Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 76, 30 March 1922 — Page 3

SEEK CONSTRUCTION

OF WILL EXECUTED AT EATON IN 1851 EATON, Ohio, March 30. Construction of a will executed in 1851 Is sought In common pleas court. The will is that of Andrew Shroyer and disposes of SO acre's of land in Twin township. Shroyer willed the realty to his wife. Sarah, who survived him, during her natural life. If he had an heir or heirs and they lived, the widow was to have one-third of the realty. If she remarried her children were to get the realty, but nothing to the husband. If she should die without heirs the land was to be sold and the money to go to the county infirmary trustees. A daughter, Susannah, was born and was the only child. The daughter survived the mother, grew to woman hood, married and became Susannah Kreitzer Susannah Kreitzer died and left a will giving the CA A.aa nor nliil. DV CXI V.O IV AAV. A ,u dren. Jacob It. Kreitzer, her executor, enlists the aid of the courto in determining the intent of the will executed back in 1851, in order that there may be no error in the line of transfer of the realty. . Defendants named In the application are: Sarah Glandcr. Emma Lesh, Jacob H., Perry A., Edgar A. and Clyde A. Kreitzer. Joseph J. Havre, Daniel, Clem and Lewis Fritz, Emma Fulkcr and Mary Hoffman. Kindergarten Teachers Miss Madeline Dawson, Union City, Ind., teacher in' the local public schools, and Miss Martha Vaughan, of Eaton, have been selected by the Council of Mothers as teachers for the free kindergarten to be conducted this summer by the council. Tne tots school will open early in June, it is

Hfcxpected.

The Council of Mothers conducted a free kindergarten last summer and the year before, when the first one was established, a small fee was charged. Award Judgment Judgment for $4,923 has been awarded Charles J. VanAuadal against Su-t-an F. Holmes and others, in common pleas court, on a note. Foreclosure of mortgage on - 85 acres of land in Somers township, securing the note, has been ordered and the realty has been appraised at $5,700. Makes Wife Defendant In a common pleas court action brought in common pleas court by George Detro against Ed Richardson on an alleged account, Richardson's wife, Amy Fall Richardson, is made a party defendant. Foreclosure Suit Withdrawn Withdrawal of a" foreclosure suit brought by Nettle A. Lovett against Maragret E. Lee and others, is shown in a court entry in the case. The action involved $2,621.72. alleged to be due on a note. Order Claims Paid In a suit entered by the Preble County National bank against A. C. and Jane Hensley, claims of Henry Parker for $158.50 and Perry Pottenger for $119, have been ordered paid from funds in the hands of the sheriff, which are more than sufficient to pay the bank's claim, it Is stated. Further distribution of the funds will be determined later by the court. Klepinger Gets Judgment Judgment for $1,060 has been awarded H. A. Klepinger against John G. and Anna Dillman. Elijah Ott also is awarded judgment for $3,196.10 igainst tne unimans. vine juagmems 5re to be paid immediately or a mort gage on iv acres or iana in i win township securing notes involved is to be foreclosed. Order Deed Made .Electing to take a piece of property in Eaton at its appraised value of $1,200, deed to the property has been ordered made to Adam House, who brought an action against Addie Howell and others for partition of the property. ' Calls Club Meeting Walter S. Tyrrell, president of the Eaton Country club, has called a meeting of the club for Monday night, at which time election of a board of managers will take place. The meeting will be held in the clubhouse. Marriage Licenses Preble county marriage licenses: Robert Kelley, 26 years old, and Alice Ruby, 17 years old. both of New Paris; Orla L. Fudge, 21 years old, Eaton, and Dola Brown, 19 years old, Eldora do; Frank B. Brown, 26 years, old. Franklin, and Goldie May Howard, 17 years old. West Alexandria. Pry loose from 13 cents once try Blue Devil Cleanser.-Advertisement. $, ! $ i a ,j i $ f" 4 i5MJ5MjjM5MjM8MJw J Home-made Remedy Stops Coughs Quickly t z The fast polish medicine yon ever Iwra. A ranuiy supply ( ally and quickly made. bavea about S i. rTTYTTTTTTTT iiTou might be surprised to know that the best tiling you can use for a severe cough, is a remedy which is easilv prepared at home in iust a few moments. It's cheap, but for prompt results it beats anything else you ever tried. Usually stops the ordinary cough or chest cold in 24 hours. Tastes pleasant, too children like it and it is pure and good. Tour 2 Ms ounces of Pinex in a pint bottle; then fill it up with plain granulated sugar syrup. Or use clarified molasses, honey, or corn svrup. instead of sugar syrup, if desired. Thus vou make a full pint a family supply but costing no more than a small bottle of ready-made cough syrup. And as a cough medicine, there is really nothing better to be had at any price. It goes right to the spot and gives quick, lasting relief. It promptly heals the inflamed membranes that line the throat and air passages, stops the annoying throat tickle, loosens the phlegm, and soon vour cough stops entirely. Splendid for bronchitis, croup, hoarseness and bronchial asthma. Pinex is a highlv concentrated compound of Norwav pine extract, famous for its healing effect on the membranes. To avoid disappointment ask your druggist for "2Vs ounces of Pinex" with directions and don't accept anything pise. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or money refunded. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. 4

WEAR A KUPPENHEIMER SUIT THIS SPRING

Atosr Ever vrrfG 803 Main

THE

Battling With Disease By FREDERIC J. HASKN

WASHINGTON, D. C March 30. When a new chief , of police was appointed recently in Washington, the announcement went forth that gamblers, bookmakers, drug peddlers and other forms of underworld entertainers hed better seek fresh fields for their games. Those forms of vice which exist in every city which has no strong civic consciousness were running wide in Washington. They were run very quietly but the door was always open. With the announcement that the new chief of police would start a determined effort to clean up the Capiti! City, a little known bureau of the government stepped forward with a long list of places on which evidence had been obtained. Vice was rampant on the very doorsteps of the capitol building itself, the report showed. A congressional investigation la under way to verify this report and i rz i i ai mi . a . j auMm exiBls m ue l uic The quiet government bureau which had collected these facts goes by the name of the U. S. Interdepartmental Social Hygiene board. The "Interdepartmental" comes from the fact that the secretaries of war, the navy and the treasury are on the board, as are the surgeon generals of the army, navy and public health service. The active head of the board Is a woman. Dr. Valeria H. Parker, who has had very wide experience in social work. The government war on vice is organized through this bureau. The board is definitely charged with the duty of protecting the health of the men in uniform while they are in civilian communities. So well has the work been done that in one year it is estimated that over $1,000,000 was saved the government. This amount would have been spent in the hospitalization of infected men, had not the number of infections been greatly reduced. The cost of the work has been about $225,000. It is a paying proposition. Science Supplants Sentimentality. The government's war on vice represent"? a new and powerful force at work throughout the nation today. Science, substituted for sentiment, is giving the world a new sense of pub lic safety. The scientific side of reforms and reformers is the view taken by the Interdepartmental Social Hygiene board. Interested in the health of the nation, the scientific side of health and disease is being preached at every opportunity through public health meetings in every state, attended by medical men, public health officers, and representatives of societies interested in the question. The moral sie'e of the question is being left to the churches, as falling properly withia their province. The medical approach to the sub ject by the Hygiene board is short and direct. "Science has proved that no way has been found to make vice safe. Therefore the only thing to do is to attack vice. This plan has a proven record and is an excellent ex ample of "the cheaper to prevent than cure" policy of modern medical practice. Just how heavy the vice toll becomes was gathered from the records of the Public Health Service which is working at the problem as it affects civilians while the Social Hygiene board handles the military end of the matter. Physicians of the Service estimate that about 1,500,000 cases of diseases due solely to bad social conditions occur each year. From the medical standpoint this means great danger of passing on to the next generation a virulent bacillus so insidious in its effect that few chil All Claims to End Rheumatism en ALLEXHRU relieves at once. One bottle a full pint will show you the way to complete recovery or your druggist will gladly return your money. Immediately after you start to take it the good work begins. It searches out the uric acid deposits, dissolves the secretions and drives rheumatic poison out of the body through the kilnevs and bowels. Blessed relief often comes in two days, ! and even in cases where the suffering; is most painful all traces disappear In i a weeK. Mr. James II. Allen, of Congress Avenue. Rochester, N. Y., the discoverer of AL.L.TCNIIHU, who for many years suffered the torments of acute rheumatism, desires all sufferers to know that he does not want a cent of anyone's money unless Allenrhu shows immediate results, and he has Instructed druggists to guarantee one full pint bottle in every instance. All druggists can supply you. Advertisement. OUR ANNUAL March Furniture Sale Closes Saturday, April 1 Don't fail to attend during the next two days if you desire to save money on Furniture and Rugs, Stoves, etc. We Undersell WEISS FURNITURE STORE r 505-512 Main St. Met trnd. Street

"Boys .

RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

dren live under the handicap, and those who do are sickly and weak. From the national standpoint there is the danger of losing effective citizens. Vice Cost is Big The Social Hygiene board places the cash cost of this social folly merely among the soldiars m the army during the war period at $72,000,000. . In 1919, the cost in the army was placed at $15,000,000. Tne cost was cut in 1920 to about $5,500,000. It is about onethird less, this last year, due to the more effective preventive work, previously mentioned. In civilian circles medical records are harder to obtain. The accurate type of record kept by the army and Navy is not available for civilian affairs. But the draft records show that, in civilian life, at least $54,000,000 a year is the wage loss alone, due to these social diseases. This is simply the amount lost due to the inabil ity of people so afflicted to perform any useful work. The figure is based on a daily wage of $4, and is probably low, as disease plays no favorites, but hits all classes of society, rich and poor alike. The American Social Hygiene Society which has long conducted a war against the plague estimates that the complete cost of these ills, largely preventable is $188,000,000 in one state, Illinois, alone. Ohio's cost is placed by the authorities at about $100,000,000. These figures include items such as doctors' fees, lost wages, expensive drugs needed for the cures, which are not met by the individual, then partial costs for maintaining hospitals for the insane and the blind, the cost of treating women who become, infected through marriage and are forced to undergo complicated operations, much of which is met by the taxpayer, for much of this work is done at public expense, for the general protection of all. The old idea that segregated districts tended toward safety in vice has been exploded, it is claimed, as the disease rate among troops in America was about one-third that of troopB in foreign countries, where Time to think of

Jd aster

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SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND,

DISHWASHING IS CAUSE OF DIVORCE, SAYS PROBATIONER m t V; n if )Vfw

- V Hi i

Mrs. W. P. McDermotU "Dishwashing, plain prosaic old dishwashing, with all that it symbolizes, is the reason why wives leave home," says Mrs. W. P. McDermott. probation officer at Little Rock, Ark. Her office fits her to speak authoritatively on marital troubles and divorce. the open districts were in operation. Vice cannot be abolished by laws, the Board holds. Education along the proper lines of sex is essential. The subject which has been hidden under a blanket of assumed innocence must be exposed to the light of understanding. The cure will be brought about that way. Dr. Parker declared that boys are SI GY9

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IND., THURSDAY, MARCH 30,

naturally just as clean-minded as girls. Yet boys, she holds, do not receive in the average home, the same instruction on physical questions which come to the girls. The result is that the girls are more clean-minded at the critical age. But she also added that the whole subject does not receive the attention it needs as a primary one in life. The home,. the church, the schools, all sidestep, she declared, and when Bex becomes part of a boy's life he has had little instruction and is generally allowed to drift along as best he: can, exposed to the bad influence, . too often, of commer cialized vice. - ' - Predicts Tighter Laws The laws of the United States, Dr. Parker believes, as they relate to this question, will become more stringent as time goes on. The United States is leading among the nations in taking on this question. Regarding the enforcement of prohibition, it ; was thought that the question would grad ually work itself out, when more people had paid the price of blindness or death from bootleg poison. ', But by stringent, it is not meant that the movies will be darkened, or . that grandpa's pipey would be taken. away ft t 5

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Which means that if you can get your MllltUtlMHIIIilllltMIMIUIItllllltlllllMilltlllllllltlllllllllUttllltlMIIIIIUIIIlllHllllllHf Loose Leaf Ledgers and Out-1 1 fits, $2.50 and up I BARTEL & ROHE 921 Main f inHiitiHMniiiiftniHMMiiHiiniiiiiiiinHuitiiimiiiiiMitinitiitiiiiiiiiMittHiiMHiiiiu AUTOMOBILE STORAGE and Repairing Overland-Richmond Co. K. of P. Bldg. S. Eighth St. VVSrVNrVVSArWrVVVrWSArVSrWNrrArV 1 For REAL COAL 1 PHONE 1178 1 I MATHER BROS. Co. ! iiwtHiNitttmtmimimimimiiiinimitimtMiimiiiiuiiiiiHiimimiiiiiitiiHiim Fresh and Smoked Meats BUEHLER BROS. 715 Main Street Pure , Pasteurized ' Milk and Cream Phone 1531 KRAMER BROS. DAIRY WILSON to be Cleaned Phones 1105-1108

! BOSTON STORE ; Quality Always Don't Wear Spotted Clothes ' ; ' Send them to WILSON to be Cleaned Phones 1105-1108

1

1922.

T,he entrance of women into politics proabbly will lead to more effectual laws and heavier penalties for vice operators. ' The work of the board throughout the nation is carried on through nine district officials, eacn a f ieid representative. These- in turn are aided by field agents, located in cities near the Army or Navy posts.- The field agents keep in touch with the medical officers of the armed forces and receive weekly reports as to how much or how little commercialized vice in each locality is undermining the health of the men. ' Closing the red light district in one city resulted in cutting the disease rate from 199 to '27, which is cited as a "health example in disease prevention." The field agents keep in touch with the municipal, county and state health officials, police officers and other organizations. Thus very accurate figures are obtainable on the commercialized vice question. The board's figures are also good indicators of the conditions which exist among the civilian population. Through these field officers the board is quickly able to place its hands, on the vice situation in any part of the country. The results have

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"Home, Sweet Home5' Is a Favorite Song this Spring T)UT there's apt to be many a false note in it for .tt the people who haven't been able to find the sort of homes they want. . : , ' i Spring is the great home-hunting time of year v: and you can make it the great home-fmdinsea-r:C-r son, as well if you will use the "Real Estate" columns in the Palladium's classified section. - All the worry and fatigue has been taken out, f; , of house-hunting by this orderly list of the most attractive available properties in and around the city. ' v ;' " J-; - ;'?J """ You can tell in a few minutes' time if the home you want is on the market this spring. v You can't . afford to miss this best chance of the year, " rr

Look Up and Down the Ads- :r Not Up and Down the Streets! Watch the Classified Columns , ". . . ,t I,, . - . . . - - - .. ..- v.... . --. fCopyrlerht, 1922. by!Basil.U SraltM ?

paOTadium WANir

FAGE THREE

been that 77 districts have been closed i. and - that- hundreds .or cities;; have' staged ' ''clean-ups' which will ; have an important effect on the future ga- I erations of. Americans. ' ,ir, ,".'

YOUNGSTOWN MAYOR'S ' FAME REACHED SWEDEN " (By Associated Press 1 !'.,;. YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, March 30. The fame of Mayor George Oles.of Youngstown, has reached Sweden. , A copy of a Stockholm daily has reached here, containing a long article on the -election of Oles, . and his , campaign pledges. - - - Did you ever see dirt fall out of clothes use Blue Devil and watch.. " Advertisement. WISHES HE HAD KNOWN IT SOONEH "I only wish 1 had discovered Koley's Honey and Tar 60 years ago, as I have . bvrn the victim of attacks of influenza and bad colds until I found this , wonderful relief," writes W. H. Gray, -854 Nowita PI., Venice, Cal. KoleyMs Honey and Tar helps coughs and colds, -bronchial and la grippe coughs, tickling throat and hoarseness. It is good for croup and whooping cough. Mr. !ray adds: -Worth its weight In gold. .1 Marvelously effective." A. J. Luken & Co., 626-62S Main. Advertisement..- '"' Three Friendly Uentlemen FIFTH AVE NEW YORK CITY ads brinq'.rbsults

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