Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 141, 24 April 1914 — Page 8
rAGE EIGHT
TlfE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1914.
IPRQHIBITISU PARTY NAMESDELEGATES Postpone Nomination of Full County Ticket Until July Fourth.
; CENTERVILLE, Ind., April 24. The 'nomination of a full county ticket was : postponed at the Prohibition convention held here, until Jwly 4, when a picnic-convention will be held in JackI son's park. Delegates were elected to the state convention in Indianapolis, June 2. ; The committee on reorganization, (Consisting of the Rev. Aaron Worth, Thomas Clevenger and Stephen Thomas, appointed Thomas Hough of Richmond, county chairman to succeed Fred Teas, with Alma Bond, secretary, and .Andrew Tremp, treasurer. J. Raymond Schmidt, state chairman of the Prohibition party, made an address at the evening session, and a short talk in the afternoon. . Rev. Aaron Worth also made an address. The convention appointed the following; delegates to the state convention at Indianapolis, June 2: John 'Selig, Dublin: Thomas Clevenger, Centerville; William Jefferies, Milton; William Smith, Dublin; Martin Davis, I Aaron Worth. Mrs. Aaron Worth, Fountain City; Bertha Hogan, Richjmond; B. F. Henson, Hagerstown; (Fred Teas. Centerville: F. M. Westjhafer, Milton; William B. Hogan. Richmond, and C. A. Mitchell, Centerville. CLEARS COMPUEXtONREMOVES SKIN BLEMISHES Why go through life embarrassed and disfigured with pimples, eruptions, blackheads, red rough skin, or suffering the tortures of Eczema, itch, tetter, salt rheum., Just ask your druggist for Dr. Hobson's Eczema Ointment. Follow the simple suggestions and your akin worries are over. Mild, soothing, effective. Excellent for babies and '.delicate tender skin. Stops chapping. Always helps. Relief or money back, 50c. Recommended by A. G. Lukent& Co. Married Life the Third1 Year BY MABEL HERBERT URNER. Paris at 7 o'clock on. a summer evening! The gleaming lights, the gay gowns of the women, the trees, the outdoor cafes Helen clinging to Warren's arm, walked down the broad boulevard athrillwith the glamour of it all. It had been just four hours since they arrived from Cherbourg tired, dusty, travel-stained. But now rested in cooler clothes, they started out to tiri Warren expressed it, "a place to feed." Where should they go? Helen suggested a number of well-known places that she had read of in the guidebook. But Warren was determined to have their first dinner at a restaurant he had been particularly fond of when he was in Paris eight years before. Although he had forgotten the name, he had felt confident of his sense of location. They had taken a 'bus to Porte St. Martin and had walked several blocks in what he felt was the right direction. "Must be around here somewhere," frowning down a street that was jplainly unfamiliar. "I don't believe 'they've moved." "Isn't that a restaurant over there . where the lights are?" asked Helen, , hopefully. "By Jove! Believe thafs the place," ;as they crossed the wide street. "I'd 'have sworn It was on the other side." Entering, they were met by an officious head waiter, who hustled ahead ushering them to a table in an inner room. "Oh. we don't want to sit mack hero," objected Warren. "Give us a table cut on the veranda." "Sorry, monsieur, but they're all taken." "Why, there's half a dozen vacant ones at that end." "They're all reserved, monsieur," repeated the head waiter stolidly. Warren turned to Helen with a scowling, "So they know that game over here, too. This fellow's looking for five francs. Well, what do you say? Want to sit back here, or look up some other place?" "Oh, dear, let's go somewhere else," resenting the supercillious air of the head waiter, who stood by impatiently tapping the dinner card with his pencil. Outside Warren demanded curtly: "Now where to? It's getting late and I'm hungry. We don't want to wander around all night, you know." "But, dear, we don't want to stay there. That man was almost insolent. He Blames Her. "Well, you're pretty darn particuGLASS OF SALTS IF YOUR KIDNEYS HURT Eat less meat if you feel Baekachy or have Bladder trouble Salts fine for Kidneys.
Meat forms uric acid which excites ,and overworks the kidneys m their ' efforts to filter it from the system. Regular eaters of meet must flush the kidneys occasionally. You must relieve them like you relieve your bowels; removing all the acids, waste and poison, else you feel a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick, headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and "when the weather "is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment; the channels often get irritated, obliging you to get up two or three times during the night. To neutralize these Irritating acids and flush off the body's urinous waste get about four ounces of Jad Salts from ny pharmacy; take a tablespoonful ' in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine and bladder ' disorders disappear. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys and stop bladder irritation. Jad Salts Is inexpensive; harmless and makes a delightful effervescent llthla-water drink ; which millions of men and women take now and then, thus avoiding serious kidney and bladder disreasev
Uncle Sam's Boys on Border
L$? -gib ki w -o
Sentry squad and corporal about to start for their sentry post at the prison camp, Fort Bliss, Texas. These are the type of fighting men that will be rushed across the Mexican border in the event of an open declaration of war on the part of either Mexico or the United States.
lar," as usual throwing the responsibility upon her. 'We'de have been sure of good food there, anyway. But you're always kicking. Suppose you find a place now. Helen realized that Warren was on the verge of one of his irritable moods, when he would blame her for whatever happened, however incon-jit sistent or unjust. He had had nothing to eat since that early and unsatisfactory luncheon on the train. It was a critical moment, and she was desperately anxious to find some other good restaurant at once before his growing hunger increased his irrita bility. They walked on for several blocks, Helen gazing anxiously in every direction, while Warren maintained the scowling, sullen silence that always foreboded a storm. "Oh, there, dear," eugerly, as she caught sight of a balcony, high above the streets, with white clothed tables and rose-shaded lights. "Doesn't that look like a good place?" "You can't tell anything about these strange places in Paris," growled Waren. "May be rotten. But we've got to eat somewhere. Come on. And we'll stay here understand? whether get a table you like or not. No more trotting around for me tonight." Helen followed Warren up the broad, red-carpeted stairs, hoping desperately that at thi3 . place things would go right. The first glimpse was disappointing. The room was crowded. Would they have to go some where else? As they stood uncertainly at the doorway, a couple rose from a most desirable table on the veranda one that Helen had seen from the street. If they could only get that! The next moment the head waiter was bowing them toward it. Two other waiters rushed forward with fresh linen and silver, and a third placed a foot stool at Helen feet. "Oh, dear, it's a wonderful place," sinking back with a sense of infinite relief that a critical situation had been safely passed. "Well, we'll not get enthusiastic till we see what the food's like," grunted Warren, somewhat appeased by the attention they had received. "I can't make anything out of this," scowling at the menu, which was illegibly written in French with pale purple ink. "Will you have our five franc table d'hote dinner, Monsieur?" asked a waiter at his elbow. "Umph, you speak English? Well that simplifies things. What do you get with that dinner?" "Sounds Good." "Hors d'oeuvre, potage, fish, entree, roast, salad, entremets and a bottle of i red of white Bordeaux."
"That sounds pretty good," assented j Sun and Wind Bring Out Ugly Spots, Warren. "All right, we'll try it." How to Remove Easily. To Helen the atmosphere of the j Here's a chance, Miss Freckle-face, place and the street scene below was to t a remedy for freckle3 wUq the one of enchantment. She was begin- , euarantee of reHabie dealer that it ning to feel the charm of Paris. guarantee of a reliable dealer that t With the hors d'oeuvres and tbewlH not cost yu a Penny unle8S u first glass of wine, the scowling frown j removes the freckles; while if it does on Warren's brow had relaxed, and ! give you a clear complexion the ex-
with the thick green Saint Germain soup he grew almost genial. "Just taste that fish! It's great. What they call filet of sole at home is only a flounder. We ,3ver see the real thing there. This is an allright place." He Feels Better. "Oh, I'm so glad we found this, dear, for I felt you were getting out of humor, and would blame me for not staying at that other place," ex claimed Helen, who, womanlike, always wanted to go back over a situa-
Flay Apple Root Oldest Known Medicine Me ntioned in Genesis and Songs of So lomon
"Mandrake" is the Biblical name of what we call May Apple. Of the May Apple, Encyclopedia Britannica defining the word Podophyllin says: "Mandrake or May Apple Root, a popular remedy much used by those averse to calomel or other mercurial preparations, hence has been -called 'Vegetable Calomel.' " Our grandsires used May Apple Root, tea or powder as a Liver Regulator. It has survived by virtue of its merit as a starter of Bile. Our forefathers said: "it makes the Liver act" which Is true in the sense that it releases the Bile from the Liver. Bile is the one natural germicide that overcomes germ growth in the intestines. A free normal flow of Bile
Don't "Wear Out" a Cough or Cold Smooth out with Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey
tion, in stead of being content to leave well enough 'alone. "And I couldn't bear to have our first dinner in Paris an unhappy one." " Who in thunder was going to make it unhappy, unless you were?" growled Warren, who hated post-mortems. "What the devil are you harping on
now for, anyway?" "Oh, I only meant, dear " began Helen hastening to conciliate. But fortunately at this moment the waiter uncovered the fowl, roasted to a deli cate brown, and Warren's attention waB directed from Helen's untactful remark. ! "Dear, there's not much difference in the gowns worn by the French women," commented Helen, now anxious to change the subject. There aren't any sensational dresses here. That woman over there in pink, is rather striking, but any of the others might be in New York." "Well, this isn't the sort of place where you'd see much in the way of dress. Some night . 1 11 take you to supper at Maxim's. The gowns there will be striking enough." delightedly. "I thought it was a dreadful place." "Not so dreadful as they want you to think that's their best asset. You'll find it pretty tame. More than half the crowd will be rubbernecks like j ourselves." But Helen had read and heard much of Maxim's, and as she minced over the fruit salad gazed down on the gay ; boulevard in eager anticipation of a supper there. "Dear, what IS this?" as the waiter placed before them two small brown jars filled with a thick, creamy substance. "Search me!" shrugged Warren, Investigating it with a spoon. "That Creme de Zeigny, Monsieur. "Will you have sugar with it?" "I'll try it straight first." "Oh, it's delicious, dear," exclaimed Helen, enthusiastically. "It's sort of sour, salty and sweet! More like a delicate liquid cheese." Very Smooth. "By Jove, that is pretty smooth," admitted Warren. Isn't this the stuff the Thurstons raved over when they got back last year? We'll have this often that's sure." When the waiter had cleared off the table, Warren lit his cigar and turned FRECKLE-FACE ;ense is trifling. Simply get an ounce of othine double strength from Leo H. Fihe and a few applications should show you how easy it is to rid yourself of the homely freckles and get a beautiful complexion. Rarely is more than one ounce needed for the worst case. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength othine as this is the prescription sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove , freckles. Adv, is essential to immunity from germ infection and intestinal disorders. For years chemists have labored to overcome the only objection ever raised to Podophyllin the griping and at last have succeeded and offer to the world a new formula called "PoDoLax" "PoDo" from Podophyllin and "Lax," meaning laxative or gentle in action as contrasted with its former cathartic or purging effect. PoDoLax is good to taste and is taken by children from a spoon or glass without the usual resistance. Best results are had by a single dose when a bad taste, or bad breath, or coated tongue are first noticed. Ask for PoDoLax and be sure to get PoDoLax.
over the check placed unobtrusively beiore him.
Ten francs two dollars! Well that's what I call a good run for your money. Everything specially cooked, too and that was a whole chicken. To get a dinner like that in New York you'd have to order- it a la carte, and with that wine it would cost you not a cent less than ten dollars." "Now, aren't you glad we didn't
"'j
From actual photograph. April 17, 1914. Our Bluejackets loading Post Toasties on U. S. Flagship Virginia, Rear Admiral Beatty commanding, at Charlestown Navy Yard, preparatory to possible war with Mexico.
Here's a Food thai, like our Navy, Is Always Ready Up and down our seacoast, Battleship, Transport and Destroyer have been waiting the President's word. At Portsmouth, Charlestown, Brooklyn, League Island, Washington, Norfolk, Pensacola and New Orleans; at Mare Island, Bremerton and our other Naval Stations the Big Ships that carry the Flag have been loading food for the guns, and food for the men.
ready-to-serve delicious bits of toasted white corn been a favorite aboard ship for many a year. Grocers bring them to YOUR table factory fresh. If you like good things to eat and want to get into from the Grocer
stay at that other restaurant?" Insisted
Helen with a true feminine persistency. That food COULDN'T have been any better! You see I didn't find such a bad place after all." But Warren was no longer in an inflammable mood. The excellent dinner had had a most pacifying effect on his temper. So to this rather indiscreet remark, he only shrugged a good natured: "Umph. that's right rub It in!" MILTON Miss Amelia Knauf was at Richmond Tuesday. Mrs. Grant Clark and daughter, Miss Helen, of Cambridge City, were guests of the mormer's mother, Mrs Amelia Needham. Mrs. Sam Thompson entertained as guests at dinner Tuesday, Mrs. Harry Mahan and children, of Glenwood. The pupils of the high school at Milton are busy this week with their final examinations. Mrs. Elizabeth Wallace is reported Wesley Newton stepped on a rusty nail which penetrated his shoe and made an ugly wound. Mrs. Edward Enyeart, of Connersville, was the guest cf her sister, Mrs.
Anna Hall Tuesday i eaiures were piaoo soio y miss uora. Miss Leak, teacher of Domestic i Beeson. a chorus by the Intermediate Science in the township high school c,ass of girls and a reading by Miss at Milton, ha3 been suilering from Mary SI1,Sapendicitis for some time. The mat- The Christian church Bible school ter has come to a crisis and she an- orchestra furnished several numbers nounced that she would enter the at the Christian church in Cambridge hospital at her home town, Anderson, i City, Sunday evening. for an operation. Mrs. Flora Ferguson is spending a ' Trans-Atlantic communication has few days at Cambridge City with ' been established between the governfriends. i ment station at Arlington, Va., and
Lester Cain, of Economy, was the guest of his mother, Mrs. William Threewitts, Sunday. He was accompanied by Mrs. Threewitts' niece, Miss Christina Souther. The Rev. F. M. Westhafer was at Centerville, Tuesday to atend the Prohibition convention. Mrs. L. R. Gresh and Mrs. Sam Hoshour ware at Richmond, Tuesday, to visit the daughter and sister, Mrs. Louis Klotz and family. Mrs. L. E. Thompson was at Richmond Tuesday. Lycurgus .Beeson will have his house repainted on the interior. The surveyor was setting the grade for the Pouth side of West Main tstrt n-..ne.nn ofnnAn . i .,,, ' Mrs. Harrv Hussev and siRter MIkb Hattle Izor, were at Richmond, Tues - day. Mrs. Adam Snyder was calling on friends at Cambridge City Tuesday. Farmers in this township are sowing oats. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ferris enter-
They're Always Ready
tained as their guests this week, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Charles and Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Wolman, of Fountain City, Mrs. Pickerell and daughter, of near Darlington were guests Monday. Ross Doddridge and Walter Higham and Misses Irene Crook and Luella Lantz attended services at the Christian church, at Harrisburg, Sunday. Santford Little reached another milestone in his road of life and in honor was given a pleasant surprise Sunday. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Will Little and son of Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Little and fomily of east of town, Mr, and Mrs. Charles Morse and son, Mr. and Mrs. James Revalee and family, and Mr. and Mrs. Crrtiss Little. A dinner was served. Ralph Moore acted as rural route carrier for John DuGranrut on Route 16 several days last week. Elmer Bertscb and the Misses Moore and Veva Witter formed an auto party to Connersville, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Willis Leverton has
as their company . Sunday, . Mr. and 'Mrs. Clyde Leverton and' daughter. Doddridge. The Christian church Bible school enjoyed a kne program Sunday morning. The occasion was Girls' Rally Day and the girls of the Bible school furnished the program. Prominent 1 m . . t 1 . the Eiffel tower in Paris, as well as stations at Panama and San Francis-1 RELIABLE HOME TREATMENT The ORRINE treatment for the Drink Habit can be used with abso- ! lute confidence. It destroys all desire : ror wnisxev. Deer or otner aiconoiic . stimulants Thousands have success-! ! fully used it and have been restored to ' lives of sobriety, and usefulness. Can I he given secretly. Costs only $1.00 per ; I box. If you fail to get results rrom ORRINE after a trial, your money will be refunded. Ask for free booklet telling all about ORRINE. A. G. Luken and Co.
B2 08 1. N Kl HAESDTl
a food that Uncle Sam and his men both like has sell them everywhere in tightly sealed packages Criat - action, order a package of delicious POST TOASTIES
co, but this is only occasional, and tha service is not open to commercial 1
business. NEW FEET WHEN YOURS ARE TIRED The Wonderful Foot-Joy, Speedway, Will Make Your Weary Soles Feel Fresh and Fine! Put gladness into your feet after the day's hard work by rubbing them a little with Speedway! Just forget your feet, in fact, by removing all the pain soothing out all the aches with Speedway. Wonderful! That is what all Speedway uners say of this real "road to quick relief." It's as sure as fate, and as gentle as toilet water. Like magic. Speedway takes away the burning, smarting and throbbing almost Instantly. Your feet are left cooled and refreshed, the aching gone. and you feel like a new person. Try Speedway this very dayl Buy v bottle the first minute you i get a to your complete satisfaction that it is the one sure relief for suffering feet. Speedway cannot stain the skin or the daintiest fabric. It cannot burn or blister. On the contrary, it soothes and delights the moment it is applied. Rub thoroughly, full strength, on your weary feet, or on any stiff Joint, sprain or swelling. The druggists join the makers of Speedway in absolutely guaranteeing it to do all that is claimed for IL It will give you relief and comfort, or you get your money back. Buy a bottle today and know r r foot comfort beginlng to night. , - Can You Use $10, $25, $50 or $100? If you need money call on us. We loan any amount from $5 to $100 on household goods, pianos, teams. Stock, & Etc., without removal. If you are unable to callwrite or phone and our agent will call at your house and explain our LOW RATE. Private Reliable The State Investment & Loan Company Phone 2560, Room 40 Colonial Bldg., Richmond, Indiana. S
