Lebanon Daily Reporter, Volume 26, Number 7, Lebanon, Boone County, 5 October 1917 — Page 3

at

Reasonable Prices

Ladies' and Misses' Fall and Winter Suits of Broadcloth, Gaberdine, Poplin, Oxford, Velour, Poiret, Serge and Silverton. Colors Taupe Navy, Havana, Iieet Root, Pekin, Burgunrly, Greea, Black and fancies. Prices $15 S20 S25 $30 $35

Come and see them. MRS. COMLEY HOSTESS. Mrs. (ieorge Comity was hostess to the Thursday Afternoon Bridge club yesterday afternoon at its regular meeting held at her home on North I cbanon street, at which time a number if guet? were also entertained. They were Mrs. C. I). Orear, Mrs. Anna Ryers, Mm. Henry Moore, Mm. . A. Schultz, lira. (J. K. Daviii, Miss Ruth Perkins and Miss (Irwe Norwood, of this city; Mm. June Norwood, of Los Angeles, Cal., and Mrs. Comley s house Runt. Miss Fannie H Penney, of Tort Jervis, N. Y. After the frame a plate luncheon was served and the favors were awarded to Mrs J. W. Shelby, who received the club prize, and Miss Grace Norwood, whe received the guest trophy. OLD FOLKS' SERVICE. The annual old folks' service will be observed Sunday morning at the First Paptist church. Committees have been at work for the past week inviting elderly people of the city to attend both the morning and afternoon meetings. In the afternoon the meeting will he conducted ay Rev. W. P McKinsey. Conveyances for bulb meetings will be provide for anwme wishing to attend. Those who wish to attend and have no means of doing so are asked to telephone Mrs. Ed Stephenson, phone 872-Y. The basement of the church will be open to anyone caring to bring their dinner with them. ENTERTAINED GUESTS. Last evening at their home on South Lebanon street, Mrs. Ed Emmert and on Floyre, entertained Mr. and Mrs. Ol Harshbarger and family, including Vora Harshbarger, mho will leave in the morning for Camp Taylor; Mr. Henry Deatrick and family, including Wilbur Deitrick, who also leaves tomorrow for Camp Taylor; Mrs. John r.illin and children, Mrs. Art Stewart and son, and Mis Jennie Ross. The evening was pleasantly spent and refreshments were served. CAVE NOON DINNER. Mr. and Mrs, Wine Stump entertained at a noon dinner today in honor of Claude McLaughlin? who leaves in the morning with the second contingent of conscripted men for Camp Taylor, Louisville, Ky. The guests were Mr. McLaughlin's father, his two brothers, a sister and Miss Mayme McLaughlin, of Ladoga, and Mrs. Abigail McClain, of this city. II. B. SHOOK VETERINARIAN Over Oak Drag Star Telephone IIS. Lebanon. Ind, LEBANON VULCANIZING 4 SALES AGENCY Everything for the auto. DOBT automobile. Vulcanizing a iudalt,. TslTriAt 1Ut9 t.-tl ir ij MMiMUilf I 02.25 per

ENTERTAINED TEACHERS. Mrs. Elizabeth Harrison and Mrs Mary Fruits, of Stringtown, entertained a number of the teacher ot the city schools last evening at a f o'clock dinner. The affair is given annually by Mrs. Harrison and Mrs. Fruits and is always looked forwani to by the guests. Covers were arranged for Mr.s. Hattie B. Stokes, Mrs Julia Harney, Mrs. Mary Hartley, Mis.Norah Darnall, Miss Isa Pollard, Mis Ethel Umberhine, Miss Avaline Kin'ig. Miss Nannie Miller. Miss Rose ?ints and Miss Mae Shannon. TO VISIT IN EAST. Mrs. W. C. Yutzy and daughter. Vilerta, will leave Saturday for New York City, where they will be th.iiesta for some time of Mrs. Yutzy's 'ather, W. H. Hoke, and other relatives. En route home they will stop it Philadelphia, the old home of Mrs. Yutsy and wilt also spend several iays in Washington, D. C., where they will be entertained by Congressman D. D. Revis, of Nebraska, a brother-in-law of Mrs. Yutzy.

UNDERWENT OPERATION. lin. iienrge Miller and daughter. Miss Maude, of Indianapolis avenue, spent yesterday in Crawfordsville where Mrs. Miller's daughter. Mrs. Ed Cuppy, of Waveland. underwent an operation at the Culver hospital. Mrs. Cuppy, at the time of the return here of Mrs. Miller and daughter, was getting along nicely. Miss Miller will return to Crawfordsville tomorrow and Mrs. Miller will spend Sunday with her daughter. ATTENDED STATE MEETING. Levy Stevens was in Indianapolis, yesterday attending the state convention of Edison dealers. In the evening. Mr. Stevens, Miss Mary Stevens snd Crover Rigsby attended the Edison tone test given at the Muial 'beater by Madam Marie Ruppold, soprano, and Guido Ciccolini, tenor, assisted by Elias Breeskin, violinist and Jac Glockner, violin-cellist Mr. Stevens also attended the banquet which followed the recital. A SIX O'CLOCK DINNER. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Neff, of East Main street, had as their guests at a 8 o'clock dinner last evening, Mrs. Dr. Britton, of Indianapolis, and Mrs. William Fish, of this city. Mr. and Mrs. Neff received word of the serious illness of Miss Rebecca Cain, who was a recent guest at the Neff home. Miss Cain is ill with diphtheria. GAVE NOON DINNER. Mr. and Mrs. Lon Vamtz, of North East street, entertained at a noon dinner yesterday, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Shumate, Mrs. Amanda Stewart and Rayard Shumate, who leaves soon for Chicago, where he has accepted a position as government wireless operator. DINNER GUESTS. C. S. Nelson and daughter, Miu Nellie, of north of Lebanon, had as their dinner ruests todsv. Rev and Mrs. A. L. Ward of this city.

2 car loads 800 bushels

Bushel

PERSONAL KENTICX

Mr. Harry Richey m ill at her home oo North Lebanon street. Misa Mary Shinn, a teacher in the Advance schools, will accompany Miss Lilah 0 haver, also an instructor in the schools of Advance, to this city this evening to be Miss Ohaver'a guent over Sunday. Mrs. C. H. Todd, of Attica, is spending several days with her niece, Mrs. W. J. DeVol, and family, of Eaxt Washington street. Mr. and Mrs. F.d Conner, of Merhanicsburg, will move h first of I next week into the C. A. Brown proj perty on Park street. ! Mrs. C. M. Lenox spent yesterday in Crawfordsville with Mr. and Mrs. I David Evans and family. Mr. Evans 1 had his ntm broken at the elbow yesterday morning when he fell from the i top of a wagon loaded with baled rags. Mrs. Charles Kiser, of Lawtcn, Okla.. is expected today for an extended visit with Mr. and Mrs. Allert Rogers, of West Fordice street, Mrs. Lou Kiser, of South Lebanon street, and other relatives. Miss Daisy Masters his returned from a several weeks' stay in Denver and Colorado Springs. Miss Alice McConaughy, who accompanied Miss Masters to Colorado will remain for in indefinite stay. Miss Edith Brown, if Connersville, who was also a mem!er of the purty, returned home ten days ago. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Brenton motor! to Albany today. Mr. and Mrs. John Frank of South East street, are in A'exundria, where they are spending a few days with heir daughter, Mrs. Carl Jones, and 'amily. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Adair and Mr. ind Mrs. C. B. Adair will go to Munie tomorrow to remain over Sunday ith relatives. Mrs. Samuel Storms, Mrs. Otus Overleese, of this city, and Mr. and Mrs. Alva Beaty, of east of Lebanon, motored to Indianapolis yesterday. Miss Louise Burrow, of East F.lm street, who his been ill for some time is improving very slowly. Mrs. Clarence Fall and daughter, of Indianapolis, came yesterduy for a visit of several days with Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Jones, of North Meridian street. Mr. Fall will come tomorrow evening to remain over Sunday. Louise Burrow of East F.lm street who has been ill for some time is improving very slowly. Misa Grace Witt and Miss Haze! Perkins spent today in Indianapolis. Miss June Mullen has gone to Jeff, mtonville, to be the week-end guest of the Misses Myrtle and Gladys Clark. Miss Mullen will also visit Lieutenant Arthur Wilkinson of Camp Taylor. Louisville, Ky. A 7 O'CLOCK DINNER. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Sterling, of North East street, were hosts at a 7 o'clock dinner last evening complimentary to Lyle Stephenson, a member of the Marine Corps, at Quantico, Vs., who is enjoying a short furlough Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Whitaker, Mrs. Ruth Warren and the Misses Alpha, Esther and Hazel Perkins, of this city, and David Duthie, of Indianapolis, grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Whitaker, who is spending several days here. IN INTER EST OF C. W. B. M. Mrs. W. O. Damull went to Whitesville yesterday in the interest of the local C. W. B. M. society of the Central Christian church. Mrs. Darnall, who holds the position of district secretary, succeeded in organizing a C. W. B. M. society with a membership of thirteen ladies. MOW HAS FIVE ( tke WrMiul Kmt ttrHc.) PITTSBURGH, October 5. Testimony before the State Workmen's Compensation Board brought out the fact that Mrs. Catherine Conlin, a widow, of Homestead, has five sons in the new National Army. Two other sons are under the draft age. Aristocratic Neighborhood. Real Estate Ageut There arc restrictions on the property. You cannot keep hens nor a dog that traces ht ancestry back for less than three generations.

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WOMEN IN THE WAR BY G. KAY SPENCER. Fran Reimer, ChauRease. Out of the little East Prussian town of Tapiau has come the first and only woman to actually perform staff-dispatch work with a motor under fire. Frau ReJmer, the young wife of an army surgeon, has take her car through the seven hells of modern battle and has successfully performed her taiiks under the extremely difficult and dangerous conditions obtaining in East Prussia and Russian Poland, during the headlong retreat of the Russian armies, subsequent to the Mazurian Lakes debacle. Quite unaffectedly she narrates her experiences of thrilling rides at terrific speed, with shrapnel spattering her machine and Russian snipers cut'ing the air around her; of hardships sufficient to break a strong man; gay Christmas festivals in the field with staff officers, and a presentation to the emperor. Her military career was precipitater by a rather too efficient service rendered to a young lieutenant in a great hurry to get m Insterburg from Tapiau. He had asked for a volunteer chauffeur and she had responded. ,Her cool ability to stay with the ar and hang on to the wheel through the heaviest fire of hostile batteries impressed the officer to such an extent that she soon was attached to the staff of General von Clausius. Then, in the solemn presence of a major, a formal contract was drawn up between the Imperial German government, party of the first part, and Anne Marie Reimer, party of the second part, whereby she was officially appointed a volunteer automobile driver in the German army. After a few hours' Ipave, to send her little daughter off to friends in Berlin, she cranked up her Mercedes, leaped to the wheel and drove off to the thick of the fighting. In the fighting near Tilsit this dauntless woman advanced with the troops, continuously under fire, coolly observing the odd postures assumed by W'ing men. She comments on it in her mimoira of the day. As the army drove forward over the frontier, Frau Reimer carried her cargo of corpulent staff officers along with the advances sometimes too near the advance for the ease of these mas sive officers, who usually desired to get on the ground after their pawns had had sufficient time to make thingi reasonably safe. When the actual dividing line was reached between the German crown land and Russian Poland she turned her hooded haed and facetiously remarked, "Gentlemen, your passports, please." The joke had just faded on her lips when a ntirderous shrapnel fire opened on the car from a nearby Russian emplacement. Mudguards, radiator and chassis were lient and hammered by the wicked sUel, but Anne Marie Reimer coaxed that macfiine through sloughs of Russian mud and over slippery wooden bridges until she finally daihei into Schirwindt like a young typhoon, with her cargo shaken up and grovelling in undignified postures all over the big leather cushions. Otherwise she had brought them through safely. As the big Mercedes came to a halt, major came rushing forward saying in horror-struck tones. you mean to tell me that you have escaped from hell all afe and sound?" Adventures of the kind were plen tiful in the dava that followed, espe cially as Frau Reimer was always

These are as fine peaches as were eyer grown

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within 'an hour of the advanced patrols in rolling into captured territory. Once while she was seated at luncheon in a little village a Russian shell exploded outside in the street, killing four men and eleven horses and wounding five men. A chip of shell carried a cup from her hands. That was only annoying. She would hnve another cup. Then she coolly rendered medical attention to the wounded, while six shells in succession rained down in the vicinity. In one village, immediately behind th advance, Frau JJeimer's duties carried her into a maze of dead and lying horses and men. There had been street and house-to-house fighting and things were musse'd up a bit. A bullet whizzed past her ear and lodged in a stone wall behind her. The most natural thing to do, of course, was to go after the would-be donor of the little souvenir. She got him by the nape of the neck but he emptied his shell-clip while she coolly walked up to him. n

' Why You Should Take Chiropractic Adjustments

called "disease

5. BECAUSE many of the leading physicians of this country and Europe are recognizing the value of Chiropractic, and also that it Is not the practice of medicine. 8. BECAUSE there are no examinations made, nor treatment give ta which the most refined lady could object. 7. BECAUSE people in all civilized countries of the world are taking ad justments for the removal of the cause of their dis-ease also to build up bodily resistance to so-called "disease." 8. BECAUSE the adjustments as we give them, are not disagreeable, nor painful; hut are followed by a wonderfully delightful sense of relief. 9. BECAUSE CHIROPRACTIC adjustments have removed the cause and nature has restored to normal health many cases similar to your own, which have been pronounced incurable by the best medical and physicians. Therefore you have no reason to be discouraged. Why not let a competent Chiropractor start you on the ruad la health as others are doing. 10. BECAUSE what Chiropractic has done knd is doing for others it will do for you. For further information or consultation call on

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But, plucky as she was, nature asserted herself, and soon the little chauffeuse was in Konigsberg hospital with a raging fever, engendered by exposure in the frozen lake region. Her rugged constitution Boon overpowered the invading disease and several weeks' time saw her up and about. She wanted to return to her work. But she was to meet disappointment, for the German War Ministry h"l decided in the meantime thut volunteer chauffeurs should not be employed with the urmy. Influence with friends and officers was of no avail and she finally had to reconcile herself to the fact that her soldiering was over. Has Job on His Hands. "Whnts Scrlbsoii dulug?" "H'' whipping o poem Into shape." "He seems considerably ivnrrlc.!." "Ye. It's hnrd work. He's trylni! to prevent a sonnet fmiu d. Keinrutiior Into vers llbre." Hinuliichiun Ase-lleruld.

Ten Reasons

. BECAUSE CHIROPRACTIC never fails in discovering Ike exact cause of your dis-rase and the location of the cause, lo.wit: A subluxated vertebra. BECAUSE CHIROPRACTIC will remove Ihe cause of your dis-ease and the cause being removed, nature will "cure" you. BF.C.M'SE it accomplishes more than all other methods, and leaves o ill effects. BECAUSE f'HIItOI'RACTIC is the greatest factor in the sclentiBc pre. ventirtn of so-called dis-ease, the building of a bodily resistance to so-

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AIM WOKEN (By atrrMHoaoi km SsrckM.1 NEW YORK, October 5. "Wooden shoes for American workingmen and their families and for not a few in a higher station in life Is a strong probability should the war last another year," said the manager of the shoe department of one of the Urgent retail stores in the city today.. "Shoes with wood soles nd other mollified forms of the kinds commonly worn in Europe are already in greater demand in this country than ever before," he continued. "They would be more generally bought and warn if they were to be found on sale at the shoe counters in the stores." n LEBANON, IND. Free U