The Vernon Times, Volume 7, Number 51, Vernon, Jennings County, 5 June 1919 — Page 2
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John A. Knight, Warrick county committed suicide by :. 17 i ; 1. 0 I i a ' Decatur county has a total common school graduates pr.o ti :: ;.:i ti r ; L'.h o 1 I r . t 1 II. Frederick Van Nuys total 153 year r ? T m 1 .In it, i;. , 1 Ty : : y ; t: c:. v; '1 r ' :
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D. A. Kochenour, Jackson county, dead at Brow$199nstown ! t, ! 1.. and incorporated towns shows a loss of 382 in the county. What is believed to have been an earthquake was felt plainly in Evansville, Petersburg, Mt. Vernon, and 1cim., in t -..; ( -torn r.rt of Indiana a few days ago I'n'llraSnary aivl tentative plans for the Indiana state fair home economics school, an innovation in Indiana, were Avnrlcrd ;;t !-y tic 1 ;'r l of women iiiiinaL'CM of h'i stat i' noard of ajrriculttiro at a li-M-cUntr !:o!fl i (! it ly. Two Newcastle men, whose names iri U'hvj; w'nhhvbl. v:fx luiv offercl' ?.V.fn) touanl a Y. 1. C. A. l.uilding for Newcastle, the offer being conditional, it is said, on the city raising $100,00 more for the purpose. A heavy hail storm in the western sortiori of Pike county a few days ;: yt, heat down wheat Holds .and damaged orchards nnd pardons. Zllore than tlireo Inclie.i of rrd'i also fell during t!i storm, flooding small streams. Mrs. Natalie B. Mann Owen, widow of Horace P. Owen of the famous Owen family, died at her home at New Harmony, after a short illness. She was soventy-two years old and was horn " and reared in New Harmony. A sinte convention of the World War Veterans of Indiana has heen called for Friday, June 0, in the room of the house of representatives in the statehouse, by Judge Raymond S. Springer of Connersville, the state president. At a meeting of the Indiana State Nurses' association of the Fourth district from 31 counties of central Indiana, at Indianapolis, steps were taken to urce congress to pass the Lew-is-P.aher hill which would give army nurses the rank of officer.-?. Marshall Pugh, seventy-three years old, a wealthy land owner of Wayne township, U dead ti his home, seven miles west of Indianapolis. His death occurred on the farm whore he was horn and where he had lived all of. his life. Mr. Pugh, who owned 930 acres, was r.otou as a iarnier mm , stock raiser. Indiana ehun h workers will hold copfere;:ee at IiMlinTmpolis June o and 0 to .orgrnnhie iho Interchitrrh world tuovetnent of. Xort'i America in the state. Invitations have heen sent to J 00 persons his hoi '. superintendents, Sunday school hoards" .social service workers, lninWt eri-d relief otlicials and you i iff people's soeh.-?ies. Widner township, Knox county, it is announced by James M. Adams, county treasurer, is without a sagie delinquent freeholder. In order that the fowic-hip weuhi sivo- '") per cent on! the list several ho; l .w5,.! gre untlew stood to have tun.'-d t. Victory and Liberty l.ond over the treastirec for taxes at ftarket vukie, making hid sacritlee. Twelve hundred row names are on, the roter ef the page rank. Knights o Pythias. In Indiana following an elans, orate ceremony at Indianapolis, when the degree was conferred on that num.-. her of candidates. Candidates and; visiting delegates were from all parts of Indiana, and it was estimated that nearly ten thousand knights attended' the sesions. The contract for the 1020 automoIdle license plate has heen awarded to the state prison by William A. Roach, secretary of state. The prison 1 'el was 12 cents a pair for automohlle and motor truck plates, and 5. cents each for motorcycle plates. Four companies submitted hid.. The, l'SL'0 plates re to he made of heavier steel than those of 101'X Graft of a piece of one of his rib upon his jawbone is the operation, which Clarence E. Klee of English, a veteran of the world war. will undergo-, at St. Louis soon. He was wounded. ugut 7 last in fighting overseas. A part of his jawbone was torn away hyj a,, bullet from a machine gun, which also tore off n piece of his torume. The, operation will he the seventh he has undergone since he was injured. As Lieut. E. J. Tallaferro, pilot of one of two army airplanes from. Ran-! toul. 111., was about !- start a flight from Bristol to Elkhart, a bulldog leaped up and hit a piece out of one of the propeller blades, The deg was; hurled a. number of feci, but the ma-; Cliftii? continued Its ascent and it was not until it landed in Elkhart that "V ! -. ft 'to f .-v.:- I the t'-.de f be d.tr.:1 u -o.."t tl furt! i : t ' 1 : ' 1 - : . " -1 o :d a 1 v ' s i T p C". o . i r. r h oil. Charles C. Lawson, age fifty-five, a farmer living south of Anderson, died in a hospital as a result of gunshot wounds received a quarrel with Grover Lawson e 4hh ty-s"?, a c -'. 1. TI . a Oil III. I t 1 3 . : r... " 1 o v tl r.c:tttie. a I t..te .! 1 4 - are - f 1 1 3 i 1 ! x ' tT -ay Peter J. Kruper 1 rtv - 1 . : 1
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'.r.- f r ferty-tv. o : 1 a, i :id w " - ! . t f th : h:. t I kytlfiac? hi America, says: 'If you have fn.i,",e with your v-- . 1 , s-tr maeh, kidr ?ys, Dr. Jcfiii A'lzr.iz, liver r nents I :oK - ? you to tnko Forgim. It i-i a yihn'i- tonic. Pcpgon not only relieved -tne but It has litdped many cf ray patients. A short tiice ago I wag in a badly run-down condition. Recent epidemics kept me, like other physicians, c-oing day and night. I needed something" to build up my nerves and strengthen me. I took Pep gen. In a short while I felt like a different man. I was so pleased with the tonic that I began prescribing, it. In every case the result has been satisfactory." Pepgen may be obtained at any firstclass drug store. Adv. FIXING LEAKY FOUNTAIN PEN Really No Need to Put Up With Annoyance That Can Be Remedied Easily. If you have a fountain pen that leaks around the joints, especially so if it is one of - those tj-pes of fountain pens having a point which disappears by turning a section of .the ban-el, try an application of heavy oil. To remedy the defect, soak the pen in warm water, not hot, and allow it to dry, particularly inside. Then apply oil on the spindle which revolves. The oil should be worked through the bearings from end to end. You can now refill the pen and wipe off the excess oil. A heavy cylinder oil is best for this purpose. To unscrew the parts of a fountain pen which have become set, merely heat the pen with hot water or by holding it near a flame, but be careful not to get too hot for there is danger of melting. While pen is healed a slight twist will often loosen the set. Frank P. Goeder, Colorado Agricultural College, Fort Collins, Colo. "FAKE" ASPIRIN 17AS TALCUM Therefore Insist Upon Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin' . Millions if fraudulent Aspirin Tablets were sold by a Brookl3'n manufacturer which later proved to be composed mainly of Talcum Powder. "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" the true, genuine, American made and American owned Tablets are 'marked with the safety "Bayer Cross." Ask for and then insist upon "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" and always buy them in the original Bayer package which contains proper directions and dosage. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester cf Sallcylicacid. Destructiveness. "'See that hoy?" "Yes," "Very dost motive." "How so?" "Wears a suit of clothes out the first day he gets them." "Impossible!" "Well, he does. He wouldn't go naked, would he?" Cuticura Soap fcr the Complexion. Nothing better than Cuticura Soap daily and Ointment now and then as needed to make the complexion clear, scalp clean and hands soft and white. Add to this the fascinating, fragrant Cuticura -Talcum and you have tL3 Cuticura Toilet Trio. Adv. No Hurry for Jealous Woman. "The photographer's wife is very jealous of him." - "No wonder. Just see how many 01 her women he flatters." Pcstoa Transcript. Accoantsa Fcr. "Wl;y do tliey nlways speak of vessels as In the feminine frecdor?" "Maybe cue reaseit $3 that they're generally trimming their sails." naturally. "He went rdl to pieces." "What made him d; that?' "He was broke." , t ir v. O
Democratic national convention. Prof. F. C. Beall of the Purdue university live stock farm will take 20 head of Polled Durham cattle to the buyers in Montevideo, Uruguay. The cattle were raised at the university farm. Col. Robert Tyndall, commander of the One Hundred and Fiftieth field artillery, the Indiana regiment of the Rainbow division, received his discharge from the United States army at Camp Taylor. Governor Goodrich announced the appointment of Glenn Van Auken of Auburn, as a member of the state industrial board. This completes the appointments to the industrial board as enlarged under the new law. Laporte Knights of Columbus will charter a special train for June 8 to take the members of the council of Laporte and Michigan City to Plymouth, where a new council will be formed with approximately 100 members.
Mrs. Charles B, Sehomaker of Hammond recently submitted to two operations at a hospital. A few days ago she received the surgeons bills and the size of them so shocked her that she committed suicide by turning on the gas. Miss Carrie C. Lesh, sixty-one years old. for more than thirty years n teacher in the Richmond schools and a passenger on the first boat to pass through the Panama canal, is dead at her home in Richmond of a complication of diseases. The Public Service commissiori received word Informally that the interstate commerce commission had ordered an investigation of the class freight rates of Illinois as a result of the fight being made by Indiana against the discrimination in rates. The body of Thomas Washington, negro "hoozerunner" indicted for the murder of Elmer Robbins, Big Four railroad detective at Greensburg, who escaped from the Columbus jail recently, was found in White river, near Columbus. It is thought Washington drowned while trying to swim the river in his effort to escape. The Winkler-Grimm corporation, makers of wagons at South Bend for a number of years, it is learned,, has been sold to a Chicago firm. The consideration is said to have been $123.000. It is understood that the newcompany also has bought the plant and holdings of. the South Bend motor car works, manufacturers of lire trucks. The annual high school commencement of the Noldesville high school was held recently. There were -13 graduates. The sum of J?270 in gold was distributed among six of the graduates 'who made the best grades during the four-year course. The prizes are" given annually by S. O. Levinson, a Chicago attorney, who formerly lived in Noblesville. William M. Collins, alleged head of the Muncie gang of swindlers, was released recently on bond in the sum ot .$12,500 provided by the National Surety Company of New York. Collins has been held in the Marion county jail to await the action of the federal grand jury, following his arrest at Thoenix, Ariz., by federal authorities some time ago. . Contending that other cities are getting paving cheaper than the prices quoted by several leading Indiana firms, the city officials of Bicknell, Knox county, have agreed to readvertise for bids and not accept the lowest bitj of e2.0S a square yard for the paving of ten streets there. The Bicknell city engineer estimates that the work would cost $2.08 a square yard, this price being quoted on sheet asphalt. The state board of accounts has required a number of Marion county undertakers to refund overcharges which .they collected from the county owing to a misconstruction of the law relating to soldier burials. The law authorizes county commissioners to pay $73 of the burial expenses of soldiers and an additional $23 for a lot. Some of the Marion county undertakers -have buried soldiers in $1S lots, and have charged $7 additior.nl for "opening the graves." thus bringing the total to $23. Lieut. Charles A. Grimes and Sergt. Elijah Grimes, two of the seven sons of Mr. and Mrs. W. E." Critics of Ethel, who were in military service tluring the world war, have returned home with honorable . discharges. Three brothers still in service are Sergt. Leonard Grimes, Sergt. Arthur Grimes and Sergt. Edward Grimes, the latter two having seen service in France. Private W. J. Grimes, who has a wife and several children, en listed voluntarily and arrived over seas about the time that the armistice '.was signed. . Each township trustee in Marion county will be asked to appoint a com:raltee cf farmers to form a general county eotpniltiee to supervise the dls tribution of road funds among the townships, it was decided at a meeting of the Marica County Farmers' federatien. Joseph Marino, a young returned overseas soldier, who shot and killed his best friend, Carmelo Fonte, on March 29 at a welcome party given for him at the home of his cousin, Sam Marino, was convicted of manslaughter at Hammond and sentenced to two to fourteen years
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Don't suffer! A tiny bottle of Freezone costs but. a few cents at any 3rug store. Apply a few drops on ihe corns, calluses and "hard stun" on bottom of feet, then lift them off. When Freezone removes corns from the toes or calluses from, the bottom of feet, the skin beneath is left pink and healthy and never sore, tender or Irritated. The New Modesty. "The new modesty," said Clarence Underwood, the magazine illustrator, "has a frank qualitj. It is born of athletic beauty. The old modesty was merely a desire to conceal ugliness. "A beautiful girl in a. white bathing dress came out of the water at Palm Beach the other day and advanced over the sand to her mother. "'Dear me!' the mother whispered. 'You shouldn't have got white, dar-' ling. That suit is almost transpar- j ent.' ; "The girl smiled calmly. " Lon't worry,' she said. 'I'm not deformed.' " Detroit Free Press. That Useful Guardhouse. "Them gua'd houses at the trainin' camps is shuah doin a gran work, jes' like the Red Cross," observed Cindy, the colored laundress. "They saved mah boy Duke's life." "How is that, Cindy?" queried her employer. "I dunno how they done it. Only he wrote me a postal card sayin' if he hadn't got ten days in one of 'em he'd a' been a corp." (moortant to Ltothsro Examine carefully every bottle cf CASTOEIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and seo that it rtPTl! thf .my -MemfCS Signature of 've in Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castcria Revising the Revenues. "The glasses are very small." exclaimed on girl. "Yes," replied the other. "The luxury tax ought to pay for the ice cream soda and the rest of the money ought to go to the government." Comes Out in the Wasn. Irs. Youngthing Yovi ought to be ashamed of yourself to dye your lovely gray hair. Mrs. Well along I didn't dy it. We're burning soft coal. What Is "Sprine Fever" It ia fimp.j low Vitality, a lack of Enersry caused by impurities in the blood. GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TOXIC restores Vitality and Energy by Purifying and Knrichingr the Blood. Yoa can soon feci its Strengthc-nln-, Invigorating U3ect. Price 60c. " At the Hotel. "Mrs. Mary McGinnis," wrote the woman. "Miss Mayme McGinnies," registered her daughter. Too many young men empty their sand boxes on the' first grade. Some men manage to talk a great deal without snyimr anything. Guaranteed to play any disc record better than any other phonograph; on easy weekly payments of 551.GO per week, with 10, 10 inch records, music on both sides. Price S57.30 payments, or $47.50 cash. Will ship anywhere. Write for description. GEORGE W. BIRT, !'fr. 711 Russell Ave. Indianapolis, lad. cr: si? i i . . C . 3 c . c - : j . r. -,l.t 1 r rt i " . . - I " ir - -
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1 t It f 1 a r : ; : - : -- ' . . j I 1 ' t. a t. e, mi : c.'t nr. I i 1 1 1 tt' ; -,t L.: .1 :.' 3 O. 1 at 7 u t eye s. , . , . . "I ' - s 1 i 'ir'.y ' I 'i 1 - j v ' . ': : - 1 s 1 . . i - I wcvli scire""). I Lid i.on, e-r. ' " -I.fMd-'U.-c-i t! ? l-ck ci-r ram"! r e. I vr -j so i y I t" . it 1 i --7 I rycr t-r f---sr o lh " c 1 ' " ' fce. y (' ' t l.ecaroe I.jri.h I 1 tick till over. . "Five br-e- rf Deer's IZi Ft"' cured r.".e f f hi 'rov trcd 1- "j tl n k I hive ciercd -ph-r. hd Leihh r. . I-I ove it ad"t )oa:.?. Surcrn l--fow SAifUUL fl.i:.7c:;. Notary Ja.i,".' .'. CtDoMrae.t Aey Store, 3s73o - doaii's xl-;-FCSTES-tKLBURN CO BUFFALO. N. Y. Caused by L b -sj m. v. J, ' d . J J a U V -J v 3 U fti If people who r bilious are treated acconiine to I oral (jniplunii they ffittom sret very much, better. Whatever relief t obtainei ts usually temporary. Trace biliousness to Its source and remove the cauwe ana the chances ate that the patient will remain strong- and healthy. I -uctors say that more than 70 nonorganic diseases can be traced to an Acid-5-tomach. Biliousness is one of them. IndiFestion. heartburn, belching, sour stomach, bloat " and srs."! are other siirn3 of acidstomach. E ATONIC, the marvelous modern stomach remedy, brings quick relief from these stomach raieries vrhiOlt lead to a lonqr train of ailments that make life miserable If not corrected. EATONIC literally absorbs and carries away the except acid. Makes the rtomach ptrony, cocl and comfortaDle. Helps diestlon; improve? the appetite and you then pet full etrenpth from your fool. Thousand fay that KATOSIC is the most effective ftomach remedy in the world. It la the help YOU ned. Try it on our money-back-if-not-satisfied suarantee. At ail drusrslsta. Only 5f cents for a bly box. o.. ::ljiiM!lb . 11 .." Evrry rcort is 3 oji:' roora, -a .t e.r'Jl ctoJ vvaier. ' The Right Hold at the Right Prices. "J j I RATH5 : ; 5t.OO'v!JStJZ5 Wth Bath $1.50 nd $2.03 YOU GAtlT.CSJT CUT t IS13F.S3Hf hi but you can 'clean them off promptly with snd you work the horse eimt time. Does not blister or remove tls hair. $2.50 per bottle, deliverei. Will tell you more if von write. Book 4 R free. ASS0RE1NE, JIL, the antiseptic liniment for mankind. V reduces Varicose Veins, j'.uptureJ , " . M'Jc!c or Iiem-nr. FnUrytd Ciznai. Wt-t, Cyi Altars ramcuickiy. Pries JU.2S bsrtlil it drusjijti or deUrersX I.iids in the U. S. A. hy W. F.Y0UXS.P.0. F..S13TemjWSt..Sor!no!!erd. Mast. f1 .o -. , r i i - V -i I : red PLi:: nrm. nvni. . : DUiclvcd ia v2.tr for t!c"2c:i"s j pelvic catarrh, tilcersitlon end k-rian-natlca. I'.:i.irir.JJ Ly Lydl L. Pinhham f.ol. Co. for ten years. A healing wonder fcr riasal catarrh, sore throat a -.d sore eyes. Economical. i Has extra .vdiary cfeaBrmc ar.d srEariadal power. I Saapla Frer. 50c. eiS &ra(tsU, er potpU by lillOiaiiii jim '".l'SiXm-mL!.': nf..Mi,iil WANTED L-idy .jr biancli office in thl tO.-'iict; fu.-sii s:ii iry, I'articulars Jr.""". OTtsJ W. N. U., Indianapolis, No. 2S-1313." r "' - . - r - "i . r. tji i o i r, t. j." ci 1 - . ' "' i " - . . J r , ,. . tU o, , . ..'" t con r j ; I- ' : :i ;..o 1) ; . h . .. ; Ml" . . i , . r ,. ' -
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