful medicine. MRS. J. II. DIXON. R. N. 3367 Home Avenue

Brand i ln n el ojU

Better Than Expected

Pure food laws Have imposed a higher standard for canned milk than for any other food product. There can't be any guesswork about milk it must come up to the set standard. HOOD'S CANNED MILK not only reaches the hipfh standard set by law but it EXCEEDS this standard by a bier percentage.

IES ITCHED

NIGHT AND DAY

On Face and Neck. Sleep I m possible'. Cuticu raHeals. "My face and neck broke out with little pimples which festered end

became linn. Th,y itrhHl

mgnt ana day, and burned o at night that it was impossible for me to sleep. My face and neck were disfigured until I was ashamed to go in public.

"After readingabout Cuticura Soap and Ointment I decided Vo get some. I used two cakes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Ointment for three weeks, when I was healed." (Signed) Miss Nellie Dibble, Leonidaa, Michigan, July 25. 1919. Cuticura For Toilet Uses Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum are all you need for your skin and all toilet uses. Bathe with Soap, soothe with Ointment, dust with Talcum. Cuticura Soap is ideal for the complexion because so mild, so delicate and so creamy. Cntiirura Taienm is an antiseptic, prophylactic, toothing dufttinff powdr of daiicat. f urinating fragrance for powdering aod perfuming the akin. 26c. everywhere. For aampla each of Soap, Ointment and Talcum free by mail, address: "CaMeara, Dast. B. atalaaa " BVCuticura Soap eh ay as without mas.

J

"I. -was almost helpless with rheumatism when I began taking Tanlac, but now I haven't an ache or pain of

any kind and have gained twenty-one

pounds in weight, said Miss Lily Minor Pecor, 93 West Tenth St., St. Paul, Minn., who has been a teacher

in and about the city tor. eignteen

years, in a statement the other day.

"I suffered with rheumatism so bad

that I have been able to get out of the

house only three times during the past

years," she continued. "I wa3 almost helpless, for I was confined to my bed

for weeks at a time and I was simply in misery from morning till night. The pains in my back felt like a knife cutting, my joints were stiff and my muscles were drawn and swollen. My

appetite left me and my stomach was so badly upset that what little I ate

caused severe pains in my sides and around my heart. My nerves were! in an awful condition and I lost weight! until I was so weak I could not stand up at times. j "My next door neighbor advised me to try Tanlac, and since it has done so much for me I will always be grateful to her for telling me about it. The rheumatism began leaving me right after I started taking Tanlac and now it has completely disappeared. The pains in my back and sides and around my heart have also left me. My appetite was never better and I can eat just anything I want without suffering any bad effects. I am not nervous or restless and am sleeping soundly every night. 1 have not felt so well and strong in years and it is a real pleasure for me to recommend the mdicine that did it all." 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; in Williamsburg by S. Merton Catey Co. and in Dublin by E. R. Money. Advertisement.

Iff tbtm it ttthrtniT- D. Does' ur lUcch--iimfly? , Do yon have shArptwlBgs when stooping or lifting?,?- - -t Feel all used p-?aa'lf you could lust go no further? ' Why not look to your kidneys? Why not use Doaa's Kidney Pills? TUchmond people have done so. . They tell you the result. ' Mrs. JC. B. Sanderson. 71 Laural St., Richmond, ays: - I have used Doan'a Kidney Pills and-found them a, Tery im.'lisfactory Temedy. - When my kidmts got out of order and acted irregularly, I had dull backaches and feftt run down and languid. ' ' ' Itoan's had been used in my family for years, stI took them. They soon put, -my kidneys In good order and relie v 3d the troubles." -'

li ice 60c. - at all dealers. Don t simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doao's "kidney pills the same that Mrs, Sanderson had. -. Foster-Milburn Co., 'JBIrs., Buffalo, N. Y. Advertise-

DR. LEE C HOOVER Veterinarian

Phone YS99

20 S. 12 th St

ill

wrr m Mil

110? MA JAUIAD6E njEisLEor

J CONQUEST

Comix g to the

0" , l" JR

H

If you knew the care and cleanliness taken in producing this milk if you knew just how rich and pure it wagyou'd never use any other kind. Besides being" convenient it has everything that fresh milk has. There is nothing taken away but a little water and nothing added it is creamy and unsweet

ened and ready for any use from drinking: to makingcakes and pastries. For coffee and cocoa it surpasses the richest milk you can buy in the bottle. Ask your grocer for HOOD'S CANNED MILK. It is economical and delicious. Use it for whatever purpose you use fresh milk and gret better results.

For sale by all tiseniertts.

druggists.

Adver-

THE W. H. HOOD CO. . WHOLESALE GROCERS PORTLAND, IND. RICHMOND, IND.

When Have You Seen Such Low Prices as These on Shoes? This is Truly a Good Pace to Buy Shoes Ladies' Shoes

$4.19

Special We on!y have about 250 pairs left of these $tt hand-turned Nurses' C'omrort Shoes. Be sure you get yours at

We today received another lot of those Ladies' Black Kid Lace Shoes, military heels, 9-inch tops. If we didn't have your size last week, get them now at

$4.65

Growing Gills' Biack Calf Lace Boot, low heel, stitched tip, our 5.35 quality; sale price

$4.45

Ladies' Black Kid Lace 9-inch Boot, Louis heel, a $9 value; our sale price

$6.95

Ladies' Patent Lace Boot, fawn buck top. Loui3 heel, Utz & Dunn finest grade, $12 value: sizes 4 to 6V2

$7.95

Ladies' Beaver Brown Kid Lace, Louis heel. See this shoe in our window. A $12.00 shoe for

Men and Boys Shoes

Special Choice of any Men's Beacon Union-made Black Calf Shoe, values up to $9.00 fTfT Sale Price PU I O

Boys' solid leather double sole School Shc-?s, the very best made. Large sizes, $3.95; small sizes $2.95

Don't fail to get a pair of those solid leather outing style Work Shoes. Others get $1 for them. Our sale price

$3.15

Men's Brown Calf English Shoe, welt sole, absolutely a $7.50 value. Our sale price

$4.95

$7.35 : -

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