Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 147, 30 April 1920 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. FRIDAY, APRIL 30, 1920.
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. Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Second Class Mail Matter.
MEMBKH OF THE ASSOCIATED mES9 Th Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news 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.
Swat the First Ones ' Get out that old fly swatter, and be on the watch. - If you haven't a fly swatter, a folded newspaper will do. A fly hit over the head with an account of the League of Nations is a "goner", according to the Washington Star, in the first day of : the open season for fly swatting in the District of Columbia. "Recent mobilizations of the flies was reported in nearby Maryland towns," that newspaper continues. "Spring is really here and the advent of the flies may be expected in force within a few days. "Swat the first ones. "That is the advice to every housewife, every storekeeper, every small boy, every citizen who wants to keep the capital of the nation clean. For not even a capital of a nation can be clean if it harbors a superfluity of flies. "Extermination, pitiless, merciless, of the first fly invaders will put such a crimp into the
i)y advance that tlie swatting for the rest of the '.
spring and summer will be comparatively easy, it is declared. "Untold progety will be wiped out before born by a swat at the early flies."
Men Who Work "It has alwaysibeen possible to separate men into two grand divisions those who like to work and those who do not," says the Chicago Nws. "The number anjproportion of those who do not like to work is soniewhat higher now than it used to be. Why thi3 is so the phychologists may be able to explain. 'The fact regains that there is a very considerable proportion of men who are going on with their work as faithfully and loyally as they did before there was a war or an armistice. They are the men who have what science calls 'the instinct of workmanship'. They like their jobs. They work as if they believed it a good, healthful, wholesome thing to perform constructive service six days a week at the very jobs they are holding down. "In a list of the men who work should be included those who are in processed industry. The driver hauling earth starts his horses when the ;-;team shovel has filled the wagon. The steam shovel engineer runs his machine better when a long line of wagons is waiting to be filled. Each feels himself part of a process, to speak scientifically, or he is playing a game, to use the term of sportsmanship. "Working and liking it is normal existence. It is also the most lasting form of enjoyment."
Today's Talk By George Matthew Adams
Mme.
IT'S WHAT YOU ARE Over and over again this fact comes to me as a driving truth that it is what people, are and not what they 1-nvc that mafcps them worth while and worthy of love. And that is the way the Invisible Judge oT the World looks at things, I i'nisiire. I shall not excuse any of your vices, iior shall I defend any of your virtues; I hall simply take you for what you
are or not at all. That is the basis j stop
for friendship or comraaesmp nouiing else. Also, that is the plane from which you are always going to be sized up. It's what you are not what you are going to be, or what you have, or what someone else has that may sometime te- yours. Y'ou've got to stand alone. And inasmuch as the thing which you do, must be a personal affair clear thru, you must make your own contractand then see that it goes to completion. It's what you are that you haveto t uiUl upon. Your recommendations are in your face, wound about the way you dress, and stamped across every thought that j ou think and express. More lies are written across people's faces than are -ver parted from people's lips. "What you are, is eloquent in plainness. Lt us tryiot to defend, boast, or auolozize when it comes to what we
sre but. in sincerity, U't us seek '
higher ground and try to give a better account of all that we havo to make us better than we are now.
OVERJOYED WITH WHAT ORECO DID FOR HIS ECZEMA
f t i mm 117 ji Li. M. Flesh, all of Piqua, Ohio. U XT OT d mayor On Ytarpaitl j. a. Krohn, better known as "CoA 4 11 fLlZnm lonial Jack," the original wheelbarrow Against All uamoung man arrived in this t.ity on his way frrn I ra Ancroloc Oil 1 1 f t r Titctrn
OXFORD. O., April 30. MayotfMass. He pushed a wheelbarrow con-
Hughes has gone the warpath agains?
gambling in all forms. Since causing the arrest of Nelson B. Fulton, ant fining him $50 and costs for operating a handbook on the races, the mayor has been told that there is an occa sional game of poker in the village, and that small crap games are not altogether unknown in the village. Tie
mayor declares that all gambling mufet
aining his baggage weighing about
CO pounds all of the distance. Extensive plans wero made for the Fall Festival. The managing board, composed of nearly a score of Richmond business men, was nanifd.
Answers to Questions
Farmer Have many farmers left Canada for the United States? The Canadian superintendent of imniigration said in 1908 that about 10,000 farmers leave the dominion for the United States anually. In 1918 the total migration from - Canada to the United 'States was 22,446, but it is not know how many were farmers. In 1916-1917 more than 105,000 persons proceeded fr.om Canada to the United States. R. B. What is the area and population of the earth? Its area i3 55,255,000 square miles and its inhabitants number 1,692,604,360. The fertile regions are estimated at 29,000,000 square miles. B. J. Where are the largest refracting telescopes in the world? In the United States the one at Yerkes Observatory, Geneva Lake, Wis., has an object lens 40 inches in diameter with a focal length of 64 feet. II. T. What is the estimated life in years of an apartment house? It is estimated to be between 18 and 21 years.
Rendera may obtain aaanrri to quralliioi by wrltlne the Palladium (Ideation and Answer Department, (titrations ahonld be written plainly and briefly. Answers will be slven briefly.
father i. noi u naturalised citizen. " Would you class him as 'The Man Without a Country'?" the recruiting sergeant was asked. "Man without a country nothing," said the sergeant. "I'd class him as a League of Nations."
"If you struck one of those golf balls and hit a man in the eye, what would you do?" asked the man who was interested in first aid to the injured. "Oh, I'd have to play it from just where I found it," replied the en thusiastic golfer. A slum child was enjoying his first
stool he sat beside the farmer's wife, who was plucking a chicken. He watched the operation gravely for some time. Then he spoke: "Do yer take off their clothes every night, lady?"
, "UeJ;: Help" he yelled. "If I Jump?,
will you catch me? ' "Sure, an' Oi will!" replied the policeman readily. So the man jumped, only to crash to the ground and lie there stunned. When, a few minutes later, he recovered consciousness, he looked up at the constable reproachfully, and murmured feebly: "I thought you said you could catch me?" "Begorrah!" replied the Irishman, "Oi was only waiting for yez to bounce an' Oi'd have yez!"
Dinner Stories
Louis C. Minctte. accepted for enlistment in the United States marine
corps at Tula, Okla., recently, said
Count de Lesseps disliked to have any of hi3 family entertain sil'v superstitions. One morning at breaklast a beautiful Dresden teacup was broken. The countess was greatly distressed and said: "Now, two more of the set will be broken; it always happens so." "Are you so superstitious," asked the count, "as really to believe that two more will be broken?" "I know it." "Then let us get it off our minds," he said. And taking two of the cups by the handles ho dashed them together. The anger and dismay of the countess proved that she had not seriously held to her superstition.
As the police recruit strolled along on his first turn of night duty, loud
yells of "Fire!" rent the air. He
that his mother was an American who bolted quickly to the spot and found married a Frenchman in Italy. He j a house well alight, with a man half
was bom on a ship flying the Spanisli
colors while lying in the English channel. At the age of five his parents -died in Sweden, and he was adopted by a German, who brought him to the United States. His adopted
hanging out of an upstairs window.
FIERY, ITCHY SKIN QUICKLY SODTHED BY SULPHUR
Mentho-Sulphur, a pleasant cream, will soothe and heal skin that is irritated or broken out with eczema; that is covered with ugly rash or pimples, or is rough or dry. Nothing subdues fiery skin eruptions so quickly, says a noted skin specialist. The moment this sulphur preparation is applied the itching stops and after two or three applications, the eczema is gone and t he skin is delightfully clear and smooth. Sulphur is so precious as a skin remedy because it destroys the parasites that cause the burning, itching or disfigurement. Mentho-Sulphur . always heals eczema right up. A small jar of Mentho-Sulphur may be had at any good drug store. Advertisement.
Pay When Cared Dr. I'.urkhart wants you to write him today for a treatment of Dr. Ivurkhart's Vegetable Compound for Liver. Kidney, Stomach Trouble, Constipation. Catarrh. Rheumatism. Pay when eured. Don't mi.ss this grandest of remedies and wonderful preventative for Grip, Flu. Address 621 Main Ht.. Cin'ti, O.. For sale at all Drug Stores. 20-day treatment 2 ji-. Advertisement.
Music Head Resigns.
Lillian A. Wiesike, head cfi
the voice department of the Western College for Women, yesterday tended ed her resignation to take effect t
the close of the present school year. Mme. Wiesike came to the Western Iwo years ago from Indianapolis, Ind. Next, year she will be a member of the faculty of the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music.
! Memories of Old Days
In This Paper Ten Years 1 Ago Today
Articles of incorporation were taken out for the Richmond Underwear company with a capital stock of $100,000. Directors named were Abe Louis, W. P. Orr. It. E. Sims, K. A. Todd and
I feci splendid"
'Cascarets" act without Gririnz
or Sickening you So Convenient! You wake up with your Head Clear, Complexion Rosy, Breath anJ Stomach Sweet No Biliousness, Headache, Constipation, Indigestion.
I'OLITICA L A D V V. RTI SUM KX TS
POLITICAL. A D Y fcl ItT I S H M EX TS
Fester's
Right
ieves that the local officials and the tax payers should have the right to determine their community's needs, and to provide for same without the unwarranted interference or domination of the State Tax Board.
H-3 CSl W XJh aT Ml II 1 CJIy tfdodfl r Ml lllfl b4L
AN ABLE REPUBLICAN
or governor
PRIMARY MAY 4, 1920 " The Folks are For Fesler"
Marion Farmer Declares it is the Only Thing that Dried it up for Him, the Burning Itching Would WaVe Him Up During the Night, Body Full of Sores From Scratching. Dreco Cleared Out His Blood and Healed All the Sores and His Skin is as Smooth as a Baby's Now.
Dreco h.is been found to be a wonderful medicine for a number of ailments, and has-helped a great number of persons suffering from eczema. Many people do not realize that the only way to positively rid themselves of this very annoying disease is to cleanse it from the blood. There are many treatments sold these days to be applied to the parts affected, and as long as they are used they hold the disease in check, but. they contain nothing to really drive it from the system; a medicine acting through the bleod Is the one sure way. That Dreco acts on the blood, driving out the impurities, is proven by the signed statements from many reliable persons, who have given it a fair trial. "1 am overjoyed at the way Dreco has dried up the eczema which has bothered me for a long time," said Mr. Theodore Evans, the well-to-do farmer of Marlon, Ind. "I'd often wake during the night scratching myself; -the itching and burning were awful; 1 had sores all over my body from scratching trying to get relief. I never knew what a good night's rest was like. I took lots of medicine; used salves and lotions, but to no advantage. "It is astonishing what two bottles of Dreco have done for me; why all the itching and burning have stopped"; the sores have healed over; my skin is smooth; I sleep all night long, and that awful bitter taste in my mouth is- relieved. "Dreco is a wonderful medicine." All good druggists now sell Dreco, and it is being especially introduced In Richmond by Clera Thistlethwaite's Seven Drug Stores, Advertisement.
A One-week Drive On
I 1 I I
H
For Ladies & Misses
and up
Just to prove that OUR PRICES for BETTER GRADES are LOWER than any other store in this city. We have eliosen SUITS for this BIG DRIVE as they are in largest demand, but ECONOMY PRICES rule throughout our entire stock. We restrict this sensational selling: event to one week as we predict demand will exceed supply and we cannot replace at our present prices. GENEROUS CREDIT r r You onlyj need a small amount we'll adjust the .terms to suit your pocket book.
toil ilit
"S
A Financial ervice Station
99
Xkc
A NMIONPO, INSTITUTION
830 MAIN STREET
ii
II
Not all service stations are for the benefit of motorists. This institution is a financial Service Station in more respects than one. As a member of the Federal Reserve System, we are able and prepared to assist in financing legitimate propositions in this territory. As the largest and oldest Trust Company in Eastern Indiana, our resources, equipment, organization and varied departmental services enable us to render constructive and helpful assistance in every phase of finance. In fewer words, we provide safety, service and profit for business man and humble saver alike. Your account invited protected and appreciated. Dickinson Trust Co. "OLDEST, LARGEST AND STRONGEST TRUST COMPANY IN EASTERN INDIANA
1
Mart
CdDiris-
"(Cds-If
(Gd
No Corn Can Withstand "Gets-It"-Peels 'Em OH Painlessly
Why "monkey" around with various corn experiments? If you don't want that corn, just put a few drops of "Gets-It" on and be done with it. Pain slops on the instant corn gone in a hurry.
i ii m mum ii ii i
mi)MHiii(itjiiim.iiintmimiMtimtHttiutmi:ii
i i
i -
!! f i II I ii M f 4MM
Corn and "Ueta-It Can't Llv Together
"Gets-It" discourages corns makes 'em let go and loosen up so they lift off, root and all, without your even feeling it. A few drops does
the business any time of any day or night. "Gets-It" dries instantly, so your hose and shoe can go right back on. It takes but a few moments to doom a corn with "Gets-It," and there's no more hurt left in it after a few drops, have landed on that corn. Why stand another twinge? What's the use of suffering? It's time you showed that corn who is boss. So show it with "Gets-It," the painless, quick corn getter that knows no such thing as failure. "Gets-It," the only sure, guaranteed money-back corn remover, costs but a trifle at any drug store. Mfd. by E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago. Sold in Richmond and recommended as the world's best corn remedy by A. G. Luken & Co., Clem Thistlethwtite, D. & S. Drug Co. A
iiiHiitmniM umw
