Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 143, 26 April 1920 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, APRIL 26, 1920.

RAILROADS AND GOAL COMPANIES SPLIT BY U. S. SUPREME COURT

, (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, April 26. The federal government today won Its antitrust suit against the Reading Company, and affiliated companies, In one ., of the so-called anthracite coal cases. 4 By a vote of 4 to 3, the Supreme court sustained the government charges that -vthe companies violated the "commodrty clause" of the Interstate commerce act," and ordered the dissolution of the "companies. The Reading and Central New Jersey railroads, the court decided, must -dispose of stock ownership respectively of the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron company, and the Lehigh and Wilkesbarre Coal company. ' Justice Clarke rendered the declsloa for the majority, while Chief Justice White, in a minority opinion, in .which Associate Justices Holmes and VanDevanter Joned, said the minority was in favor of accepting the opinion of the lower court, dismissing the government.

rWilliam E. Shinn, 52, Is Dead at Home Near City : William E. Shinn, Sr., B2 years old, I died at his home west of the city at ;;l p, m., Sunday. He was a resident of ttthla. vicinity all of his life, and was ;,a member of the Red Men's lodge. Surviving him is his wife Nellie, two

sons, wiuiam J. sninn ana ttoDerc u. 'Shinn; one sister, Mrs. Ammerman, j and two grandchildren. Funeral services will be held from I the home Wednesday at 2 p. m. Bur;;'ial will be in Earlham cemetery. -Friends may call at any time.

Funeral Arrangements

- A J D Santis Bully De Santis, age 32, ' died at 4 a. m. Sunday, at his home, 310 Center street, of complication of '. diseases. One brother survives, Cami lllo De Santis. Funeral services will be conducted from St. Mary's church, ! ruesday, at 9 a. m. The Rev. Cronin .wilt officiate. Burial will be in St. -Mary's cemetery. Friends may call 'at any time. V. Wilson Funeral services for Alice : Davis Wilson, infant daughter of Mr. ! and Mrs. Thomas Wilson, of South

Thirteenth street, were to be held i;Monday afternoon from the parlors :of boan & Sons. The Infant was a 'twin, born Saturday morning in Reid i hospital. The Rev. J. J. Rae will officiate. Hallowell Funeral services for ' John Hallowell, who died at his ;hqme, 45 South Eleventh street Saturday noon, will be conducted from the-bome Tuesday at 10 a. m. The Rev. J. , ' Rae - will officiate. Burial will be In Earlham. Friends may call at any time. Funeral will be strictly private. Dunbar Funeral services for Thomas Dunbar, age 71, who died at his home in Centerville Saturday evening, will be conducted from ., the home Tuesday at 10 a. m. Interment will " be i la .'Crown Hill cemetery. Friends may call at any time. Long The body of Mrs- Long, who died In Indianapolis, is to be brought to the parlors of Doan & Son. She is a sister of Seth Kinley. Funeral announcements will be made later.

No Sigts of Sanity Yet On Part of Public, Say Many Richmond Merchants Some people are looking for bargains, but the va-st majority is still willing to pay $25 a yard for elite material, and a skimpy little tricolette blouse can be easily sold for $15 or 520, according to Richmond merchants who shake their heads over the possibility of making people happy with cheap materials. "High prices have become such a matter of course with many of our customers," said a dry goods salesman. "Some people grumble a lot about the 'awful prices' but go right on and pay them without a noticeable wince. I believe most of this H. C. L. ghost stuff is m,ere hot air. Most people aren't dodging high prices." Half an hour in a local dry goods store will convince the alert watcher

that people are looking for style, and

the price go hang! "Of course, there are the salehounds, but they generally end up by taking something better than they'd expected to," said another clerk. Biggest Hippopotamus In World, With Hagenback When the Hagenbeck-Wallace circus comes to Richmond Wednesday, May 5, there will be on exhibition in the menagerie the largest hippopotamus ever brought to America. It reached the circus a few weeks ago and has been given a place of honor among the many other unusual specimens of far eastern animal life. The huge river horse was caught in British South Africa by means of a pitfall a deep trench, the mouth of which is covered by a network of moss and sticks to resemble the grassy earth. When the animal took his fatal plunge, he fought so ferociously that it required 50 natives to drag him from the dark hole and make a prisoner of him.

FINAL PREPARATIONS

(Continued from Page One) 6:00 p. m. and be at the headquarters at the Westcott. Frank O. Doherty. Johnson's man-

Lager from California, and Carl Mote,

of the headquarters at Indianapolis, will have charge of the headquarters while Landis and Johnson are in the city. Tire Richmond city band will furnish the music. The program follows: 6:15, doors open; 6:45, Richmond city band; 7:15, Honorable Frederick Landis; 8:15, Senator Hiram Johnson. Frederick Landis will address an overflow meeting if such is necessary. Committees In charge of the meeting are: Chairman, Senator Walter McConaha; chairman of program, Mrs. Charles Teeter; secretary and the stage, Charles O. Williams; Coliseum, Jesse Bailey; music Clarence Kleinknecht; ushers, Geo. Matthews; reception, G. A. Dwiggins, Clem McConaha, Howard Brooks, Mrs. Charles Teeter, Mrs. Lloyd Pyle, Miss Martha Whitacre. Vice President. Boston Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Porterfield. Centerville Mr. and Mrs. Mordecal Doddridge, Mrs. Porter Pike, Mrs. Thomas Ahl, Mrs. Elizabeth Lashley, John Jackson, Walter Matthews, Frank Petro. Greensfork Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bond, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knode, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Eliason.

, Cambridge City Mr. and Mrs. j Frank Mosbough, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac ! L. Brooks. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hicks,

Dr. H. B. Boyd. Dr. J. E. Wright, Mr. Gus Garrett. Dublin Mr. and Mrs. Aldo Cain, Mr. Will Floyd, Mr. Joseph Groves. Hagerstown Mr. and Mrs. Charles Teeter, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Crull, Mr. and Mrs. Crozier Thornburg. Pershing Park Glpe, Fred Dryer. Economy Mr. and Mrs. Charles Atkinson, Mr. and Mrs. Addison T. Chenoweth. Nine From Fountain City. Fountain City Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Dwiggins, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Edgerton, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Pyle, Charles Anderson, J. D. Williams. Milton Albert Anderson, Charles Calloway. Williamsburg, Mr. and Mrs. Omar L. Pearte, Mr. and Mrs. James Ladd. Webster Mr. and Mrs. Newton Brumfield. Richmond Hon. William D. Foulke and Mrs. Foulke, Sen. Walter McConhha and Mrs. McConaha, Mr. and Mrs. Will Reller, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hill Mr. and Mrs. William K. Barton, Mr. and Mrs. Levi Meyers, Mr. and Mrs. George Brehm, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Kleinknecht, Mr. and Mrs. Ancil Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mills, Dr. and Mrs. L. M. Gentle, Mr. and Mrs. Horace Kramer, Mr. and Mrs. Clem McConaha, Mr. and Mrs. Linus P. Meredith. Mr. and Mrs. Fillmore Rlggs, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Brooks, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Potter, Mr. and Mrs. Turner Hadley, Mr. and Mrs. Omer G. Murray, Mr. and Mrs. Charles O. Williams, Mr. and Mrs. J. O Edgerton; Mrs. Ollle Hunt, Mrs. Wm. Curtis. Mrs. Russell Clark, Mrs. Claude Trusler, Miss Anna Bradbury, Miss Martha

High School

New members to the high school "R" club are to be taken In this week. This and plans for the annual party will be taken up at a meeting Monday afternoon. All members of the high school senior class ..were notified to 'communicate with. S. S. Vernon, if desiring to take the college entrance board examination Funds realized from the G. A. A.'s "jitney" dance In high school Wednesday evening, will be used for the annual "spread" of the organization.

TWO BROTHERS ARE SUED FOR DIVORCE AT SAME TIME The divorce case of Myrtle Helms vs. Earl Helms, of Center township,

was taken under advisement Satur

day afternoon in Wayne circuit court.

Cruel and inhuman treatment is the

charge.

Oscar Helms, a brother of Earl, Is also defendant In a divorce case. His

children are In custody of their moth er pending decision.

HOWTO RAISE BABYCHICKS Put Avlcol' in the drinking water.

Most people lose half of every hatch, and seem to expect It. Chick cholera or white dlajrrhoea is the trouble. The U. S. Covernment states that over half the chicks hatched die from this cause.

An Avlcol tablet, placed in the drinking water, will positively save your little chicks from all such diseases. Inside of 48 hours the sick ones will be as lively as crickets. Avlcol keeps them healthy and makes thpm frmw n .1 Hov.lnn

Mrs. Vannie Thackery. R. F. D. 3. St. Paris. O., writes. "I had 90 chicks and they all died but 32. Then I commenced on Avlcol and haven't lost any since. They have grown wonderfully." It costs nothing to try Avicol. If yoa don't find that It prevents and promptly cures white diarrhoea, chick cholera and all bowel diseases of poultry, tell us and your money will be refunded bv return mail. Avlcol Is sold by most druggists and poultry remedy dealers, or you can send 25c or 60c today for a package by mall postpaid. Burrell-Dugger Co., 168 Columbia Bid?.. Indianapolis. Ind. mncoi. stops chicks dying

We Sell and Recommend "Avicol" "It Stops Chicks Dying" Omer G. Whelan THE FEED MAN 31-33 South Sixth St. Phone 1679

WHITMAN DELIVERS ADDRESS FOR WEBSTER COMMENCEMENT The Rev. Charles Whitman of Seymour, Ind., who has often appeared on the Richmond Chautauqua platform, delivered the principal address at the Webster township consolidated schools commencement exercises Saturday evening. Miss Mabel Williams and Marvin Hunt were the high school graduates. Those graduating from the grades were Mildred Wilcoxen, Charles E. Kem, Edward A. Waedick, Dudley C. Palmer, Charles H. Stoten and Charles R. Ellibee. Will Moore is the trustee.

MINISTERS HOLD MEETING Nothing definite was done at the weekly meeting of the Richmond Ministerial association held in the Y. M. C. A. Monday morning. Committee reports and matters of business occupied the time.

What do your Clothes cost you? When anyone asks you that question you probably think of the i price you paid. That isn't the real cost. The real cost is the price divided by the number of days you wear the clothes. That's why we eay your clothes will cost less if you buy them here. You get HART SCHAFFNER & MARX clothes and they give more days of wear for every dollar spent than any other clothes we know of. If you don't find It that way money back

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TOURING 1917 (latest authentic figures available) motor trucks hauled 60 tojis of freight a mile for every person in the United States. Then the country was at war and the capacity of the railroads was overtaxed. It is doubtful if even a small percentage of this enormous tonnage could have been moved except by motor trucks. The management of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana), recognizing the necessity of furnishing facilities for supplying gasoline to automobiles and trucks as they traveled through the country, established Service Stations at convenient points throughout the terriWy served. These Service Stations perfected the system of distribution maintained by the Company. The drivers of this caravan of motor trucks which carried the 6 billion ton miles of freight in 1917 would have found their task more difficult of accomplishment had it not been for the network of Service Stations along the way. While the Standard Oil Company was supplying a substantial share of the fuel consumed by these motor trucks, it also was supplying its regular patrons, and meeting the demands of the United States Government with great quantities of gasoline for war purposes. Its preparedness, and its ability to meet an emergency, however unheralded the emergency may be, serves to emphasize one of the salient phases of the bigness of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana). Standard Oil Company' ( Indiana) 910 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, III.

12041

Whitacre, Miss Nellie Mayhood, Miss Esther Griffin White, Miss Blanche Bowen, Miss Cora Nolder, Miss Marie Backmeyer, Miss Nellie Morrow, Mayor W. W. Zimmerman, Theodore Martia, Thomas Martin, E. M. Campfleld, L. L. Parks, Charles Little, Oliver Mote, Norman Anderson, Jesse Parker, Win. R. Tharp, Charles McPherson, George McKinley, Robert Boyd, B. B. Myrlck, Lindley Swain, Elmer Hall. Ellis Frame, John Taylor, Frank Crump, J. Henry Bode, Harry Niehman, Harry Hodgin, Wm. Trusler, Charles Harris, Milton Atkinson, John Schneider. Major General Leonard Wood will be in Richmond, May 3, and will epeak at a rally arranged for that afternoon. Wood will arrive In Richmond at 3:55,,but will be able to remain only an hour, as he is scheduled to speak in Muncie, at 7:30 p. m.. May 3.

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Sure Relief

6 BCLL-ANS Hot water Sure Relief

E LL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION.

One Eyelet Tie

Pumps

Ladies' Black Kid, one-eyelet e. at SO.OO Ladles' Black Patent, one-eyelet tie at S7.00 Ladies' Brown Kid, one-eyelet e at $7.50 Bowen & Fivel 610 Main Street

Special CLEAN-UP OF ODD SIZES OF GOATS and SUITS THIS WEEK After every sale there are a few select numbers left. To obtain space in our limited sales room we are making a special offering of these Coats and Suits. If your size is listed in this ad, take advantage of the saving. GOATS

SIZES

16 118 36 38 40 42 44 46

$11.95 2 111 1 $14.95 1 11111 $17.95 1 3 4 $18.50 3 1 2 1 4 1 1 1 $19.75 2 1 3 2 1 1 SUITS SIZES H16 1 18 36 38 140 42 144"46 $19.75 112 12 1 $24.75 ..... 3 4 2 2 $29.75 1 15 12 3 3 $39.75 113 15 2 12

A Good Selection of Silk DRESSES at. $19.75 New Georgette BLOUSES, all Sizes $4.95

618 Main St.

Between 6th & 7th

"The Store That Keeps Prices Down"

REED'SC

3 REED'S C

Remarkable Cooking Secrets that will Revolutionize Your Cooking When the "RED STAR" was put on the market, the secret of efficient cooking with the cheapest kerosene was made public. The perfection of the "Red Star" made possible for the first time the use of kerosene or other cheap oils without the aid of wicks or substitutes for wicks. It made possible a complete vaporization of all the heat units of oil and increased. heating efficiency

over thirty percent.

The "RED STAR" is really a gas range.

It produces its own gas from any grade of liquid fuel. It increases heating efficiency over thirty percent.

Detroit Vapor Oil Sto Competent, official judges

countless housewives have proclaimed it to be the most economical oil stove ever - offered to American women. FAMOUS "DOUBLE-RING FLAME" BURNER It is the patented eight and one-half pound burner that is responsible for the greatest achievement of the "Red Star" Oil Range. This burner vaporizes all of the heat units of the fuel, leaving no trace of odor or smoke. It heats quickly. It can be heated to a fiery red heat or held to a low, even flame for slow cooking. It concentrates a double ring flame DIRECTLY UNDER the utensil.

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Beautiful, Efficient, Economical Not only is the "Red Star" efficient and economical to operate, but it is a beautiful range. It is designed like a city gas -range, a credit to any kitchen. It is raised on substantial legs, which permits sweeping under and around the stove.. It is a sturdily built stove, capable of a lifetime of faithful service. Ask for a demonstration.

Ask to See The "Red Star" Today

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Easy Credit Term Arranged to Suit Customer

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3 TENTH AND MAIN I

I RICHMOND IND.C

PALLADIUM WANT ADS BRING THE BEST RESULTS, TRY v .. .