Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 93, Number 32, 6 February 1923 — Page 6

page; six

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, FEB. 6, 1923.

THE' RICHMOND PALLADIUM . -' ANTJ SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every f Evening Except Sunday by t ; - i ' j Palladiurri Printing Company. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, a3 ' ' - , Second-Class Mall Matter

MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS " The Associated Press Is exclusively- entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It o not otherwise credited In this pper, and also the local ""J" published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.

Safety Campaign Shows Results. "A statistical bulletin issued by one of the larger life .insurance companies containing an analysis of automobile fatalities shows that the

rate has declined among school boys and young

men since 1919," Tsays the Indianapolis Star. "The rate among children under 5 years and young men above 25 years has been increasing.

The gain is most marked among those more than f5. years old. The education section of the National Safety Council points to those figures as indicating probably that the propaganda carried on in the schools and through the newspapers is bearing fruit. It is indeed significant that the period of reduction in automobile accidents to boys of school age should correspond to the campaign for education in accident prevention which began in 1919. . If the movement has been the cause of this improved showing it should by all means be continued. "Children ordinarily pay more heed to instructions given by the teacher than by the parents, and a great number of acpidents can be prevented by inculcating at school the habits of caution in accordance with the ordinary laws of safety and common sense. The plan includes instruction along this line as a part of the regular curriculum, English class work especially offering a wide field for accident prevention material through reading, composition and debates. The. drawing of posters, the use of accident statistics in arithmetic and the study of municipal and governmental agencies for the protection of

citizens in civics make up a basis of the campaign in the schools. Last November the council sent out a questionnaire to the school superintendents of cities of 10,0Q0 or more population, covering the phases of safety instruction, and the replies indicate a rather general acceptance of the national organization as a clearing house for safety teaching. , "Every year in the United States 76,000 persons are killed by accidents and of this number on jthe average 25 per cent or 19,000, are children under 15 years. For every death there are twenty-six serious injuries, which means almost 2.000,000 people hurt, maimed or crippled. It is this discouraging showing which has encouraged

the National Safety Council to undertake the country-wide campaign. The deaths and injuries by automobiles usually receive the greatest

publicity, and while the motor accidents present a shameful picture of American indifference to life and limb they by no means cover the carelessness wrhich prevails in the industrial field or in the ordinary everyday surroundings. "In attempting to present a true statistical picture of the significance of automobile fatalities it is necessary to consider the number of deaths or casualties, the number of automobiles in use within a given area, the concentration of population and the extent' of traffic congestion. There are, of course, far too many automobile killings, but from a statistical point of view the fact that the 10,000,000 or more motor vehicles in the country cause less than 1 per cent of the total deaths and less than one-sixth of the accidental deaths indicates at least the necessity for paying attention to other factors which contribute so materially to the nation's annual death toll. A properly conducted safety movement in the schools undoubtedly will accomplish more than the spasmodic 'safety first' weeks set aside at occasional intervals, good enough in themselves, but weakened by the constant recurrence

of this and that special week for every conceiv

able purpose."

Movie of a Man Receiving a Cablegram

Throoch The Hotel.

CORRIDOR FCEUKKS

full, of Check, ako Pep

MR. LArwrAER Goes To Thc "Bar (This A a hoarsely calls for Bracer

fAfc. LAMMER.IS PAGED

mr. lammcr fears Bad news

MR. LAMeR HAS ' GULPRD T Cowm Ar4t Proceeds to ths busime5s of.op6nins cadlegra!n

A.

Jit

MR. LArArAER NOW Ie4 Almost Total collapse reads'it-

MR. LArwiME'R FIGURES t is like" ly a Death message 3r financial. DISASTER. Of. SOMETHINC

VJHlCH WAS A 7ii Merry month ofMY, WHAT SSAJED "BALTIMORE fALS"

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A Virginia Pottery Plant Handwork Comprises 95 Per Cent of Effort Used in " Turning Out All Kinds of Pottery.

We Have Little to Fear From Earthquakes

By HERBERT KAUFMAN Copyright 1923 by King- Feature Syndicate

No checkup yet on the Polynesian disaster. Broken observatory instruments give ominous hint of its extent. But weeks must elapse before xe can learn how deeply the heart of the Pacific i.- ruptured. Meanwhile, let imagination paint the picture. Indefinite. miles of ocean bed begin to wave iike a shaken earpet. Suddenly a great, split appears - in the grinding rock. The chilled waters pour through in a mighty t'lood upon the flaming earth core. Explosive gases form a colossal submarine mine. - It hursts, tho shock spreads spokewise to the outer rim f a wheel a wheel of rack and ruin, that likely includes half the Coral seas. ' ' But Nature's laboratory mishaps are

far less dreadful than human deviltry i and ignorance. ' All the eruptions of the past thousand years didn't kill a million people. The big quakes since .the twelfth century including those at Lisbon, St. Pierre, Japan," Italy, Sicily together, flew less than five hundred thousand of us. And their totals of destruction can't equal the property loss in a year of recent warfare, or from the strikes and industrial tieup3 after armistice. Black Plague, the Champion Killer. Far huger fatality breeds in negWt and filth and men's cussedness. The Black Flague alone, spawn of squalorous habits, slaughtered twenty millions in 139S.

In 1877, famine, camp follower of

tanning incompetence, ted fat upon

thirteen million Hindoos and Chinese.

htorm ana tide are not the mam arsenals of death. Silence and invisibility mask the blights and pollutions

which most threaten our existence,

The microscope knows where to

serk the real enemies of men. As

witness the discovery of the flu germ a thousand times too small for the human eye to see and more dreadful than a thousand Etnas and ML Pelees. We've found the microbe "we'll

mighty soon find the way to handle it. Watch for Shocks From Asia. , The Allies do not feel so hopeful this afternoon. They haven't found the way to handle Turkey. The Lausanne conference fails its object. Curzon and Isinet can not compose differences. Poincare proceeds to fill for a long hand. 1 Diplomatic seismographs tremble at the prospect of another shock from

Asia Minor, which will still further;

retard the world recovery and may send newly grouped nations at each other's throats. No Love, Food, or Art , . In America. , :.,-'' We shall recover much sooner from the shock of Isadera Duncan's departure.That is1 the least catastrophe in the news. Russia "may have the lady. Likewise any other renegrade critic of these United States. The exotic Isadora finds it no longer possible to dance to the tune of the Star Spangled Banner. Onrs is a crass, stupid, capitalistic' land. America knows nothing of love, food or art. We don't understand what freedom means. Freedom is in Russia and much Vodka besides. She believes it is possibly a good thing that she is going back to Moscow. Right for once! Some Facts and Figures For M. Trotzky. It should interest Isadora and fellow Bolshevists to hear that bread nice, white, wheat bread is now selling at three and a half cents a loaf in Chicago. We also beg to Inform them that eizhtv-four ner cent of the world's

automobiles are possessed In this country. Twelve million members of our "capitalist" class own passenger cars and trucks. Which means that almost every other family has some sort of automobile. Let them reflect, as they, calculate ruble value and contemplate the local ravages of pestilence, that the purchasing power of our dollar still keps rising -while the death rates on nil forms of disease continue to drop here. Thirteen per cent of New Yorkers died of tuberculosis in 1910. Eight per cent last year. Mr. Trotzky Is invited to present

hi3 facts and figures. "We'd especially like to know how much hi3 railroads are making. They're under government ownership. We lost one billion, eight hundred million, while ours were. Some Dark Chapters Of Progress. French scientists .want to use condemned criminals ,; for experimental purposes.. They say to the government, "Give us your murderers. Don't -waste them in guillotine. Turn them over to the pathological laboratories and let us work out our theories on healthy tissue and pulsing organs. The legally

dead men will thus become benefactors of their kind. Justice will thus be served and humanity inherit incalculably." The proposition is not new. Pasteur was bitterly disappointed because the authorities -would not permit him to use felons for the final demonstration of his hydrophobia cure. Dr. Jenner by royal consent, first vaccinated six English convicts. When they survived. King George was pleased to submit his own august am to the serum. All of -which makes us wonder at what cost, in torture and suffering, medicine in the darker ages, satisfied its curiosity. .

THINK! By George Matthew Adams.

Half of our troubles would melt away If we only took the time to think. For most of our troubles come and most of our mistakes are made either because we fail to think or because we think wrongly. And thinking wrongly is usually thinking too quickly. Think! . What a common excuse: "Oh, I never thought of that!" Few right-minded people deliberately do things to hurt other people, and yet a large number of us do hurt other people repeatedly because' we do not think. And how hard it is to repair damage after damage Is done. ' If on arising in the morning you say to yourself: "i am going to to think this day through," just imagine what a successful day it would sure to be.. There is nothing truer than that old adage "The more haste, the less speed." But it is just as important to take deliberation and think as it is to deliberate and act. Thought is behind action always or at least it should be. Think! ' Whatever you do that is great and enduring you may be well assured In advance that proper thinking has made it so. Time goes quickly. We economize when it comes to our money and often we economize when it comes to our time, but we should not economize at the expense of properly thinking out every plan and action. Think in advance!

By FREDERICK J. HA SKI HOPEWELL, Va., Feb. 6 This is an age of amazing and wonderful machinery, but the china industry is turning out cups, saucers and sugar bowls by practically the same simple method that it used 50 years ago. The cheapest plate on your dinner table

was made on a potter's wheel. The

china in the 10 cent store and the ware in the finest shop both represent processes that are 95 per cent handwork. In the face of science, invention and standardized efficiency the potter has had the courage and the strength to remain a craftsman. The reason is not hard to find. The pottery industry is tightly organized in a union and the union men will not use machinery. They know that machinery would throw perhaps nine out of 10 of them out of work. The pottery plant here recently installed an $8,000 labor-saving machine. This contrivance would easily and rapidly make the clay - containers in which dishes are stacked when they are to be fired in the kilns. But the men refused to touch the machine. They are craftsmen and artisans and they prefer to remain in this status

Answers to Questions (Anv reader can set the answer to snv oiiesflon by writing The Palladium

Information Bureau. Frederick J. HasK-: in, director, Washinston, r. C. This of- ; fer applies strktlv to information. The ;

bureau does not give advice on legal, medical and financial matters. It does not attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to undertake exhaustive research on anv sublect. Write your question pla'nlv end briefly. Give full name and address and enclose two cents in stamps for return postage. All replies are sent direct to the inquirer. Q. Does the government make a profit by coining money? P. R. O. A. The difference between the in

trinsic value of the metal In a com and its face value is a profit made by

the government. This is called seign-j f

iorage. Last year it amounted to ; trS

?2i,uoo,uuu. ; Q. Where did the plan of laying out j

city streets at right angles to each

Who's Who in the Day's News

Lessons in Correct English DON'T SAY: He remembered SMITH telling him to watch the gate. Dad had been irritated by HELEN not marrying Edward. He is banking on YOU doing this for him. I still had that sense of GERTRUDE being in the room. I can't imagine YOU doing this. SAY: He remembered SMITH'S telling him to watch the gate. Dad had been irritated by HELEN'S not marrying Edward. He is banking on YOUR doing this for him. I still had that sense of GERTRUDE'S being in the room. I can't imagine YOUR doing this.

After Dinner Tricks

other and at regular distances origi- j P

nate? D. S. N.

A. Philadelphia was the first of! modern municipalities whose plan was prepared for a particular site, and the rectangular plan there adopted has guided city planning in America ever since. Q. How many men are required to sail a large sailing vessel? M. A. - A. The four-mast bark, the Great Republic, the largest clipper ever built, required a crew of 100 able seamen and 20 boys to sail her. Q. What are the meanings of the various train whistles? A. B. A. According to an engineer of the Pennsylvania Railroad, trains do not whistle at regular stops. At a crossing the signal i3 two long and one short blast; signal stops, one long blast by the engineer which the conductor answers with two short blasts; for calling in a flagman, traveling

south and west, four long blasts; north and east, five long and one short blast. Q. In accounts of golf matches the expressions "playing the odd" and "playing the like" are used. .What do they mean? N. E. R. A. When both players have played the game number of strokes on a hole tbei ono first to vi'-r next is playing

thft odd. When i has played one

more . stroke than 3 and the latter

nlavs. he is playing the like.

Q. Is the charter-party the owner

nr the one who charters a ship? L. C,

A. The charter-party is the written

Robert Woods Bliss,.recently named by President Harding to be minister to Sweden, resigns the post of third assistant secretary of state to take up his new duties. He will succeed Ira

Nelson Morris, who recently resigned. Bliss has as qualifications for his new post not only the experience gained in the state department since 1921, but abroad in diplomatic service. Beginning as a young man he served as

secretary to gover-

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', jftnwtti,i, & nor of Porto Rico. -,'-4C , I II. loir... csnrsH Vi t a

He later served his country as consul in Venice, embassy secretary at Petrograd, then Brussels,

Buenos Aires and Paris. A native of

SL Louis, Bliss is a Harvard graduate

of 1900. He served in the office of secretary of Porto Rico the year after graduation and then was appointed

secretary to the governor of Porto

Rico. After competitive examination, he was appointed consul to Venice in

1903 A year later he became second secretary of embassy at Petrograd.

Afterward he held in succession the

posts of secretary of embassy to Brussels, secretary of legation at Buenos

Aires, secretary and counselor of em

bassy at Paris, and charge d'affaires

at The Hague. In 1920 he was made chief of the division of western Euro

pean affairs in the state department

And on March 15, 1921, was appointed

third assistant secretary of state.

Musings for the Evening There is little use in ordering coal-and-substitute. Just order substitute,

for that is what you will get, anyhow. Dr. Edison says that collego men

lack imagination. But they all imagine they are "going to set the world

afire as soon as they are graduated. Well, when the sultan of Turkey lit out with all the house money in

his trunk the harem beauties were

put to it for a way to make a living. None of them had learned a trade or profession outside cf dancing, and their dancing, while once thought very naughty, is now very tame by comparison with the modern ballroom stuff. However, a Paris manager of theatres is going to take a chance. He claims there are 200 of these Mrs. Mohammeds. He has signed them all up and will begin to teach them at once the foibles of modern stage and society dancing and will put them in choruses in Paris and New York. He will make first-class show girls of them, if he can prevail upon them to do the sort of dancing that is now required. He does not believe that more than half of them will balk. Even a harem beauty will do things when she is hungry that she would not do otherwise.

contract for the hire of a vessel for a

stipulated voyage.

Q. What is the meaning "of the ab

breviation e. & o. e.? H. M. B.

A. "Errors and omissions excepted?"

Q. Vhat is misfeasance? K. L.

a. jviisieasance is xne doing or a

lawful act in an unlawful manner.

Headline says: "English-French Entente Broken." Shouldn't that be "broke"?

MEDIUM BROWN HAIR looks best of all after a Golden Glint Shampoo. AdTertisement.

After Dinner Stories An old man lost his wife. About a month later he married a young and giddy girl. The neighbors were very indignant and on the night of the wedding gathered about the house with

tin pans, kettles and horns and made

a terrific racket. -After the old man stood it as long as he could he camt

to the door and said, "It is a shame for you folks to make such a racket

around here so soon after a funeral." - The Dallas News says editorially: "There is something wrong when an

Italian dock worker knows more of the delights of music than an American Bank President." The banker thinks so too and discusses with his associates plans for educating the dock worker to quit wasting his time. Kansas City Star.

rather than to become factory hands. The china industry pays well. Skilled workers draw from $5 to $20 a day. They are satisfied with things as they are. That china is made almost entirely by hand does not mean that one man makes each articles. In the pottery here the clay is handled 31 times before it is shipped out in the form of a finished dish. The work, is systematized, and every worker does his special bit as swiftly and efficiently as if he were in a machine-run plant. The only elaborate machinery in these shops is in the mixing room. Six different Varieties of clay are brought here to be made into china. One kind is from Florida, one from New Jersey, and one from North Carolina. The other three kinds come

from England. All except one gray

ish variety are white and powdery.

The six clays are taken from their

separate bins and mixed and reduced to a liquid by machinery, and the wa

ter is squeezed out. After this mechanical step, the clay is ready for

the potter.

Even the plaster of Paris molds on which the pottery is shaped are

formed by hand on a whirling wheel.

Whole rooms are lined with shelves

on which molds for plates and dishes of every description are stacked. The effect is that of a huge pantry stored with interminable stacks of very white pies. These mold3 and the clay go to a room where a row of potters are standing at wheels. A mold is laid on a wheel and a flat cake of clay is thrown on that. The wheel revolves a few times, and under the skillful fingers of the operator a saucer comes into existence. The plaster of Paris absorbs some of the moisture from the

clay and in a few hours the saucer is entirely dry. How Jugs Are Made by Hand. - Jugs, sugar bowls and cover dishes cannot be quickly shaped on a potter's wheel. To cast a jug, liquid clay is poured into a hollow" mold. After a certain length of time a hard laver

of clay has formed in the desired shape inside the mold. The liquid left in the center is poured off when the jug left in the mold is dry the mold is taken off and the jug fired.. Handles for pitchers and cups are made in a curious fashion. The mold for these pieces looks like a flat tile in which some one has traced with a finger a grooved line down the center and a series of ear-like figures attached to each side of it one above the other. Clay is poured into this design and allowed to harden. The

result is a row of handles attached to pach side of a central stick of clay. A man trims the handles off neatly and they are cemented on the cups with clay.

All of this pottery, fresh from the potter's wheel and from casting, looks like the material of which paper picnic plates are made, except that it is a grayish white. The unfired dishes' are

about as brittle as pie crust A plate can be crushed between two fingers with the slightest pressure. To gain the enduring quality of china this fragile ware must be baked in a kiln. The kilns are great brick ovens that rise above the low, onestory shops in cone-shaped towers. There are 15 kilns in this Virginia plant, and each of the big ones can hold 60.000 pieces at a time. The china can not be packed loose In the oven. Thick clay containers, shaped like shallow wash boilers and known as saggers, are packed with the dishes and then stacked in the kiln. Men loading the kiln can be seen going from the loading trays to the ovens, each carrying a filled saggar in his arms and balancing one or two of the containers on his head. After 48 hours at about 2,500 degrees Farenheit. the ware is whiter and it has a slight ring when struck. It is

No. 410 The Strong Pajer Two glasses of water are placed side by Bide with enough space between them to insert another glass. The performer lays a sheet of paper across the tops of the glasses, so that It forms a bridpe between them, and asks If it is possible, without moving the glasses, to set another glass of water on the paper bridge so that the third glass will be supported by the paper alone. Of course the answer is. It can't be done." The trick can be done, however, and the drawing reveals the secret. Simply fold the paper in pleats as shown in the diagram, and the bridgre will be strong enough to support the third glas6 of water. Comrriet. tt$, y jhtbMo Ledamr Omsa-w

Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON

Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today

President Robert. L. Kelley, of Earlham, received a letter from the inauguration committee at Washington, asking him to send delegates to the college students parade to be held on March 4. Students from all parts of the United States and possibly some from Europe were to attend. Presidents of all colleges in the United States received similar notices, and the parade premised to be a large one. It was not known just how many would go from Earlham.

no longer brittle, but it looks rough, like a paper plate. A glaze coating is applied, and then the ware is fired again for 24 hours until it is hard and glossy. In this second firing the kilns can not be packed so tightly as in the first. The glaze would cause the plates to stick together if they were laid one on top of another in the sa.gars. To prevent this pins were fitted into little grooves in the sides of the saggars, and each dish rests on these pins so that it does not touch the dish below or above it. Girls Scrape Off Rough Places From this fire the china goes into the only very noisy room in the plant. As you enter this room a shrill sound

of dishes being scraped assails your

ears. The pins on which the plates have rested have left little rough lumps on the china and girls in this

room are vigorously scraping the

roughness off with metal instruments.

The decorating processes which fol

low are particularly impressive b

cause of the dextrous handiwork involved. Although everyone in these these shops works at a rapid rate, the crafts shop atmosphere remains. There is a studio smell of turpentine and paint about the decorating shops. Some of the workers sit at tables handling brushes and paints, just as the maker of hand-painted china does, except that these workers paint far more swiftly and with extreme precision. Some mother-of-pearl luster ware ready for firing is on one table. It

SHERLOCK There Is a dead man on tho floor, some party slew him with an ax! official sleuths, some three or four, are getting down to carpet tacks. Alas, their methods are no good, they were cat out for other trades, and they're composed of solid wood above theLstalwart shoulder blades. A subtle crime like this demands the highest type of brains in men; official Hawkshaw helpless stands, and sighs, "I'm baffled once again." 'Tis true that Hawkshaw does at times some littlo trifling triumph see; he wades around among the crimes and blunders to a victory. But this is purely accident, 'tis not by skill the triumph's won if we believe the gifted gent wit-: writes sleuth fiction by the ton. O"ficial Hawkshaws baffled every .tiiiT they face the simplest puzzle life can spring. But nov the shining Sherlock comes, upon his brow and amp! wreath; he glances at the dead man's thumbs, and takes, a close-up of his teeth. Upon his famous knees hdrops, his tapeline and his glass appear; he gazes at the baffled oors. and says, "There is no problem hre." It's all so simple to the sleuth whos" intellect is wide and deep; he reach-, out and grabs the truth, while baffled cops sit down and weep. Year after year we read tho tale of Sherlocks

keen and Hawkshaws blind; and still

the criminals in jail were put there by the Hawkshaw kind. has nono of the rainbow lights seen in

the finished luster product. Instead, it is a motley brown Before they are fired most luster paints can be identified only by the labels on the bottles. Rose, green, chamois, mother-of-pearl, all the colors of luster paint are a light coffee tint when they are applied to china. It is the flring that turns the paint into the irridescent coating seen on the ware in the shop windows. The lusters are applied with a brush. Color designs require a different method in a large plant. At a long table a row of workers is decorating plates with the ever popular bluebirds. One girl quickly applies a coat of some kind of varnish to a plate; the next sticks transfer papers bearing the design on several points about the plate rim; and a third rubs the transfer color in and slips the dish into a tank of water. When the plate is dried it goes to a man sitting at a banding wheeL He pays the plate on the wheel, dips his brush in a dark brown liquid and as the plate spins around before him he dexterously guides the brush to make a narrow round band on the rim. After the third and final firing . to set the colors, this dark brown band will be shiny gold. Pottery making has been thought by some experts to represent the earliest dawn of civilization. It is strange that of all the important chafts and industries only this oldest craft should today retain its historic status and simple, time-tried methods.

Prevent Influenza The Tonic and Laxative Effect of Laxative BKOMO QUININE Tablets will keep the system In a healthy condition and thus ward off all attacks of Colds, Grip or Influenza. 30e. Advertisement.

SIMPLE WAY TO TAKE OFF FAT There can tie nothing simpler than taklns a convenient little tablet for times each day until your weight is reduced to normal. That's all Just purchase a case of Marmola Prescrip

tion Tablets irom your aruggtst - ror one dollar, the same price the world over. Follow directions no starvatlon" dieting or tiresome exercising. Eat substantial food be as lazy, as you like and keep on getting slimmer. And the best part of Marmola Tablets is they are harmless. That Is your absolute safeguard. Purchase them from your druggist, or send direct to Marmola Co., 4612 Woodward Avel, Detroit, Alien. Advertisement. 4 i

WARNING! Never allow a cold, to drift down Into your chest and lungs. The danger is positively too great. Should you contract a cold or feel bad, see your druggist at once and get a box of Bulgarian Herb Tea. Take a cupful hot at bedtime add lemon Juice. Hot medicinal Herb Tea helps to stimulate the circulation, heat up the chilled blood and flush the waste poisons from the clogged bowels. Advertisement.

RUB RHEUMATISM PAIN FROM SORE, ACHING JOINTS What is rheumatism? Pain only. St. Jacobs Oil will stop any pain, so quit drugging. Not one case in fifty requires internal treatment. - Rub soothing, penetrating St Jacobs Oil directly upon the tender spot and relief comes instantly., St. Jacobs Oil is a harmless rheumatism and sciatica liniment, which never disappoints and can not burn the skin. Limber up! Quit complaining! Get a small tral botle from your druggist, and in just a moment you'll be free from rheumatic and sciatic pain, soreness, stiffness and swelling. Don't suffer! Relief awaits you". Old, honest St. Jacobs Oil has cured millions of rheumatism sufferers in the last half century, and is just as good for sciatica, neuralgia, lumbago, backache, sprains and swellings. Advertisement.

l (y Dividends Jan. 1 and OO July I on SAVINGS

Interest on Certificates

THE PEOPLE'S HOME & SAVINGS ASSOCIATION

5

29 North Eighth Street

Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent