Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 112, 23 March 1915 — Page 10
PAGbTEN.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 1915
MISSIONARY TALKS TO MILTON PEOPLE OF WORK IN INDIA Miss Creek Tells of Welcome
to Religious Message De livered by American Wom- . en in Field Abroad. MILTON, Ind.. March. 23.-rMiss Creek, a returned missionary from India, spoke at Doddridge cbapel Sunday morning and at the M. E. church here Sunday evening. Her talk was very Interesting and related more particularly to the work among the women of India. She told of the religion of the Hindu and bow It was believed that their gods were only beings who would send evil1 upon them if they did not follow their religion and when (they learned what American women believed they would ask why American women did not come sooner to tell them about the God they worshiped. A good audience was present and the music was furnished by the church orj chestra. The Friends minister disj missed services at that church that all might attend and hear Miss Creek. Edward Manlove was home from In- ' dianapolis to. spend over Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Manlove. ,. Starts Boat Line. The Whitewater Navigation company of Milton, has launched its boat and is running now every Sunday that Jt does not rain. " Mrs. Dan Caldwell of near Harrisurg, has 100 and over young chicks. fa Mrs. Ann Martin Is, very low. Her daughter, Mrs. Kenerian of Richmond, ame Monday to attend at her bedside. Mrs. Malinda Barton was at Indianpolls Saturday on business. Mr. and Mrs. Charles - Basson, Sr., ad as their guests Sunday, Mr. and Irs. Charles Basson of Connersville, fend Miss Esther Basson pf Richmond, f Mrs. Vashit Kimmel of east of town, js reported improving.. . I Mrs, Josie Holiday of Greentown, is '.visiting Mr. and Mrs. Omer Kirlin and upther relatives in this vicinity. ; Mrs. Ella Hoffman is sick again. Miss Nora Doddridge, who is at Winona, has been sick, but is thought to be improving. . James Doddridge and W. H. Miller were fishing Saturday and caught three bass that made a total weight of six pounds. Sing at Funeral, i Mrs. L. H. Warren, Mrs. Henry Hussey, Mrs. R. W. Warren and Mrs. Edward Wilson gave the. music at the funeral of the late James Lemon at the Christian church Saturday afternoon. The songs were "There's a Stranger at the Door," "I'm Going Home Tomorrow" and "Deliverance Will Come." There were many beautiful flowers. Mrs. "Will Pence came with the family. Mr. Pence was unable to come and Warren Lemon- of Indianapolis, was a pall-bearer instead of Mr. Pence. Mr. Lemon was also a nephew of the deceased. Mrs. Adam Bortsfield of Cambridge City, visited her sister, Miss Amelia Knauf. Monday. Miss Kate Baker of Indianapolis, Is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Baker. On Sunday they were guests at dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Weaver. Dr. and Mrs. Charles Kniese and daughter, Pauline, of Cambridge City, were guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Beeson, Sunday. Mrs. Paul Ferris of west of town, had a birthday Sunday and while she and Mr. Ferris were at church here, the following friends came to their home and dinner was ready on their return: Mr. and Mrs. Henry Larson, Mrs. Delia Hurst, Mr. and Mrs. Omer Wirlin ana family. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kirlin and family, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dailey and family of east of Milton, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Cramer and Frank Connelly of north of East Germantown, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Kirlin of Milton, Mr. and Mrs. Park Thornburg and daughter and Mrs. Barbara Ferris of west of town. An elegant dinner was served. There were thirty-six at dinner. Mrs. Anna Hoshour entertained relatives, members of the family of the late James Lemon, at dinner Saturday, who came to attend the funeral. Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Filby of Richmond, who were at Connersville to attend the funeral of Mrs. Filby's mother, Mrs. Parsons, were with his relatives here enroute home. Pldl Ydoo j ever try LONDON'S Original and Genuine Catarrhal Jelly? s For cold In head, hay fever, hacking cough, sneezing, dry nose catarrh, (bronchitis, grip, deafness and inflammations of the skin and tissue. 'S , is a household remedy and has been doing good for nearly twenty-five ' years. About 35,000 druggists sell K. C. J. Prices 25 and 50 cents per tube, guaranteed to please or money back. If you are skeptical and wish to try KONDON'S before making a ' purchase, write quick for a free trialsample and booklet. Don't take a substitute. i Kendon Mfg. Co., Minneapolis, Minn.
kondon
I PLANING MILL WORK
We can fill your orders promptly, both large and small, for all kinds of Mill Work and Kiln-dried Cut Lumber. See us before you buy and let us quote you prices on all your requirements. LOUCK & HILL COMPANY Phone 1412
Teach Boys to Save Advises T. B. Fulmer
"Just as the twig is bent, so the tree's inclined." So it is that just as a boy f allowed to spend freely his pennies earned, or received gratuitously. Is he likely to spend his earnings in later life, or just to, the extent that he learns to save while young will he be frugal and thrifty when grown. "Train up a child in the way he should go and when he Is old he will not depart from It" Is as true today as when it was first written. Teach your boy the value of his pennies and nickels and have him leaTn early in life that the spendthrift usually comes to some bad end, while the systematic saver will have the "nest egg" ready when an opportunity offers for Investment in a business he may call his own. . ; The many savings institutions to be found everywhere . today with their home savings banks or Christmas money clubs or regular savings pass books so freely issued make It so easy for the boy to accumulate a fund for future use and bearing a fair rate of interest, that it is the height of unwisdom for a parent not to see that the boys (and girls as well) have 'a deposit account in some financial institution. Easy For Any Boy. Some parents may think these Institutions do not care for the boy's account perhaps, because the initial deposit Is necessarily small, but any savings bank or trust company wilL be glad to issue a nice passbook all made out in the boy's name for a deposit of one dollar and for the purpose I of accumulating that first dollar will j
ANTI-TUBERCULOSIS SOCIETY TO EXPOSE FAKE GORES SOLD FOR CONSUMPTION
Realizing the vast amount of harm exerted by the sale of fake consumption "cures," the organized anti-tuberculosis movement announced today that in co-operation with the vigilance committee of the National Association of Advertising clubs, they will conduct a vigorous expose of these frauds. It is lamentably true that hundreds of manufacturers are willing to make the ever-living hope of the consumptive a means of financial gain. W. D. Thurbur, executive secretary of the Indiana Society for the Prevention of Tuberculosis, and Merle Sidener, chairman of the vigilance committee, have announced their intention of giving the manufacturers of these "cures" a fight for their lives in Indiana. Testimonials False. Glowing testimonials, which in many instances are appended- to advertisements of these remedies, have been investigated by the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, the American Medical association and other agencies, and have been proved to be absolute fakes. Often the person whose name is signed to one of these testimonials is dead and buried, and in many cases the records show that death was due to tuberculosis. The Indiana Society for the Prevention of Tuberculosis is planning a comprehensive campaign against the selling of these nostrums, which will embrace all this section of the country. Through the various state organization! for the prevention of tuberculosis and its affiliated county societies in The only but It 'Up thinglt Let us figure on your new roof on a handsome, lasting roof of Neponset Shingles. Neponset Shingles arc spark-proof, weather-proof. They are double width, hence cut the cost of laying. Won't curl, crack, rust, rot, blow loose.'' Irvin Reed & Son We carry Napoaiet Betiding Product FASHION SHOP Spring Dress Skirt Sale!
NepohseT 1 shingles! PATENTED
furnish various kinds of ingeniously contrived coin containers or small banks in which to jv.ve the pennies. Every boy is interested in the struggles and final success of such men as Rockefeller, Carnegit, Edison and others who began as poor boys and by thrift and perseverance became the cantains of fin an cm and Inriiintrv. Tail
hims that without thrift and economy such successes as these are never attained, v ; -' Methods of Saving. Almost every boy can find time to earn some real money by carrying papers, selling magazines, cutting grass in summer and sweeping snow in winter, or by doing odd jobs around the house or running errands and no boy should be brought up that these manly things would not be considered by him to be entirely honorable and proper. ; . It' is the systematic saving that counts. Spasmodic saving generally does not get anywhere. Persistent, steady, regular saving of something every week is the sure road to success. The parents who allow the" boy to spend every penny he gets, at the corner store, usually for needless and often positively harmful knickknacfts, is doing the boy an injustice which only time will reveal. , The present day art .of the shopkeepers in displaying so alluringly the attractive wares dear to a boy's heart must be overCome by a teaching and training at home that such things are only a snare and delusion and calculated to teach the boy a cheap value of money. Indiana, the state society plans to obtain detailed Information in regard to there frauds. As far as possible the truthfulness of the testimonials appearing In publications in the Mississippi valley will be Investigated, and the results pf these investigations made known to the public. RECIPES OF OUR PIONEER MOTHERS. for the home treatment of disease were wonderfully dependable. True, they knew nothing of drugs, but owed their success to the roots, herbs and barks of the field. It is interesting to note that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, the most successful remedy for female ills we have, was originally prepared for home use from one of these recipes. Its fame has now spread from shore to shore, and thousands of American women now well and strong claim they owe their health and happiness to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Adv. ' Order a case of Real Bock Beer. 2710 or 1214. Minck's j Phone 23-2t EASTER Is Inseparably Assc dated with "Brand New" Clothes No man is (or wants to be) deaf to the call of Easter. Buy your Easter suit here and assure yourself against disappointemnt, buy the sort of garments that are authoritative in style and that will keep their shapeliness, because -they are all wool, and so guaranteed. Don't fail to ??e our splendid showing at Up to
For That Boy of Yours We are showing the best line of clothes that are to be found anywhere in the. city. Every suit is made of good serviceable cloth and will surely stand the test that every boy is bound to (PO fA f A 1 A put them to.' Priced at $t).dU 10 e)IW
ADDITION MAY JOIN GLEN. KARN STREET WITH. HOLLANSDUAO With Platting of New Land, ; Citizens Hope to See Side walks Unite Two Towns in Ohio.
GLEN KARN, Ohio, March 23. According to reports from the Commercial club Mrs. L. V. Mikesell has sold a field between Glen Kara and Hoilandsburg to a Kokomo firm to be plotted and made into lots facing both roads to Hollandsburg and with a street between and thrown open to the public for sale about may 1st. In case they are successful in obtaining gas there are several concerns which figure on locating here and It Is hoped that before long the two towns will be connected by sidewalks. Miss Mildred Louden slager took dinner Sunday with Court Koonez and family, . - ' Harvey and Miss Ruby Downing attended a lecture at Spartansburg last Friday night. Attend Board Meeting. Li. V. Mikesell, who is president of the school board attended a county meeting at Greenville Saturday. Mrs. Leonard Thompson, Miss Mae and Robert Thomas visited in Greenville a few days last week. , S. D. Chenoweth and wife entertained Earl Mitchell,-wife and daughter, Mildred, at dinner Sunday. . Ed Lindenwood has moved from the Groves farm to a farm near Palestine. Sampson Cloyd has moved from the farm owned by O. A. Downing on the one vacated by Mr. LIndemood and Tilden Hoke of Clark's Station has moved onto Mr. Downing's farm. Elam Mikesell and wife of Middleboro spent the day Sunday with Wm. Hor nand family. Carl Thompson and wife of Winchester are visiting for a few days with W. A. Harrison and wife. Auto Hits Richards. Ivan Richards and his brother Ben had a narrow escape last Friday in Richmond from what might have proved a bad accident. While going west on Main street in his machine he attempted to cross the tracks at 19th and did not notice the street car Try This for Pilos Costs Only 10c or 25c Thousands give praise after being , eured from Itching Piles, with a aim- j pie preparation that can be procured at any drug store for 10 or 26 cents. ! All you have to do is to lay down a ' dime or quarter and sa I want Plex. ' Tou will ' And Plex entirely different j from anything else you ever used. It's j so simple, so sure and so scientific. It : will allay itching piles in one night, i and is as harmless as water. Tou will find Plex delightful after shaving and to Keep the skin smooth and pliable. i PLEX COMPLEXION PILLS act as a blood purifier and should be taken : internally to get. the alterative-enecta) to assist in the cure of pile .
New Spring Hats, Ties Shirts and Furnishings for Men and Boys who care.
behind him -which -was going the same way. The street car bit them and slid the automobile a distance of about 20 feet before It could be stopped. They suffered nothing worse than a good Jolting while the machine had a broken . fender and the side caved in. They left It in Richmond for repairs and bad a man to bring them home. The box supper -which was given at the school, house Friday night was a success In every way. Before the boxes were auctioned off a program was
given in the H. 8. room which everyone appreciated. , Mlsa Flossie Diehl has gone to Richmond to take a three years course in nursing at the Reid Memorial hospital, . Every one Is going to Richmond Monday week on the new truck. Mr. Spencer has brought the truck home and has every thing ready to start but has not given out his official schedule yet." : . ' CARD OF THANKS. We wiBh to thank our many friends and neighbors for their kind assistance and floral offerings during the death of our father. 23-lt Clinton E. Sell and Wife. BIG GRAIN CROP ASSURED TO TRADE "With the wheat crop of 1914 reaching the magnificent total of 891,000,000 bushels and the corn crop passing again the 2,500,000,000 bushel figures, and a market exceeding the demand of all former years, the prospects for the traae in America are brighter than for a decade," says W. W. Ramsey, general manager of the J. I. Case T, M. company. "The tremendous European upheaval' may Jar the balance of the Old World for a time, but prosperity here is bound to reien throuehout the year. Already the districts surrounded by the great grain fields of the West have begun to exert an influ AnPA nn thn ah. tomobile trade that will restore much or tne confidence that disappeared last summer. Then the mania for restrict
Spring with all its Finery does not surpass the
megancy 01 Hoover-Bond FURNITURE
Spring goods arriving daily which makes selecting that outfit for the Easter bride a real pleasure. Brass Beds $ 11 .95, $ 1 4.75, $ 1 9.85 up to $49.85 Davenports ...... $20.00, $24.75, $32.50 up to $75.00 Rockers $2.50, $5.00, $9.75, $13.50 up to $2500 Library Tables $7.50, $ 1 0.00, $ 1 4.75 up to $35.00 Dressers $9.75, $ 1 4.85, $ 1 8.50 up to $38.85 Chiffoniers $6.75, $1 1 .50, $16.50 up to $35.00 Couches $1 3.50, $22.75, $35.00 up to $50.00
E2J
k? S3
ive legislation that seemed to grasp
parts of the country has wholly disappeared and on top of this has come the favorable action of tie Interstate Commerce Commission for higher freight rates. - ..w; -.- "Basing his action on the exports of grain in 1914 compared with 1913. the farmer today looks forward to 1915 as a year when be can have a new automobile and all the other things that he heretofore thought entirely out of his reach. The total value of the grain shipped out or the country in 1914 was $340,841,000, against $290,952,000 in 1913. In 1915 it is believed that the total gross income from the export of grain will reach the $500,000,000 figure, and when the farmer reaches the benefit from this great trade the whole country will be Immensely benefited." UT.7 ROUND TRIP FARES TO caufoo's Exposmons ARB THE PACIFIC COAST Low ronad trip fares are now is effect ria the Scenic Highway of the Northern Pacific By. to Cahfornia'a Frpwaitiont ria the North Pacific Coast. Those ticketa permit liberal stop-overs and enable the tourist to include both Expoaitiona aa well aa a atop-over at Yellowstone National Park via Gardiner Gateway. If you will advise when yon will plan your western trip, I will be pleased to quote rates, send a copy of oar handaoroe Expoaitiona folder aa well aa Tellowatone National Park and trarrel literature, and assist yon in any way possible in planning your 1915 vacation trie.. Safety First With Our Night Latches We Carry Yale and Reading in Stock. Prices 35c to $1.50. TTTTORNADAY'S liliARDWARE 616 Main St. Phone 1281.
Dress Up Your Home for Easter At this season make your home to take on the best appearance possible. Our outfits or even a few pieces from our large stock will grace your home. Genuine Leather Rockers. . .$14.85, $22.50, up to $50.00 Buffets $ 1 4.75, $ 1 9.85, $25.00, $37.50 up to $65.00 Dining Tables $8.75, $ 1 5.00, $22.85 up to $45.00 Room-size Rugs in Velvets, Wiltons, Body Brussels, Axminsters. Priced at $10.85, $15.00, $18.50, $22.50 up to $30.00, $37.50 and $45.00. Spring styles in Curtains of every kind to brighten your home. Bring Your Friends. Go Through Our Store. Always Welcome.
TLbbtW &ST3Pc YOU 01 i onoura use TTS different " froffl I others because more cars is taken in the asking' ana ine materials nsea axe higher grade. Black Silk Stove Polish Make a brilliant, alitor noUah that i not tnboC or dost oS.andtlwahiMlaata foor times as lone aa ordinary stove poliah. Used on sub pis afore and sold ' bjr hardware aad crocery dealers. AUsmssklsatnsl. Usttoajimi inaietese. roor parior Blow or roar n imncv. If m tmr dsstaria sathoriscd to rr(Wd sear . r . -- r iia Sua in liquid r asat-aa qosktr. Black Silk Stove Poliafc Work FASHION SHOP Stunning Spring Blouse Sale! We Repair Typewriters, Adding Machines, Bicycles, Locks and Umbrellas. We make Keys of all kinds. DUNING'S 43 North 8th St. 3 i
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