Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 132, 13 April 1920 — Page 6

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM " AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Published Evefy Evening Except Sunday, by I. Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Streets. I Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as ; ' Second Class Mail Matter.

MKMUCU OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Frss la exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all mwii dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.

Where Our Money Went I If you want to read a chapter in high finance and of reckness expenditure of public funds, rjroI vided by the Liberty bonds which We bought, 1 read the report of the joint committee on priritI ing which investigated the operation of the comi mittee on public information of which George p Creel was head. ' Creel will be remembered as the official cen-

sor of press matter during the war, and some of

his effusions, especially that of an alleged fight between American naval unit3 and German sub-

marines, still cause newspaper men to smile and bgrin. , ! The joint committee in its report to congress ! reveals some interesting facts, j For instance, $135,000 a year was expended f by Creel for the publication of the National li School Service, the object of which the committee says was to "convert the teachers of the

country to the idea of the league of nations and to urge them to teach that doctrine to their

school children." Today's Talk By George Matthew Adams I ' KEEP GIVING AWAY. "I We give for everything which we i get, whether we intend to or not. But Mhen we intend to give, we get so Inuch more. The drone bee gives its life that its l?ee race may be perpetuated on and on. Its entire thought is toward its own kind not its own self. The entire life of the bep, whether drone, worker, or queen, is to preserve its , (Community. i And so it is with the human, the noblest form of life the more that he I gives, the greater does he become. Keep giving away! Sometimes v e give too much, both for our own good and the good of the one to whom we give. But it is not so much in the fact that quantity of act has been performed as in the fact that a fine effort has been set forth to play its way. Nature is very lavish. Wells says, in one of his interesting essays, that "Nature slays'" But that is only so I that the finest may remain to carry on Its tradition of beauty. The sun elves its light and heat and ! receives back the gorgeous colors of the flower for pay. The very clouds i gather in substance and brust their 'bodies into gentle rain, .while the . whole carpet of the earth rises in ripened harvests to call it blessed. And we all profit from these maniTestations. We see the hand of the Infinite pointing our eyes to a motto: 'Keep Giving Away!" I We can only keep so much. The rest imust be given away or else we ffchrink into littleness, obscurity and f oblivion. Dinner Stories ' "And so you learned French thoroughly while over there, son?" said the proud father of the returned soldier. , "Sure! I got so I could say 'Hello' and 'Good-night' and order ham and eggs, and I could ask a fellow to lend me money and tell a girl I loved her better'n anything, Rnd that's all a fellow need3 in any language." One day little Ella was very naughty, so her mother told her she was going to send her back where sffe came from. Ella replied: "You can't. .You washed me and you combed me and I'm used now, and they won't take mo back." "What are your impressions of No Man's Land?" T didn't get into the war," answered the morose citizen. "My only vivid Mea of No Man's Land is home while ' 6pring housecleanlng 13" going on." " Two little girls were playing in the 'street when an automobile was seen approaching. Loretta, the elder, said (to her sister: "Look out, Sophia, or the : automobile will run over you and you k-will never be alive again as long as jou live." Good Evening By Roy K. Moulton One of the magazines presents a radical depai ture from , custom this month by publishing the picture of a pretty girl on its cover. The world So move. i ' "What did people do before the age cf the teleplnne?" asks an eastern college professor. Well, for one thing, they enjoyed a little contentment here 'find there. .More men are "done" by their DOIfIG HIS DUTY ? "For two years I suffered agonizing pains in my stomach, belching up sour end bitter fluids and gas. Tongue always coated. Doctors were unable to help me. The first dose of Mayr's Wonderful Remedy made me feel 100 jjer cent better, and I am now feeling better than at any time in my life. I 3eem it my duty to advise other sufferers." It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the Inflammation which causes practically ill stomach, liver and intestinal ailfents, including appendicitis. One ise will convince or money refunded, em Thistlethwaite's Six Drug piores; A. G. Luken & Co., and leading Jruggists everywhere. Advertisement.

The committee compelled the administration to cease publishing 111 of 226 periodicals at an annual saving of $1,200,000; cut down allowances for field printing plants $898,000, and has curtailed the activity of the government printing plant to such an extent that $908,184 was saved on print paper alone this year. Money was "wasted recklessly" on scores of publications in army and navy camps during the war, says the report. Officers of the Great Lakes Training Station not only Issued an eightpage daily but also put out a pictorial magazine which rivalled any publication in the million copy class. When the committee compelled the Official Bulletin to discontinue, it was put out as a private enterprise, the new owners obtaining the name, good will, prestige, value as a going concern, mailing lists and subscription accounts without paying the government a cent for the transfer. "There seems to have been a deliberate effort to loot this $600,000 a year publication," says the committee's report. The disclosures of this committee serve to illustrate the high handed manner In which the public money was extravagantly and foolishly spent. No wonder that the national debt has not been reduced. It is easy to see why the government must put out treasury certificates quarterly and redeem them with the income tax payments. A tolerant American public is growing weary of the shameless expenditure of money for which it is being taxed heavily. It wants economy in high places.

friends than are undone by their enemies, GOING GOOD. (From the Cincinnati Enquirer.) M. V. Going and Natalie Good were married in Jonesboro, Tenn., last Saturday. It is told of a Kansas farmer that he had filled his cellar so full of private stock that his family could not get in when the recent tornado struck. John D. Rockefeller says that when a boy, his greatest ambition was to be a piano player. But how could he have played all the pianos in the country at once? Many a man taking the perilous zigzag course through life has zigged when he should have zagged and zagged when he should have zigged. SUITABLE EPITAPHS, For a theatrical press agent: "Here lies a press agent." "Man Shot. The Knife at His Side," headlines in an evening paper. Whom do they suspect of poisoning him? The voice with the breath wins. It looks as though nobody made any money out of the theatrical business this past season except those who were mixed up in it in some way. A burglar stole all the tickets out of a Kansas City theater for a certain performance. With the usual carelessness of burglars he failed to even pay the war tax on them. "Sit down when you are in financial trouble," says an expert, "and see where you stand." What's in a Name (Copyright) NANCY The, quaintly demure name of Nancy which has come into great vogue in modern times signifies "grace." There was a period in her evolution when Nancy fell into disuse, or was bestowed as a homely, uninspired cog nomen, particularly indigenous to ru- ; ral communities. But Nancy's day ! has come she is fashionable and exceedingly pleasant to pronounce. Nancy's origin lies in the Hebrew Chaanach, signifying "ryercy or grace" and her earliest forbear was Hannah, mother of Samuel. But Hannah is a harsh name because of" its aspirate initial, so the process of evolution carried the original word through the successive steps of Anna, Anne and finally arrived at Nan. It seems curious that Nan was tb forerunner of Nancy, instead of being a contraction of the latter name; indeed, it i3 one of the few instances occuring in etymological records. Nannie, which is Nancy's diminutive, is indegenous to Scotland, though much used in England. Nancy Is Annot in the former country. Frafce has many equivalents for Nancy and Nan, among them being Nanette, Nanon, Ninette, Nichon and Nillon. Nancy becomes Nanna and Ninetta under Italian influence. There is even a Dutch farm of Nancy Naatje. and Nann and Nannell are popular in Switzerland. Amber is Nancy's talismanic ge.m. It is a medicinal stone which protects its wearer from danger and disease. Monday is her lucky day and 7 her lucky number. BE PRETTY! TURN GRAY HAIR DARK Try Grandmother's Old Favorite Recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur. ; Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sluphur. properly compounded, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray. Years ago the only way to get this mixture wa9 to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will get a large bottle of this famous old recipe, improved by the addition of other Ingredients, at a small cost. Don't stay gray! Try it! No one can possibly tell you have darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, and after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. Advertisement. v.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Masonic Calendar Tuesday, April 13 Richmond Lodge No. 196 F. & A. M. Called meeting. Work in Entered Apprentice Degree beginning 6:30. Wednesday, April 14 Webb Ldge NO. 24 F. & A. M. Called meeting. Work In Fellow Craft beginning 7 o'clock. Friday, April 16-s-King Solomon's Chapter No. 4, R. A. M. Called meeting. Work in Mark Master degree. Saturday, April 17 Loyal Chapter No. 49 O. K. S. Stated meeting and initiation of candidates. FORTUNE IN OLD CLOTHES CHEST "Diamond Dye3M Turn Old, i Faded, Shabby Apparel i into New i Don't worry aoout perfect results. Use "Diamond Dyes," guaranteed to give a new, rich, fadeless, color to any fabric, whether it be wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods, dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts, children's coats, feathers, draperies, coverings. The Direction Book with each package tells so plainly how to diamond dye over any color that you can not make a mistake. To match any material, have druggist show you "Diamond Dye" Color Card. Advertisement.

THESE

HARRISON'S "TOWN AND COUNTRY" for your house

Phone

Answers to Questions

W. B. Who Invented the rotary turbine? C. A. Parsons, of England, in 1891. Subscriber. Describe a pagoda. A hindoo place of worship, containing an idol, it consists of three portions; an apartment suhmounted by a dome, resting on columns, and accessible to all; a chamber into which only Brahmins are allowed to enter; and, lastly, a cell containing the statue of the deity, closed by massive gates. The most remarkable pagodas are those of Benares, Slam, Pegu, and that of the Juggernaut, in Orissa.. E. C. R. Do different nations use different colors of mourning? In the UnitedStates and Europe the usual color is black; in China, it is white; in Turkey, blue or violet; in Egypt, yellow; in Ethiopia, gray. C. M. L. What does the abbreviation H. M. S. stand for? His (or Her) Majesty's service, ship, or steamer. H. H. In what year did the Boxer uprising take place? In 1900. Reader may obtain annvrera to questions by writing the Palladium Question and Ansvrer Department. Quest loon should be -written plainly and briefly. Answers will be srlven briefly. American Legion Posts of the American Legion In Indiana, including Harry Ray post of Richmond, began a campaign for new members Monday night. Arrangements were made at the regular meetings of ' the Marion county posts for the promotion of the membership drive, which, it is hoped, will obtain 30,000 new members in Indiana by May 2S, a month before the Vincennes convention on June 28." The Posey county and Richmond posts are the only ones that have already started an TO RELIEVE CATARRH, CATARRHAL DEAFNESS ' AND HEAD NOISES Persons suffering from catarrhal deafness, or who are growing hard of hearing and have head noises, will be glad to know that this distressing affliction can usually be successfully treated at home by an Internal medi cine that in many instances has effected complete relief after other treatments have failed. Sufferers who could scarcely hear havg had their hearing restored to such an extent that the tick of a watch was plainly audible seven or eight inches away from either ear. Therefore, If you know of someone who Is troubled with head noises or catarrhal deafness, cut out this formula and hand it to them and you may have been the means of saving some poor sufferer perhaps from total deafness. The prescription can be prepared at home and is made as follows: Secure from your druggist 1 ounco Parmint (Double Strength). Take this home and add to it 4 pint of hot water and a little granulated sugar; stir until dissolved. Take one tablespoonful four times a day. Parmint is used in this way not only to reduce by tonic action the inflammation and swelling in the Eustachian Tubes, and thus to equalize the air pressure on the drum, but to correct any excess of secretions in the middle ear, and the results it gives are nearly always quick and effective. Every person who has catarrh in any form, or distressing rumbling, hissing sounds in their ears, should give this recipe a trial. Adverticement.

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TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1920.

active campaign to obtain their quota of members. Resolutions favoring extension of hospital facilities for former service men disabled mentally or physically were passed Saturday by a committee representing welfare agencies for dis abled soldiers of Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio meeting in Indianapolis Dr. T. Victor Keene of Indianapolis, chairman of the hospital .committee, read the resolutions, which had been adopted at a meeting in Cincinnati, and they were promptly approved. Dr. Kennon Dunham of Cincinnati, chairman of the educational commit tee, and Eugene Foster of Indiana polis, chairman of the general com- j mittee, spoke on the work of caring for disabled soldiers. Amos Butler, secretary of the Indiana 'State board of charities, said soldiers were being given preference in tate institutions. RICHMOND MAN IS ABLE TO GO BACKTO WORK System Weakened by Severe Attack of Grip VolaTonic Brought Back His Strength. IS GAINING EVERY DAY Among the many people right here in Richmond who have been helped by Vola-Tonic, "Builder Of Strength," is James Haner, 240 South Seventh street, a cement worker. Mr. Haner recently suffered a severe attack of grip and was so weak when he got over it that he couldn't work but he says Vola-Tonic has built him up and made him feel fine. "I couldn't do anything when I got over the grip," Mr. Haner said. "For a period of about ten days I was so weak that all I did was lie around the house. "I read about Vola-Tonic in the newspapers and finally decided to go down to Quigley's drug store at Eighth and Main streets and ask the druggists there about Vola-Tonic and see if they would recommend it. "Well, the druggists at Quigley's store recommended Vola-Tonic to me and I got a bottle and started taking it. I am now on my second bottle of Vola-Tonic and it has proved to be all that is claimed. "I have become stronger every day since I started taking Vola-Tonic and I am back at my work again now and find that it grows easier and easier for me as the days pass. Vola-Tonic put my stomach and bowels in good condition and has brought me a fine appetite. "I heartily recommend Vola-Tonie because of what it has done for me."

MY TELL HO

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PLAN PUBLIC AQUARIUM.

jvi x iwbI oi what lis fApecied to be $200,000, according to an announcement in Chicago, a public aquarium Is to be built in Lincoln park. Fish from all parts of the world will make up the collection. It will be located near the Field Museum of Natural History. , Ko Internal ftedWne wffl em SVtewit. Only fir UM iliesttoa at CRANOLENE. tfte mat sxternurapdsr.ean tii KaMtnn mtaroba b tnyed. Prevn th IS stftjMMat tor eurlt "SJMMtOcaa "I 'suffered for SO year with EcsObk fa fM form. Affected eil er the. boar. citAiWMLuyii left ram mm tarn mm ,wu jjiic. end I sleep lies IB plow dot." w . seunan, Jon lie Iff i oh neon City ."J mi . (Wrtttsn tor nets titer M list I Sold sad CMsraatesd by sU Druggists Powers of the "Builder Of1 Strength" Praised by Thousands of People Over Wide Territory. - EXPERT AT QUIGLEY'S The unusual powers of Vola-Tonic for strengthening and building up men and women who are weak and run down from influenza, pneumonia, grip, colds and the like have been told by people In all parts of this section. Thousands of men and women over a wide territory praise Vola-Tonic for the benefits it has brought them. The Vola-Tonic expert, who has been at Quigley's drug store at 806 Main street, meeting the local public and explaining Vola-Tonic, will remain here until Saturday afternoon. Many Richmond people have called to see the expert. Chief among these were men and women who were weakened and run down from influenza and other forms of weakening sickness. Explaining how Vola-Tonic builds up new strength and brings back better health, the expert said: "Vola-Tonic stimulates the appetite. Then it helps the digestive organs take nutrition from food to nourish and strengthen the organs and tissues of the body. Vola-Tonic also soothes the nerves and permit1? sound, energyrestoring sleep every night. New strength and better health come a a result." Where To Get Vola-Tonic The expert is at Quigley's drug store at 806 Main St.. anad will be there until Saturday afternoon. He will explain Vola-Tonic to you. You also can get Vola-Tonic at any other Quigley drug store and at one leading drug stcre in cities and towns alt over this section. Advertisement. IT COSTS NO

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A Sure Way To . End Dandruff There Is on sure way that has never failed to remove dandruff at once, and that is to dissolve It, then you destroy It entirely. To do this. Just get about four ounces of plain, common liquid arvon from any drug store (this Is all you will need), apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most If not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications win completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of It, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find all itching and digging of the scalp will stop instantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. Adv. VOLA-TONIC IS RINGING BACK HER JTRENGTH Was Hardly Able to Get Around House When She Got Over the Influenza. HELP CAME QUICKLY When Mrs. Raymond Baker, 423 Betts street, Cincinnati, O., got over influenza last winter she was so weak and nervous that she could hardly get about the house and she had been that way ever since until recently. Mrs. Baker started taking VolaTonic, "Builder Of Strength," and in just a short time she said she could notice her strength coming back. "I was In a serious condition when I got over influenza," Mrs. Baker said. "It left me in a badly weakened, nervous, run-down condition. I was so weak I could hardly get about the house and suffered often with terrible headaches. "When I read so much in the newspapers about Vola-Tonic and saw it f highly recommended I decided to try a bottle. "I have only taken one bottle of Vola-Tonic now but it has helped me so much that I have every rtason to believe it will restore my health completely. "I can notice that Vola-Tonic is gradually bringing back my natural strength. I am not troubled nearly so much with headaches now. "I am glad to recommend Vola-Tonic to everybody and am sure it will bring benefits if taken according to directions." MORE

VOLA-TONIC

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STAINS, ENAMELS, VARNISHES Suitable for every article you want to finish

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