Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 25, 8 December 1920 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND. IND, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 8, 1920.

SANBORN PRAISES FARM SALE LUNCH; AUCTION NETS S3.1 00

Rv WILLIAM R SANBORN.

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think If we should start the story of a farm sale and a first class lunch,

by talking about the luncn ana me ladles who served It first, incidentally mentioning that there were a lot of folks present to enjoy said lunch.

It is all right with your uorreci, gentlemen, so we shall proceed in accordance with your good judgment. Be it known then that the ladies of the Hollanshurg Grange served this satisfying, winter day lunch, to all comers, at a modest, price. Albeit they had garnered $50 at. the time of making their report, and were still going strong.' The menu offered piping hot' soup as a starter, and included edible sandwiches, fruity pies, some sweetstuff, salad and pickles galore, and mayhap a few home-made cakes. Oh, yes, surely, it is the William G. Ross 6ale we are talking about. It was held on the Stowers farm, two

of Hollansburg. The date was Tuesday, December 7. Ladies Who Served. The Ross sale lunch was served by Mrs. Asaac Trimble, Mrs. Paul Harris, Mrs. John Money, Mrs. Nora Harris, Mrs. John E. Chenoweth;; Mrs. Henry Wolfal, Mrs. Aria Harris, Mrs. Theodore Tilatter. Mrs. Ray Milton and Miss Ruby Mikesell.. The general verdict was that these ladies knew just what would best suit a hungry farmer during a sale recess, and that they were mighty fine plemakers. Good Bunch of Livestock. The live stock offering included 7 head of horses and mules, 7 head of cattle and 100 hogs. Ten Big Typo Poland China gilts, eligible to registry, and 7 Chester White sows, together with upward of 80 6hoats, ranging from 60 to 100 pounds, comprised the hog sale. Mr. Ross is leaving the farm and will move to Lynn. The man who will farm the place. A P. Meyers, was a liberal buyer, and took in the team of dun mares at $325. He also paid $42 and $44 for two fine white sows, and bought several tools and implements, according to his needs. The cows fold at from $50 to $80, the top price being paid by Dick Addleman for a nice Jersey. The team of young mules was captured by Gould Ross, at $302.50. The shoats sold according to weight on the present market basis, no outside prices being realized. No grain was sold and the mixed hay put up brought $12 per ion. Sale Totals $3,100. The demand for agricultural Implements was not pressing, this being the off season. A csiltipacker in fine condition sold for $65, and a substantial set of heavy harness brought $47. A few household good3 which will not be needed in the new Ross home, were put up, and the baseburner sold for $52, this being baseburner weather. The sale was cried by O. E. Ross, auctioneer, and William Harris made the settlements. Mr. Harris reoorts

a net of $3,100.

German Monarchy's Return Predicted by Berlin Paper (By A&sociated Press.). BERLIN, Dec. 8. The time for the return of the monarchy will come when the German people will have "drained to the dregs the blessings of ihe republican form of government," says the Krenz Zeitung, discussing the anniversary of the German revolutions The conservatives' organ adds "that the time is likely to come much sooner than most people imagine." The paper declares that the German proletariat in the past two years has been torn by dissensions which are constantly growing and that it is anything but a collective unit, inasmuch as a section of it prefers to celebrate the Russian revolution while the socalled reformists accept the German revolution as marking a new era.

INVENTS NEW COAL BRUSSELS, Dec. 8 It has been announced here that an engineer named Bauschleicher has succeeded in manufacturing by a simple process artificial coal of great heating capacity It is made with the vegetable refuge from peat beds, of which Germany possesses a great nutnber. The new fuel, which is called "gasol" coal, is said to have a heating capacity of 7,500 units and burns a bright flame. It leaves no cinders.

"DANDERINE"

Girls! Save Your Hair! Make It Abundant!

Immediately after a "Danderine" massage, your hair takes on new lite, lustre and wondrous beauty, appearing twice as heavy and plentiful, because ach hair seems to fluff and thicken. Don't let your hair stay lifeless, color.?ss, plain or scraggly. You, too, want lots of long, strong, beautiful hair A 35-cent bottle of delightful "Danderine" freshens your scalp, checks dandruff and falling hair. This stimulating "beauty-tonic" gives to thin, dull, fading hair that youthful brightness and abundant thickness All drugsst3. Advertisement.

BUST OF TAYLOR IN CAPITAL OP f UNKNOWN ORIGIN

fed

givlag much thought to these appoint

ments, none have yet been rendered.

Quite as important and more inter

esting in a human way than the matters of politics and statesmanship con

nected with Senator Harding's visit, was the personal impression he, made.

He met the newspaper men, some 60 of them, in a body. He met the sen

ate in a body, and he met, either Individually or in groups, an considerable number of Republican and Democratic senators and leaders. So far as

it is possible to make a generaliza

tion based on . so large a number of

individual contacts, it is safe to say, with a good deal of warmth, that the Impression Senator Harding made was extremely happy.

Observes Proprieties. Almost his chief preoccupation

seemed to be a wish to live up to

the proprieties, to be considerate of

others, and to let all his acts and

utterances be governed by a high-

y

3T

The nncatalogued bust of President Zachary Taylor. i Among the many famons statues and works of art in the capital building at Washington, D. C, is a marble bust of President Zachary Taylor. It is uncatalogued and of unknown origin. There seems to be no record of how the statue came to be placed in the Capitol.

PROPAGANDA EXPERTS RESORT TO OLD DODGE CBy Associated Press) AMSTERDAM. Dec. 8.. .Bolshevik

propaganda experts, anxious to avoid j discovery of the propaganda matter j

they are taking to America, are said to have resorted to the old war-time

dodge of having their .printed matter done in . miscropic form, capable of being enlarged photographically. One man, who was caught in central Europe, had in his possession a number of queer looking postage stamps upon which were printed Soviet propaganda matter. The authorities wera enabled to enlarge them to ordinary

sfze

minded aspiration tor what is t.

ported to be now devoting extraordinary care to literature intended for two particular classes women and farmers. The women are urged to join the

International Women's Communist associations, of which branches are to be established in America, and the latter are urged to form farmers' communes with the ultimate purpose of creating "Farmers' Red Guards."

taste. The impression he made was.

above all, one that reflected friendliness and consideration in him, and inspired friendliness and consideration

In others. When he spoke in the

senate, I, sat facing all the senators; I saw no face htat did not shine with kindliness. Even Senator LaFollette, whose devotion to individual standards frequently brings him into situations where he stands apart from almost every other senator even LaFollette's countenance beamed with kindliness and approval and he put cbvious enthusiasm into his applause. A reasonable proportion of so brief a visit was given to things in which his primary interest was sentimental. The dinner at the apartment of Senator New was that as well as some other incidents more intimately personal. Senator Harding really regrets

fairs. Mr. Morris advised them to i take a keen Interest in public affairs and stressed a number of points in state government CHILLICOTHE To shoot at a duck and kill a fox was a feat performed ty darence Webb, of Chillicothe. Webb saw the duck sitting on the bank of a stream. As he fired a fox jumped at the duck. The duck flew

away, Dut weDbs shot kulea tne fox. . , . .;

"First Skyscrapers" Built in Chili; Are Quake Proof (By Associated Press.) SANTIAGO, Chile, Dec 8. The first "skyscrapers" on the west coast of South America are being erected here. A 12 story reinforced concrete office

(building Is about completed, and another of 15 "stories is in its first stages I of construction. It is said both struc

tures will be "earthquake proof." Earth shocks are common to this country. ,

THRESHERMEN MEET

inviAMAtrijLtiB, uec. 8 Tne Indiana Brotherhood of Threshermen

win noia ineir annual convention here January 11 to 14. Expert mechanical engineers will speak on the handling, of threshing machinery. .

Palladium Want Ads Pay

Ohio News Flashes

DEFIANCE Former service men are making an effort to have the "blue laws" of Ohio repealed. They are especially working against the theatrical closing law. The movement is oecom-

leaving the senate. That is a bold i a

FRIENDLINESS

(Continued from Page One)

as If he were the party leader and to put his shoulder behind a program-of legislation for the present session. To this urging, apparently Senator Harding showed rather marked dissent. Press Budget Bill. He was urged to make some public utterance in the shape of endorsement of the budget bill, to do what he culd to .press the budget bill through the present session of Congress. Except to express the hope that the budget bill would pass in the present session, Senator Harding did nothing about this. Senator Harding was urged to seize the first occasion possible to make a speech, or some other public utterance, about the troubled state of business. He was urged to say something that would give comfort and assurance to those who have been harrassed by the fall in prices and the slow-up in business. He was urged to say that all this is merely a normal episode of after-war conditions, and to try to focus the minds of the business men of the country on the hopeful signs in the situation, and to say we have every reason for hopefulness and every reason for knowing that the depression is merely temporarily. Particularly, he was urged to say that the new administration would be sympathetic and would originally set about doing everything possible to stimulate national prosperity. Is Sure-Footed. All these things were urged upon Senator Harding, and as to practically all of them he didn't. He gave the impression of wanting to be very surefooted. Whether any of Senator Harding's callers brought up the subject of cabinet appointments, or whether Senator Harding himself brought up the subject, the present writer has no knowledge but is strongly inclined to belief

thing to say, but it is literally true. He did not seek the presidency, and would have preferred ,to remain a senator. Regrets Senate Departure. I was surprised that so few of his hearers seemed to grasp the dramatic quality in the candor with which he said, in his speech to the senate, "If one could always direct his own political fortunes to his liking, I should have preferred my membership here to any office a citizen may hold in this republic." Those of us who have followed the intimate policies of the past year know that this is exactly correct as a matter of history, and

that the sentiment come from the heart and reflected the feeling that, the next president of the United States maintained as near to his new honors as yesterday. All in all, Mr. Harding gave the impression of a man who is giving up a career of comparative ease with reluctance; who realizes that the presidency of the United States is not a glory that you enjoy, but a duty that you live up to. He gave the impression of a man who is rather regretfully giving up a career that had become familiar and easy, and taking on one which he sees as composed largely as self-sacrifice, in which the single chance of success lies in stern and unremitting devotion to the highest attainable standards of duty. (Copyright 1920 by the New York Evening Post.)

said to have

been made by James Ridgeway, 25 years old, caused John Nye, 35 years old, a neighbor, to shoot and seriously wound Ridgeway. COLUMBUS Charles E. Morris, secretary to Governor Cox, of Ohio, addressed the league of Women Voters of Columbus, who sought the benefit of his experience in public af-

FAILS TO REMOVE HAT; IS SENT TO PRISON (By Asso'ciated Press) VIENNA. Dec. 8. The state of religious freedom in the Austrian republic is illustrated by the fact that a man has just been sentenced to two weeks imprisonment for failure to remove his hat when a Corpus Christi procession was passing on the street. He pleaded that he was a free thinker and furthermore that it was a bitter day and he was a sufferer from an affliction of the head that made it dangerous to be uncovered.

In Holland many women find employment in the brickyards. They ttand out in the warmest weather

smoothing the bricks and gathering

that while Senator Harding is himself them in great piles.

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Nature's

ow a prospective

mother prepared for babyS aomii

EvoJufjOIX Of all the vital adventures in life, the birth of a baby ia the climax of nature's most wonderful evolution. During this period, nature is supposed to be preparing the internal organism of a woman for a safe and speedy delivery; but it is more the exception than the rule when nature, unaided, performs ber part at the crisis in a manner to relieve pain and contribute to comfort. " was afraid," writes a prospective mother, "until an experienced mother told me about Mother's Friend," " but now I cannot recommend Mother's Friend too highly for I know it helped me wonderfully, and I con almost soy my baby was born without pain. At tho present time I am using it again, as I do not want to go thru the ordeal without it." Three geuerations of prospective mothers have used Mother's Friend. When gently applied, during the period of expectancy, it soothes the fine net-work of nerves, lubricates the broad, flat, abdominal muscles and prepares the way for an easier, quicker and practical delivery. For valaobU trf "MOTHERHOOD and Thm BABY" free, fill in eovpen below and mail direct to the maimer of Mother's Friend. WARNING Aooii tatng plain oils, gnat anJ M&IHate they act only om the jjfcii and may catue harm without doing good

Used by Expectant Mothers for Three Generations.

BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO,

Dept. 26. Atlanta. Ca. Please aend me your FREE book

let on MOTHERHOOD and The BABY.

j Nam St, R, F. Town

--1

State..

omen and Health f

Too many women, unfortunately, suffer in health, hence in loss of happiness, thru conditions or irregularities peculiar to their sex which might easily be relieved, with a consequent restoration of health and all that it means. To every woman suffering from such troubles we advise the use of Dr. J. Bradfield's Female Regulator, as a tonic of great value. This remedy, for women only, has been sold for more than 50 years, and is today, aa always, depended upon for Hood results. At all druggists in $1.00 bottles. TRY IT.

We will be open Every Evening until Christmas Starr Piano Go.

Neglecting That Cold or Cough? Why, when Dr. King's New Discovery So Promptiy Checks It? LETTING the old cough or cold drag on, or the new one develop Beriously, is folly, especially when at druggists, yon can get such a proved and successful remedy as Dr. King's New Discovery. For over fifty years, a standard remedy for coughs, colds and grippe. Eases croup also. Loosens up the phlegm, quiets the croupy cough, stimulates the bowels, thus relieving the congestion. All druggists, 60 cents, $1.20 a bottle. For colds andcoughs DrJSing's New Discovery Wake Up Clear Headed That "tired out feeling" mornings, ia due to constipation. You can quickly and easily rid yourself of it by taking Dr. King s Pills. They act mildly, stir up the liver and bring a healthy bowel action. Same old price, 25 cents. gV Prompt Wont Gripo LfcKinffg Pills TIT y

Try a Loaf of

0&

Bread

Today

ASK FOR

ZWISSLER'S BETSY ROSS BREAD

Klassy8 Hats $4.00, $5.00, $6.00 Formerly Progress Store S12 MAIN.

nG.RAN'C V Ladies' Shop O Manufacturers' Unloading Sale Still Continues

Xmas Gifts for Boys are here choosing.

Men and for your

THE STORE WITH THE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT Practical Xmas Gifts THE GRAND LEADER

Anything worth doing - is worth doing the best. GEO. WEAVER Brick Contractor 220 North 16th Phone 1458

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