Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 322, 24 November 1920 — Page 7

MAILING VESTIBULE, LARGER DRIVEWAY, " POSTOFrlCE PLANS

A mailing vestibule and larger driveway are among the improvements to be made at the Richmond post office in accord with plans and specifications received by Postmaster Beck from the supervising architect of the treasury department Wednesday morning. The parcel poet room of the local office will be moved to the basement, where' a room will be equipped and furnished to take care of this increasing feature of the mail service. An elevator from the basement to the

mailing room will be installed to

facilitate the moving of the packages.

Postmaster Beck has been trying to

get these additions made to the office for over two years. He was anxious to have some larger additions made to the building but states that the

proposed vestibule will take care-of

the immediate needs. Built in Rear

As outlined in the plans the vesti

bule will be 30 by 11 feet and built out from the rear of the building where the mailing platform now

stands. The driveway will be cemented all the way to the alley. Complete , instructions have not been received but it is thought by local officials that the improvements will be started Immediately. Bids for the work will probably be advertised for soon.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM ANP SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND WEDNESDAY, NOV. 24, 1920.

PAGE SEVEN

SOCIETY

(Continued from Page Four) The Quaker City club will meet at the home of Mrs. Oscar Porterfield on South Eighth street Friday evening instead of Friday afternoon as previously announced. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Libbert entertained with a dinner party Sunday as a courtesy to Mrs. Minnie Hovelmeier and daughter. Miss Henrietta' Hovelmeier, who leave soon for Sharps, Fla. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas, Dr. and Mrs. Cooper and son, Everett, all of Connersville, Ind.; Miss Elizabeth Hovelmeier, Mrs. Minnie Hovelmeier, Miss Henrietta Hovelmeier, Miss Marie Libbert, Miss Agatha Wepehaan, Miss Florence Libbert. and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Libbert. Mr. and Mrs. Chailes Cannon of South Sixteenth Btreet will leave Wednesday evening for Pittsburg, Pa., where they will spend Thanksgiving and the week end with friends. Miss Ruth Schwenke and Miss Amy Fitpatrick left Wednesday for Cincinnati where they wil lattend the MiamiCincinnati football game. They will be the guests of Miss Myrtle Minning and Miss Earla Cain, nurses at Christ hospital. Mrs. C. F. Ferling and son, Richard, are making an extended visit in Cincinnati and Indianapolis. Miss Elisabeth Marvel arrived in Richmond Tuesday after an extended trip of several months in Europe. Miss Esther Jones, who is studying at the John Herron Institute in Indianapolis, arrived Wednesday to spend Thanksgiving vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R, B. Jones, South Eighteenth street. William Kirkpatrick, who is attending Carnegie Teen, at Pittsburg, Pa., will spend Thanksgiving with hi3 parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Kirkpatrick, North Fourteenth street. Mrs. George Zuttermeister and Mrs. Katherine Renk will spend Thanksgiving in Peru, Ind. Miss Blanche Wait will go to Cinciunati over Thanksgiving. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rossiter and children, of Dayton, O., are th; guests of Mr. and rMs. R. C. Russell, Randolph street. Mrs. Margaret Besselman and Mrs. Viola Kaueher have returned from Indianapolis where they were guests at the dinner given at the Claypool hotel for all supreme officers of the Women's Benefit association of tho Maccabees. Joseph Swearinger, John Teagarden, William Haberkern, John Evans and Wynne Evans arrived Wednesday from Oxford, O., where they are attending Miami university, to spend Thanksgiving vacation with their parents. Miss Dorothea McWilliams, Miss

STOP ITCHING ECZEMA Penetrating, Antiseptic Zemo Will Help You Never mind how often you have tried and failed, you can stop burning, itching eczema quickly by applying Zemo. Furnished by any druggist for 35c. Extra large bottle, $1.00. Healing begins the moment Zemo is applied. In a short time usually every trace of eczema, tetter, pimples, rash, blackheads and similar skin diseases will be removed. For clearing the skin and'making it vigorously healthy, al waysuse Zemo, the penetrating, antiseptic liquid. It is not agreasysalveanditdoesnotstam. When others fail it is the one dependable ta. tent for skin troubles of all kinds. U'Le E. W. Koie Co., Cleveland. O.

KNOLLENBERG'S

offers wonderful Gift Suggestions in all departments

TURKEY DINNER at the Arlington, Thursday

Watch for Our Specials Tomorrow Weiss Furniture Store 505-13 Main St.

Gertrude Stanton and Miss Joyce Stan-

ley, all of Lake Charles, La., who aro students at Earlham college, will be

house guests of Miss Esther Reid over vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Brehm and daughter, Margaret May, are spending Thanksgiving with Mrs. Brehm's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Hart, of South Eighth street. Mrs. William Hart will be hostess for the Jolly Twelve club Friday afternoon at her home on North Sev

enteenth street. The Elks' Thanksgiving dance Wednesday evening is in charge of Harry Holmes and Robert Tomlinson. Farling's Feature Five of Bluffton, Ind., which will play for the dance, Is making its first appearance in Richmond. The dance is for Elks only. Country club members are all invited to be present Saturday evening at 8:15 p, m., when two one-act plays will be presented under the direction of Mrs. H. R. Robinson and Mrs. Burton J. Carr. Following the presentation of the plays the Evan Smith orchestra will play for an informal dance. The November social committee is in charge of the entertainment. No admission will be charged. The Ben Hurs will give a dance In

their club rooms Thursday night for members of the club and their friends. Music will be furnished by the Miller orchestra. Mr. and Mrs. Franklin C. Hebbeler, 230 Kinsey street, will entertain the following guests Thanksgiving: Mrs. Abbie Irelan, Mr. and Mrs. Frank IreIan and family, Mr. and Mrs. L. Hirsch and son Russell, Mr. and Mrs. William Reid and family. Miss Genevieve McCume and Miss Mable Rawn, of Dayton. Judge and Mrs. Mulcay of Versailles, Ky., will spend Thanksgiving with their daughter, Mrs. Arthur Hill, 122 South Fourteenth street. The Women's auxiliary of the American Legion will meet in the Legion club rooms, K. of P. building, at 2:30 p. m., Friday. Officials request a full

attendance as important business will be transacted. Mrs. Lucile Mornlngstar arrived Wednesday morning from Kansas City, Mo., to spend Thanksgiving and Christmas with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A, J. Ford, North Eighteenth street.

Columbia, Venezuela,

See Ring Understanding

(By Associated Press) BOGOTA, Colombia, Nov. 24 Col

ombia and Venezuela are taking steps to reach an understanding relative to controversies which have arisen along

ter was a result of the actidn of Venezuelan officials in cutting off river the frontier. The most serious mattraffic west of the Lake of Maraciabo, by which mercantile interests in the province of Santander, Colombia, were injured. A protest was made at Caracas and the Venezuelan government took steps to replace its frontier authorities and has given satisfactory explanation. Recent reports to the effect that hostilities had broken out along the frontier are inexact.

German Dye Syndicate Would Open America Plant (By Associated Press) BERLIN, Nov. 24. Preparations have been made by the German aniline syndicate to erect nitrogen plants in the United States and Japan, and directors of the syndicate have already opened negotiations with those governments, says the Zeitung Ammittag.

A motor freight service operating through Kansas and Nebraska has 150 motor trucks. New York State alone has over 400 motor express lines in operation. It is estimated that for the whole country there are not less than 5,000 such lines in operation.

To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Grove's LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE tablets. The genuine bears the signature of E. W. Grove. 30c. Advertisement.

MOTOR ETHER 80c per lb. A. G. LUKEN & CO. 630 Main Street

Safe 7IUUcnwm invalids

asjv. run Horlich's

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ForlnSams.InvaHdaandGrowingChDdren Rich milk, malted grain extract in Powder Ths Original Food-Drink for All Ages No Cooking Nourishing DigetiU

AMERICAN WORKERS FIGHT TYPHUS; ARE REWARDED BY POLAND

, (By Associated Press) WARSAW, Nov. 24. The American typhus fever relief expedition to Po

land, the first organization of Its kind

in the history of the United States army, is preparing to leave soon for America, the work which the expedition organized to be carried on by the Polish health department. The expedition came to Poland intending to remain four months but its service wextended on two occasions, the work having been started in August, lux in recognition of their services to Poland in the campaign against typhus fever the Polish government recently awarded the Commemorative Cross to the following members of the organization: Lieutenant Colonel Harry L. Gilchrist, of Cleveland, in command; Major Lee R. Dunbar, Gloversville, N. Y.; Major Frank Dixon, Franklin,

Ind.; Major Willis P. Baker, New York City; Captain Paul H. Streit, Martin, Tex.; Lieutenant Robert C. Snido, Lex ington, Va.; Lieutenant Arthur Fox, Philadelphia; Lieutenant Harold L. K. Albro, Waltham, Mass.; and Lieutenant Alfred N. Bergman, Omaha. Neb. More than 40 commissioner officers and 500 enlisted men, all of them vol

unteers, have been affiliated with the expedition from time to time, tha organization consisting of about 200 men when the work began. During the

stay Its members have been distribut

ed in all parts of Poland where there was danger of the. spread of typhus, the Americans being attached to the different Polish sanitary organizations.

badly injured in a collision between a freight train and ' an express at Baraunswalde, near Marienwerder, Tuesday. It is feared that other victims are still beneath the wreckage.

COLLISION IN BERLIN

' KILLS FORTY PERSONS BERLIN, Nov. 24. Forty persons are known to have been killed or

Catarrh Will Go Help Comes in Two Minutes Complete Relief in a Few Weeks. Don't go on hawking yourself sick every morning; it's cruel, it's harmful and it's unnecessary. If after breathing Hyomei, the wonderworker, you are not rid of vile catarrh you can have your money back. No stomach dosing just take the little hard rubber pocket inhaler that comes with each outfit, and pour into it a few drops of Hyomei. Breathe it according to directions. In two minutes it will relieve you of that stuffed up feeling. Use it daily and in a few weeks you should be entirely free from catarrh. Breathing Hyomei Is a very pleasant and certain way to kill catarrh germs. Get a Hyomei outfit to-day. it's sold by druggists everywhere with guarantee to quickly and safely end catarrh, croup, coughs, colds, sore throat and bronchitis or money back. It's inexpensive. D. & S. Drug Co., and A. G. Luken & Co. can supply you. Advertisement. Ends indigestion It relieves stomach misery, sour stomach, belching and all stomach disease or money back. Large box of tablets at all druggists in all towns.

CONSTIPATION GONE SUFFERED 8 YEARS

Tried everything-, but finally found right road to health. Gained 20 pounds.

SHIP LOSES PROPELLER . (By Associated Press) LEWES. DeL, Nov. 24. The Dutch steamer Klnderdljk, Norfolk, for Holland, with a cargo of coaL lost her nro-

peller at sea and was towed here

early Tuesday by the steamer Arnndelr Rotterdam for Hampton Roads.

Clem Thirthw!-:, Ricnmond, ini

"My wife has been troubled for eight years with constipation, sue u- ... almost everything- on the market and has never received any benefit from any of them. In fact, they have done more harm than grood. "She overheard one lady telling another what Milks Emulsion had done for her. She grot a bottle and has continued its use since. 5he weighed 97 pounds at that time, and after takingfive bottles she now weighs 117 pound.; gained 20 pounds on five large bottles: besides she is feeling- fine. "If all the people suffering- from constipation knew what Milks Emulsion would do for them, you would have to enlarge your plant." Leonard McKee, 29 Eye St., N. E., Washington. D. C Hundreds have endured torture for years and then found that Milks Emulsion grives blessed relief and real, lasting benefit. It costs nothing to try. Milks Emulsion is a pleasant, nutritive food and a corrective medicine. It restores healthy, natural bowel action, doing- away with all need of pills and physics. It promotes appetite and quirkly puts the digestive organs in shapp to assimilate food. As a builder of flesh and stre.igth. Milks Emulsion is strongly recommended by those whom sickness hai weakened, and is a powerful aid in resisting and repairing the effects of wasting diseases. Chronic stomach trouble and constipation are promptly relieved. This is the only solid emulsion made, and so palatable that It is eaten with a spoon like Ice cream. No matter how severe your case, you o fa ii rtrlrl tn f rw i 1 L- c W m n I o inn n nc

I tliis guarantee Take six bottles home j with you, use it according to directions j and if not satisfied with the results. ' iir money will be promptly refunded. Price 75c and $1.50 per bottle. The Milk Emulsion Co.. Torre Haute, Ind. Sold by druggists everywhere. Adver4 lisement.

What Richmond Needs? Richmond needs hearty co-operation between the Farmers, Clergy, Retail and Wholesale Merchants, Manufacturers, the Lawyers, Doctors, Teachers, Real Estate Operators, Transportation Operators, etc., to Make Richmond the Best Placein the World to Live in.

EMM22G3

ISMMMM1

HE Country Qrocery. The rustic melting pot where disciples of an older and less

KMiiicu cueiuui7i seuiea loquaciously au quesuons oj state, jor once ana jurevcr; where budding Websters spouted' their views, and spat with gusto at a sawdust target.

The old type of grocery is all the more picturesque because of the contrast it affords with the modern store, orderly, well designed, clean. The contrast in bakeries is equally marked. The unsanitary "cellar bakery" is still with us, but it is fast dying out. In its place are coming such bakeries as that in which is baked BETSY ROSS BREAD. Sanitary, automatic machinery, white clad workers, white walls and white-tiled ovens and, lastly, the wax-wrapped loaf will identify for you the strictly modern bakery, whose product may be relied on to be high quality, clean and correctly baked. Try BETSY ROSS BREAD the finest bread possible to bake.

Ask for

I I 4 ft A CSTT f Ilk f

A 'iUK Good

i Old Fashioned Taste'9

wissler9

etsy Ross Bread

SKATING Wednesday Night, Thursday Morning, Afternoon and Evening, at The COLISEUM

Report of Condition of the Union National Bank at Richmond in the State of Indiana, at the close of business on November 15, 1920. RESOURCES Loans and discounts. Including rediscounts 547,481. 7S Overdrafts, unsecured , 4S6.37 U. S. Government securities own: Deposited to secure circulation (U. S. bonds par value) , 140.000.00 Pledged to secure postal savings deposits (par value) 5,000.00 Pledged as collateral for State or other deposits or bills payable 90,000.00 Owned and unpledged 127,750.00 War Savings Certificates and Thrift Stamps actually owned 294.56 Total U. S. Government securities 363,1 44.5G Other bonds, securities, etc.: Securities, othsr than U. S. bonds (not including stocks), owned and unpledged 203,172.47 Stock of Federal Reserve Bank (50 per cent of subscription) 7,500.00 Value of banking bouse, owned and unincumbered S4.000.00 Furniture and fixtures 2.500.00 Real estate owned other than banking house 213.00 Lawful reserve with Federal Reserve Bank 59,625.30 Cash 'in vault and net amounts due from national banks 122.758.7S Net amounts due from banks, bankers, and trust companies in the United States (other than included in Items 11, 12, or 13) 1,017.71 Checks on other banks in the same city or town as reporting bank : 15,289.17 Checks on banks located outside of city or town of reporting bank and other cash items 5.631.31 Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer and due from U. S. Treasurer 7,000.00 Interest earned but not collected approximate on Notes and Bills Receivable not past due.. - 11,000.00 Total 1,436,800.45 LIABILITIES Capital stock paid In .- 150.000.00 Surplus fund 100,000.00 Undivided profits 81,825.17 Less current expenses, interest, and taxes paid.. 16,380.92 65,444.2r Circulating notes outstanding 140,000.00 Net amounts due to national banks 5,668.9.1 Demand deposits (other than bank deposits) subject to Reserve (deposits payable within 30 days): Individual deposits subject to check 766,351.71 Certlfcates of deposit due In less than 30 days (other than for money borrowed) 140,463.4 1 Time deposits subject to Reserve (payable after 30 days or more notice, and postal savings): Postal savings deposits . , 2,372.12 Bills payable with Federal Reserve Bank ........ 66.5b0.00 Total v 1,436.800-45 State of Indiana, County of Wayne, ss: , I, H, J. Hanes, cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. H. J. HANES. Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 15th day of September, 1920. BENJAMIN F. HARRIS. Notary Public. My Commission expires October 2, 1923. Correct Attest: C. A. McGUIRE. GEO. L. CATES, W. D. LOEHR, Directors.

Published Statement Trust Company DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY

EDGAR F. HIATX. President EVERETT R. LEMON, Secy.

GEORGE H. EGGEMEYER. Vice-Pres. JESSE A. WIECHMAN, Treas.

Condensed statement of the condition of the Dickinson Trust Company, at Richmond, in the State of Indiana, at the close of its business on November 15, 1920.

Resources Loans and Discounts . . . Overdraft 3 Bonds and Stocks Company's Building

Other Real Estate

.$2,134,252.23 1,431.71 . 556,646.48 50,000.00

50,000.00 71,432.79

Advances to Estates and Trusts

Due from Banks and Trust Companies 326.769.31 Cash on Hand . 108.370.18 Cash Items 19,229.27 Trust Securities 821,591.16

Total Resources

..$4,139,783.16

Liabilities Capital Stock paid In 200.000.03. Surplus .125,000.09 Undivided Profits Net .. . 47.501.9J Demand Deposits, except - . Banks l,156,04ir Savings Deposits, except - - Banks 1,60518.97Trust Deposits, exceptBanks 141,128.44 Due to Banks and Trust - U Companies 3,476.48. Trust Investments 821.591.1ft. Treasurer's Checks 39.801.S7-

Total Liabilities "...V; .$1,139.78111:

State of Indiana, County of Wayne, ss: ? ?m I. Jesse A. Wedchman. Treasurer of the Dickinson -Trust Co of RlchP mond, Ind., do solemnly swear that the above statement Is tine. m ' , JESSE A.; .WIECHMAN.; r Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 24th day of November, ; 192-0.-H

CLEMENTINE OVERMAN, Notary Public.- -My commission expireB Feb. 6, 1922. , ' '