Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 134, 16 April 1913 — Page 10

PAGE TEN

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1913

RED CROSS MAY NOT HELP LAWRENCEBURG G. H. Lewis Writes Letter Here Thanking Richmond For Assistance.

George 11. Lewis, treasurer of the Citizens Relief Committee of Lawrenceburg, Ind., does not believe the Red Cross Society has made ample provision for the flood sufferers of that city according to a communication received by the Commercial Club from him. Mr. Lewis said "We only hope that the society will send a representative here to look the situation over so that it will be convinced of our great need." The local relief committee " was thanked for the donation made to Lawrenceburg by the citizens of this city. The sum of $750 was sent from here. The Commercial Club is continually receiving communications commending the local citizens and members of the relief committee for the kindness shown the suffering citizens of Indiana and Ohio. INDUSTRIAL SPIES NOW IN DISREPUTE (National News Association) CHICAGO, April 16. The industrial and commercial spy is getting into disrepute in Chicago, where the necessity of watching the spies made so many complicated situations that many houses are going back to a basis of common honesty, refusing longer to spend money to steal the secrets of their competitors. The spy system has flourished, however, and intrigue has regarded as business necessity because the other people in the same business might be using it. One concern recently found that a competitor had nearly half of its executive staff under pay to get Information and to upset the cordial relations with customars so that they might be won away. Quite by chance a telephone conversation was overheard "which dis closed the facts, one of the treacherous employes being heard to promise to furnish certain information to the head of the rival house. On this clue discoveries were made which caused the abrupt dismissal of half the office force. The directors now are hesitating whether to "bring action for conspiracy which will reveal to the public the business methods of the comspiracy which will reveal to the public the business methods of the compositor" or drop the matter. The intrigue was calculated to rain the credit and standingy of the house in a might short time, and the boast had been made that it would be out of business in thirty days. Only by keeping watch day and night was the manager able to prevent the flies and correspondence being abstracted by the spies and appropriated to the use of the intriguing concern. RATLIFF HAS LARGE BIRD COLLECTION The bird collection of Walter Ratliff, representing the IT. S. survey in Eastern Indiana, was enriched recently by the audience of several water birds, shot northwest of the city. A hooded Merganser, a large duck of the fish hunting species, a migratory bird, very seldom seen in this locality was mounted by Mr. Ratliff, with several smaller water birds. Wilson's snipe was albo shot and mounted. Ratliff's collection is quite extensive at this time, and he is constantly adding to it. Richmond is directly in one of the three great routes chosen by migratory water birds in their n6rthern and southern flights, and several rare species have been secured and placed in this collection. The United States imported 95 000,000 pounds and exported 70,000,000 pounds of tinplate in 1911. ILameness Sloan's Liniment is a quick and reliable remedy for lameness in horses and other farm animals. "Sloan's liniment surpasses anything on earth for lameness in horse ami other horse ailments. I would not Bleep without it in my stable." MAKTISf DOYLB, i33 West 13th SW, New York City. Good for Swelling and Abscess. Mr. H. M. Gibb. of Lawrence, Kan., R. F. D., 2So. 3. writes: " I had a mare with an abscess on her neck and one 50c. bot tle at Sloan's Liniment entirely cured her. I keep it all the time for galls and small swellings and for everything about the stock SLG&M'S IMIMEMT is a quick and safe remedy for hog cholera. GoTBiuuf of Georgia nses Sloan's Liniment for Hoc Cholera. I beard Gor. Brown (who Is qnite a farmer ) that he had nerer lost a hog from cholera and that his remedy always was a tableepoonf nl of Sloan's Liniment In a gallon of slops, decreasing the dose as the animal improred. Last month Gov. Brown and mvself were at the Asricoltnral College building and In the discussion of the raTages of the disease, Got. Brown gare the remedy named as nnf ailing.' " Orskrvfk." Savaxsah Dailt News. At All Dealer. SScSOe. 81.0O. Sloan's Boot en Horses. Cattle, liana and Poultn sent tree. Aadr s Dr. Earl B. Sloan, Bottom.

ADDITIONAL SOCIETY

DANCE TONIGHT. A dance will be given this evening by the White Ltiy Dancing club in the Pythian Temple. Piano and drums will furnish the dance music. PRETTY PARTY. One of the prettiest parties of the season was given Tuesday afternoon when Mrs. Hollace Hoover and Miss Iva Wimmer r.et a number of their friends in the private parlors of the Hagerstown Hotel. "500" was played at five tables. Those present were the Mesdams Robert Thurston, William Abbott, R. R. Brant, Benj. Shuck, William Dingworth, Syril Hiatt, J. H. Kidwell, Charles Porter, Ray Small, Cliff ord Foutz, Fred Teets, Lee Brannan, Ora Wheeler. Dorwin Durbin, W. L. Helmsing and the Misses Cristal j KeyB, Myrtle Newcome, Maude Neal, Clara Daugherty, Nellie Brant, Mary Kidwell and Eva Hoover. Lunch was served at the close of the afternoon. TUESDAY BRIDGE CLUB. Mrs. Frank Braffett was hostess Tuesday afternoon for a postponed meeting of the Tuesday Bridge club at her home in South Thirteenth street. Mrs. Richard Study was a guest for the afternoon. Bridge was played at three tables. The favor went to Mrs. Rebhan. lunch was served. After the game ; Mrs. W. G. Butler ! will entertain the club next Tuesday afternoon at her home, 45 South Seventeenth street. COLLEGIATE CLUB. The Woman's Collegiate club will meet Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Isaac Wilson at her home in South Twenty-first street. The members are i invited to attend. ENTERTAINED CLUB. A meeting of the Criterion club was held Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. A. L. Ruby at her home in South Thirteenth street. There was a large attendance of the membership. Roll call was responded to with remarks about weather signs. Mrs. Mikesell read a paper on "Mill On the Floss." Riley's "Bear Story" was read by Mrs. Ruby. An exchange of favorite recipes also featured the afternoon. After the program a social hour followed. The next meeting will be held in a fortnight with Mrs. Frank Shissler at her home, 409 North Eighteenth street. The club will entertain the husbands, Tuesday evening of the coming week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jessup in Centerville. LANCASTER-HUTCH ENS. Announcement was made late yesterday afternoon of the marriage of Mr. Frank Spinning Lancaster and Miss Lova Leon Hutchens, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Hutchens of East Main street. The. young people were married in Cincinnati and will visit with friends at that place for the remainder of the week. The bride was married in a pretty tailored suit of Alice blue with hat and other accessories to correspond. Mr. and Mrs. Lancaster will have a residence in this city. Their many friends extend hearty congratulations. Mrs. Lancaster has been a resident of this city for about four years. HAS RETURNED. Mr. Erie Glidewell has returned from Indianapolis where he was called by the illness of his brother. BANS OF MARRIAGE. The bans of marriage of Miss Leota Springer and Mrs. Frank Sleek of Wyoming, Ohio, were announced Sunday for the first time in the St. Andrew's church. The wedding will be celebrated this spring. Among other announcements called at Ihis or ENGIIS CLOTHES

v 1 - f S g JELsT f -

ROY W. V I DENNIS I

TAILOR Maker of the kind of Clothes Gentlemen Wear

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time was that of Miss Nora Steins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Steins, and Mr. Andrew Feffler, formorlv rf Pinfinnatl hut nnw a. reai-

all be celebrated this spring. IN ST. LOUIS. Mr. J. Howard Smith of the National Automatic tool company, will return Thursday from St. Louis, where he has been on business. GONE EAST. Mrs. N. Pollitz of the Palais Royal has gone East on business. HAS RETURNED. Miss Marie Campbell .of East Main street, has returned from an extended trip through the west. WEEK-END ,GUEST. Miss Adda Frances Goodwin of Newcastle, Indiana, spent the week-end here the guest of Miss Ruth Kinsey at her home in North Eighth street. MRS. BARTEL HOSTESS. Mrs. William II. Bartel, jr., will be hostess Monday afternoon of the coming week for a meeting of the Dorcas society at her home in South Twelfth street. ABOUT SEEDS. "I was interested when shown a day's business on a senator's desk," says a writer in a magazine, "and there I noticed an invoice for seeds as follows: "One hundred and two packages vegetable seeds. , "Twenty grapevines. "Ninety strawberry vines." Well, if that is the daily record of one senator, he ought to be proud of it. It is difficult to imagine any great- - er real benefit he could bestow upon his constituents and his country. Of course, there are people who object. They ask why not send boots and shoes as well as peas and beans, and why not send groceries on the same plan? The answer is that a seed stands in a class by itself. . It calls for industry. It arouses hope. It stimulates ambition. For between the seed and human gratification there lies labor, which makes manhood. Seed is like education, not a thing in itself, for its own sake, but posessing possibilities that can come through no other means. To give a man a seed Is to appeal to the best there is in him. God gives us soil, mankind ifou Can Make Pure Lager InYourOwn H Home -with IK Johann Hofmeister f Genuine Latter Beer Extract You can now brew your own beer best yoa ever tasted easily, cheaply, right in your own home. With Johann Hofmeister Beer Extract anyone can make the same high quality lager beer that has been made in Germany for ages in the same honest, old-fashioned way. Beer that's so tasty, wholesome, satisfying, every member of the family will surely be delighted with it. Better beer than you can buy in saloons or in bottles anywhere. And it will cost less thorn 3 cents a quart a tittle over a half cent a glass I Real Malt and Hop Beer at 11 Cents a Gallon ?2SS&1H not imitation beer but rial German style lager beer, made of select Barley Malt and the best Hops. Beer of fine, natural color topped with a rich, creamy foam. Beer with 'snap and sparkle clear and pure as can be with life and health in every drop. And the taste oh, delicious! Johann Hofmeister Lager Beer Extract is guaranteed under the U. K. Food and Drugs Act. Serial No. 30,317. No license needed anywhere to make your own beer with this pure extract. Get a can of it today, follow the simple instructions then you'll know why brewery beer can never be sold where this beer has been introduced. 50c can soakes 3 gallons of beer. 75c can makes 7 sallons of beer. Sold by all DruRgists. or sent direct, prepaid, upon receipt of price (either size), by Johann HofmtittoTtdZ HofmmUtur ldt.,Chicoso, III. ft. '1 4 J

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owes us seed ; and for the rest that we get out of life or put into it we must depend on ourselves. Those free seeds distributed by the government have much to do with the splendid development of the agricultural resources of our nation. The few millions spent for seeds bring back a hundredfold in actual cash value, and the return in energies aroused and ambition quickened into life no man can measure. With every dollar expended in seeds- Uncle Sam adds to his indemnity bond against panics and poverty.

YEGGMEN WRECKED rt a t mw-rr. . m.-,,- ! aiXfti IIS 1 f li A 1 Hilt ! XatlonaI News Association ' .v. INDIANAPOLIS. April 16.-Yegg-men wrecked the safe in the Keith theater early today but failed to obtain over $1,000 deposited in the inside vault. Stage curtains and draperies j w-ere used to silence the noise of the j explosion, which is believed to have j been caused by robbers who attended ' last night's performance. Although the theater is located in the heart of the city no one in the neighborhood heard the explosion. The night watchman resigned yesterday and his position was not fined. It was the first night in I many years that the theater had no j night watchman. ' j "COLDS" Caused by Lowered Vital Resistance. What To Do For This. It is a well known fact that when a person is run-down, stomach out of order, or the system overloaded with waste matter, vital resistance is lowered and colds and coughs are easily contracted. The safest and surest method we know to overcome this condition is by taking our delicious cod liver and iron tonic, Vinol. In the mdst natural manner Vinol tones up the digestive organs, promotes a hearty appetite, enriches the blood and creates strength for every organ in the body j and as a specific for chronic coughs, ; colds and bronchial troubles Vinol is ! unexcelled. Mr. Albert Porter of Richmond Hill, L. I., says: "All winter I had a bad j cold and a cough which I could not get i rid of, and was badly run-down besides. Vinol was the one remedy which cured my cough and made me well in every way." Try a bottle of Vinol on our offer to return your money if it fails to help you. Leo. H. Fihe, druggist, Richmond, Ind. P. S. For rough, scaly skin, try our Saxo Salve. We guarantee it. (Advertisement) THE OLD WAY This picture shows the average kitchen (yours perhaps). See how you must walk back and forth from table to stove, from stove to pantry, from pantry to cupboard, and over it all again dozens of times daily. With the Hoosier you can sit in one spot, everything before you, and have hours of time.

mcSOBBBOmSSS& I IIJ.II llllll III IW JVJ .SrtT Q mmmmmnm mmimmm mmmmmam

Why Pesfiiroy Yomnr Heaiffln By Walking Miles in an Oui-oI-Date Kitchen? Every physician will tell you that indoor walking is injurious. This week is your opportunity to save miles of weary steps. But the week is slipping fast eventful Hoosier week the week that makes cooking easy for the few lucky women who can enroll in the Hoosier Club. One of these women may still be you if you call early. Are you a lucky Hoosier Member? Why then delay when perhaps you have Only Three Days More to Get Your Hoosier for $1.00 Amazing Deieaed for Hoosiers Already 14 Club Memberships Snapped up Speedily-Only 11 Left

We have no promise of another Hoosier Club. The Hoosier Company has complete control. You may have to wait months a year for this lightening of your household labor if you miss this opportunity to save miles jf steps, hours of time, hours of weary -standing. YOU ARE NEEDLESSLY WASTING strength and sapping health and spirits every hour you go without a Hoosier. CALL TOMORROW EARLY and you can have one delivered by night all for payment of 11.00. And only 51.00 a week required in dues the dues that pay for your Hoosier. REMEMBER THE LOW FIXED PRICE is established everywhere by The Hoosier Company to give you full benefit of the cost saving from inormous output. Half a million progressive housewives have already nstalled this greatest of all household conveniences in their kitchen. For.all of these kitchen work now is easy.

Call Tomorrow If You Expect to Join the Club Now, Forming

LOCAL PERSONS TO ATTNDEXP0SIT10N Committee From Club to Visit Marion During Industrial Event.

A committee from the Richmond I Commercial club will probably be ap-1 pointed to attend the Industrial Expo sition at Marion, Ind., which will be ! held April 18 to 26. inclusive. held Aoril 18 to 26. incl The affair is similar to the Rieh- . , . nlonu r " "a as u mii-tos-ful last year that $60,000 was voted by the citizens of the city for the erection ?f ,f LV,C?"ventin. ?nd, Exp?fition

j uf ouuulus u "druggist : Bay Rum. 6 ounces; La-

ened this year at the exposition. The representative body from the club is asked to attend on April 21 on which date a banquet will be held. The day of the banquet is known as "City Executive. Commercial Executive and Newspaper Men's Day." CLASS ELECTION The Senior class of Earlham college today held an election of officers. The result of the election is appended:

ftVKEys DKU6 ST0KF.-gi

Always Featuring That Which Is Good in Drug Merchandise. Marshall Field, the greatest merchant of modern times, once taid "One man who can buy right, not cheap goods cheap, but the best goods for the least money, is worth more to me than the ten best salesmen I ever had." What did he mean? .Simply this it is just as important and much more difficult to buy right than it is to sell. It Is our special business to buy right for our customers. That is why we buy the bulk of our goods in the parlance of Drug merchandising in Deals. It costs money to carry a large stock, to keep up with late and new ideas; to be lower in price and better in quality than others, but we are willing to spend it to merit your patronage. TRY US ONCE AND YOU'LL KNOW.

DOLLAR SPECTACLES MOTH BALLS. LIME and SULPHUR, 18c a Gallon. Straw Hat Cleaner and Coloring. Foot Remedies Vhen You Think "The Drug 912 5. MAIN, "The always busy that always has you get the most Exclusive Penslar

WMeti Kitchen

OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT HERE TODAY

President, Ralph K. Guyer; vice-president, Fred Emerson; secretary. Caroline Sharpless; treasurer. Lindley Clerk; marshal. L. H. Painter, and vice marshal. Clinton Stanley.

To Grow Hair on a Bald Head BY A SPECIALIST. Thousands of people suffer from luldness and falling hair who. having trid nearly every advertised hair tcnic and hair-grower without results. have resigned themselves to baldness j . and its attendant discomfort. Yet their case is not hopeless; the following simple home prescription has made hair grow after years of baldness, and is also unequalled for restoring gray , b , , t orlgina, color, stoppmg hair i ,.,. nd .Wrovin the j dandruff germ, li will cot 'make the bair greasy, and can be put up by any vona de Composee, 2 ounces; Menthol Crystals, onehalf drachm. If you wish it perfumed, add half to one teasponful of To-Ka!on Perfume, which unites perfectly with the other ingredients. This preparation is highly recommended by physicians and specialists, and is absolutely harmless, as it contains j nrne of the poisonous wood Alcohol so frequently found in hair tonics. Io not apply to the face or where hair is not desired. (Advertisement) of Drugs Think of WALL PAPER CLEANER 4 for 25c. Dayton Flood Postals, 2 for 5 Cts. Rubber Gloves. Sponges. Ice Cream Cones. Fellerr0NTl04 place the place it first the place change back." Agent in Richmond

is Like Yours?

NO MORE WALKING BACK and forth between table and pantry and cupboard spending time and getting exhausted in miles of useless steps. Everything they need in cooking is within reach of their arm they sit instead of stand. Result happy, rested women, with time and inclination for the pleasure that makes life worth living. UNLESS YOU COME IN EARLY tomorrow, we cannot promise yoa a Hoosier Club Membership. We are having scores of callers and one sight of the Hoosier means a prospective member. We would like to give every woman In town a Hoosier Cabinet on Hoosier Club Terms but we are limited by the enormous demand to far less cabinets than we need. IF YOU WANT TO BE ONE OF THE FEW LUCKY MEMBERS, CALL TOMORROW EARLY

P

SPRING IS HERE

Pump will be worn more than ever this season hecause they are light and cool; because they are graceful and comfortable; because Teeple's Pumps fit. Priced at $4.00, $3.50, $3.00, $2.50 High and low heels All Leathers. Tips and plaig toes. GET THEM NOW AT Teeple's THE H00SIER WAY This picture shows the same kitchen with a Hoosler replacing the table. See how you can sit down at work and reach for what you need. Everything Is at your fingers ends. Backache, tired feet, nervous trouble that come from exhaustion, all disappear when the Hoosler comes. Yon Are Waiting Time, Strength and Health Until Yoa Own a Hoosier

NINTH AND MAIN STREETS