Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 188, 21 July 1915 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1915

PAGE FIVE

Personals Musicals Card Parties

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For the pleasure of Mrs. Randolph Rice of Louisville, Kentucky, and Mrs. Susan Yeager of Stanford, Kentucky, who are gueuts at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Rice, and also for Mrs. Harry Ayers of Modesto, California, who is spending the summer in this city, Mrs. Harry Land gave a beautiful auction bridge party and luncheon this morning at her pretty home on orin r meenm sireei. un account, oi the coolness of the day the guests enjoyed the game indoors instead of on the porch, as had been the original fotA.il ii , x mi. . luiemioR oi me nosiess. i no ruuuis were attractive with great clusters of gladioles, nasturtiums and pretty pink snapdragons. : Many pretty gowns vcie in evuieuce. raruis were given Luncheon was" served at 1 o'clock at me cara taoies, wmcn were appointed with nasturtiums, ferns and Knanrira ?nn. Mrs. Land's guests were Mesdames Randolph Rice of Louisville, Kenfnrnln VT T. Mnrawli TUMI T"U1 T r t . - .u.,m. vX, IT X , X JU' XXX. XI. . 1Tn.l Itnn A T T T . . ' ' - - - - . . - .. u . , U 1 u 1 1 tl X. Clements, John M. Lontz. George Sei- " w v J CDOIO Miss Boston is a eriieat at thA h . ------ ... . " v. ica-ci-jr uix X jtx o L Main street. Miss Marie Cole of Wnnnknnprra Dhio, is a guest at the home of Mr. ij nno. riuun 1 ounguesn, aoutn fifteenth street. Misses Katherine and rtnvkva ripe or continental, Ohio, who have etn viKiung at tne home of Mrs. D. Alexander, have returned to their lonie. Misses Carolyn Hutton and Dorothv 11 I Ira n Inc. U M - - -- w utadh 1.1 waai a. xi caenaea trip to New York. Philadelphia, Joston, Detroit and other points. Carly in the summer the girls went to eorge school, where they attended ho commencement exercises and a eunion oi inn class or wlileh they oth were meni!)-?: vMrs. Howard l au of the Cornell narrmpnts itf i-ict MrUnin ttiunm. i m i f i wn - ii n'lii ii0i i- a injuier, Airs. iJunneii, ror a few days. Mr. William Holloneter of North r. t rfiflt li'r.n , AA T . 1 . - 1 . . .... jwinuay ior visit witii relatives. Mr. George Phibbs of Muncie. is a until at Tin nnme nf ivt r o nH at A number of relatives and friends f nP.tr MIHfllohnrA fnymr. 1 II- . . f - -7 uiutu iu UIC I1U1IIH Ul .PTiTflrvi o I h nrr.i,. 1 i surprise on Mrs. Brooks. Dinner no a I, uuuu un I lie BVVn. Alter inner musical numbers, including cion Rflfr t inna hV Urn Tnln Ilonrkino in inn ill i i i ii iihiw lit iiica t'o t-ti n i-i o . or were given. Those whn PtiinvoH e arrair Avere Messrs. and Mesdames ood Alexander. A. A. Townsend, Col. lexander. Clyde Thomas, M. Norris, ra Garretson, Jesse Addleman, Sam lexander, Isaac Brooks, O. A. Bond, harles Townsend. George Newbern, 'lit Tl'To A Ivn t 1 ,1 , . Ht:l..ti . .j Aaaieman, josepn Aiexanaer, Mlllnm T .1 l.i' Ali... T nm ., II'- I iiiiaxii uarvci , uuici iMt1 line, vvai- -. T 1 . TU T' ... 1- I - 11TJ11 n 1 . - ' -' i. . . 1 , ..111 1.1 1 uuAH, oddington; Mesdames W. H. MungavElvina Alexander, Lettie Jordan; isses Elizabeth Norris, Donna Gartson. Garnet Addleman, Opal Piatt, argaret Addleman, Inez Townsend, va Hall, Audrey Alexander, Alice cClure, Lois Alexander, Esther Mclure, Donna Coddington, Lillian raig. Verna Baker, Blanche Alexanx, . ' t " 1 i v i ' i v , ..iii i.i. xii jjr n, ra Coddington, Helen Frist; Messrs. erman Alexander, Ora Townsend, larence Alexander, Ernest, Norris, Ibert Garrettson, Charles Alexander, in i n 'i i i ..l.nii. -r n . . i i I - i I vie. Delmar Brooks, Veiiing RIarson, in AiPxanner, riarry .ifiiure, lowI Alexander, AV'alter Isaac Brooks, iscoe Fowble, Wayne Brooks, Wil1m McClnre, Lowell Brooks, Oran exander and Michael Brooks. Mr. Alvin Fox. son of Mr. and Mrs. io is in San Francisco with a party Chicago friends, is registered at the diana Pavilion at the Panama-Pacific position, ihis is tne pavilion wnicn i club of the Federated Woman's, ubs of San Francisco wants to pur-j ase after the exposition closes. Oth-j wpll-knnwn riprsons registered at ' e pavilion are Miss Flora Broaddus idge City. Miss Eleanor Seidel has returned - n f ,, KUnn.in Aiii-c ni H ill fi a. I ixxrn xi xx , iidii n uix iiitaii , .. . ..... . A - I- . ... ... IS vn xuuxuxixaurp t u usxixugiuu t Haha I..- .x3'i At'Uiv pharmircr ; cial functions were given ior miss inei numis uci usu. Miss Gladys Ebenhack of Cold Wa- . Michican. is the guest of Mr. and . .. 3 . - 1 1 .-. W . 5t, X. V C I ill 'I llUMin iiiyv i Tro i.'a nn k pp nr ann rni nrpn nr lumbus, Ohio, are the guests of Mr. d Mrs. Harry Keelor of South ghteenth street. Mr. Keelor who I1L Lilt" Ct t VHU 1171- It HO 1 V 11V VX Columbus. ire v i unninsnn win n v' n : t . . I... IjIt ,' .ini'rio' i-it-i t Vi ,-i vn at her home on South Sixteenth ne annual jjicuh. xx .-ijixxx& . , Ml V- - X 1 J . . , ove sewing circle v. in ue ut? Aug3. at the home or Mr. ana Mrs. -v v. vrt tlrla on1 t h .oi r fam. ire Thrtmnfl Rrr.tt and daughter. as Ruth Scott, came today from Cin- . 5 13 J I .iU Hft f Pfl nan tur a ioil tiii Am. civ ac Douean at their home in Spring ive. tiirnic. nartv and dance will be en Friday evening at Glen Miller k by the Eastern Star, for the

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1 Social Calendar Mrs. Edgar Brown hostess for meeting of auction-bridge club at home of her mother, 3Irs. A. W. Roach. Woman's Relief Corps meets in post room at court house. Card party at 8 o'clock in the Eagles' hall. Miss Bertha Waltermann entertains informally with an evening party for Miss Katherine Mayer. Annual picnic of Coterie club at Glen Miller park. Sewing Circle of St. John's Lutheran church meets. Psi Iota Xi sorority meeting at home of Miss Emerald Hasecoster. Woman's Aid society of Trinity Lutheran church meets with Mrs. Menke. Miss Ada Ellabee entertains Queen Esther society of Grace M. E. church. members of the order and their families. Dancing will begin at 8 o'clock and supper will be served at 6:30 o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. William Jones, Miss Lucile Jones, Mr. Forrest Jones, Master Malvin Jones and Mrs. Mary Jones motored to Anderson and visited kinspeople. The tenth annual reunion of the Gardner-Wachtle families was held at the Elmer Gardner home, near Eaton, July 18. Those present with their families were: William Spitler, Daniel Spitler, Vernon ': Stiver, Charles Gardner, Elmer Gardner, Arthur Wachtle, Lee Summers, Calvin Summers and Roy Eubank, John Spitler, Sr., Warren Burnheisle, Edgar Siders, Mrs. Sarah Wachtle. and Miss Ruth Hardner. The guests thoroughly enjoyed the delicious dinner and social hour which followed. A successful ice cream social was given last evening at the home of Mrs. Dean on North Fourteenth street, by tne ladies of the First Baptist church. Ice cream and cake were served. A social was held last evening on the lawn at the North Fourteenth street mission for all members of the Sunday school and their friends. Ice cream and cake were served throughout the evening. Misses Mae Chambers of Chicago, and Jeannette Sullivan have gone to Middletown, Ohio, for a visit with Mrs. Joseph Flinn. Several social functions are to be given in their honor. Mr. Everard Knollenberg entertained members of his Sunday school class of ths First English Lutheran church last evening at his home on South B street, in honor of Misses Gladys Ebenhack of Cold Water, Michigan, and Katherine Ensminger of Kansas City. Mrs. Knollenberg assisted in entertaining. Late summer blossoms were used in decorating the rooms. .The evening was spent socially and with music and games. A dainty luncheon was served. The guests were: Misses Mary Bayer, Alice Vogelsong, Helen Hershey, Ruth Hieger, Marie Cole of Wapokonetta, Ohio, Marie Kauffman, Eunice Wettig. Miriam Krone, Virginia Thomas, Alice Knollenberg, Gladys Ebenhack, Katheiine Ensminger, Florence Bartel and Helen Eggemeyer. The Aid society of the North A street Friends' church met yesterday afternoon at the meeting house. Several matters of importance to the membership were considered at this time. The visit of Mrs. Randolph Rice of Louisville, Ky., and Mrs. Susan Yeager, of Stanford. Ky., who are guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Rice in the Pelham, is causing a continuous round of social functions and among the pleasant affairs scheduled for the week is an informal party to be given Saturday afternoon by Mrs. Rice at her attractive apartments. Several other affairs are to be given for these charming southern visitors during their stay in this city. Miss Gladys Staples is the guest of her sister, Miss Beulah Staples of Rushville. Miss Pauline Corey of Dayton, Ohio, is the guest cf friends in this city for a few days. Several members of the New Castle Psi Iota Xi sorority will come this evening to attend the charity ball to be given 1J.' the local chapter in the Pavilion at Beallview. A penny supper will be given Friday evening at the First Christian church by the members of the East End Aid society from 5:30 until 7 o'clock. The public is invited to attend. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Connerton gave a prettily appointed dinner at their home on South Ninth street, Sunday evening in honor of Miss Katherine McKone of Minneapolis. Flowers and ferns appointed the table. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Craig, of Lorraite, Ohio, are the guests of friends in this city. Mr. Craig is city editor of the Times-Herald at Lorraine. , He has many friends here as he was formerly connected with a local newspaper. Friday afternoon a social will be given at the home of Mrs. Ora Fisher, 424 West Main street, by the members of the aid society of the Reid Memorial Presbyterian church. All ladies of the congregation are invited to be present. , A pleasant meeting of the Spring GrcAe Sewing circle was held Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Mary Foulke in Spring Grove, her daugh-

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I Teas Dances ters, Misses Elizabeth and Harriet Foulke assiEting in the entertaining. Clusters of garden flowers appointed the rooms. The afternoon "was spent socially and with needlework. Mrs. Caroline Stephens-Lotz and daughter, Miss Jessie Lotz, of Los Angeles, California, were the guests of honor. Several guests in addition to the members were invited in to meet the visitors. They were: Mrs. W. Dulin and daughter. Miss Jessie, Mrs. Abijah Pyle, Miss Carolyn Salter, Miss Rose Dunn, Mrs.. Augusta Scott and Miss Susan Shaw. At a late hour dainty refreshments were served. The members: Mesdames L. J. Woodard, Isaac Dougan, W. V. Reid, Alexander Reid, H. T. Hoover, Roy Kirkman, Charles Snedeker, John Schutte, Harry Englebert, Abner Bulla, William Wood, F. S. Dodd, J. E Weller, George Dilks, Sr., Samuel Mather, Misses Irene and Naomi Mather, Sarah and Mary Evans and Elizabeth and Harriet Foulke. On account of a death the Tuesday Euchre club did not meet yesterday afternoon with Mrs. Richard Cutter. The meeting will be held Thursday afternoon at the ocuntry home of Mrs. Cutter. Members of a card club will be entertained this evening by Mr. and Mrs. Otto Kemper at their home on South Eighth street. The Lee B. Nusbau a family is expected home Friday from a motor trip through the east. They have been gene about a fortnight. Mrs. Edgar Brown will entertain members of a bridge club Thursday afternoon at the home of her mother, Mrs. A. W. Roach, South Twenty-first street. A social will be given this evening at the Earlham Heights Presbyterian church and the public is cordially Invited to attend. Even the weather is doing its best today ti assist the members of the Psi Iota Xi sorority with the large charity ball to be given this evening in the Beallview Park pavilion in order to raise funds to defray the college expenses of same worthy girl. The various committees have been working hard this week and no doubt the function will be one of the charming affairs of the mid-summer season. The weather is ideal for dancing which will add materially to the party. The dancing will begin at 8 o'clock. The Dixon Saxophone trio, one of the best organizations of its kind in this city, will play the order of dances. The trio is made up of young men who know how to play all the latest dance hits. Geveral out-of-town guests have signified their intention of attending and a number of Richmond guests will augment the party in addition to the sorority members and their gentlemen friends. Members of the Queen Esther Society of the Grace M. E. church will be the guests of Miss Ada Ellabee, Thursday evening at her home, 517 North Twenty-first street. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bennett, Mr. and Mrs. James Owens and Miss Harriet Davis, motored to Rushville and visited with friends. A Young People's auxilinry to the Mary F. Thomas W. C. T. U. was organized last evening at. 7:3d o'clock at the Y. M. C. A. building. It was decided to hold a social meeting in the near future at which time officers will be announced. The meeting was largely attended. Mrs. Jessie Fisher and Mrs. H. A. Smith have returned to their home in Logansport after a week's visit with Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Fisher of near Whitewater. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Hayes have gone to Buckeye Lake. Ohio, where they are being entertained by Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Davis for a few days. As a courtesy to Miss Katherine McKone of Minneapolis, who is the guest of Miss Laura Schatz, Mrs. Frank McDonnell gave a bridge party this afternoon at- her home on North D street. The rooms were arranged with flowers and ferns. The guests included members of a card club with four extra guests. The. game was played at four tables. Favors went to those making the highest scores. The members of the club are Misses Blanch Luken. Alice Harrington, Anna Harrington, Ernestine Lawrence, Katherine Conroy, Marcella Luken. Blanch Griffin, Mesdames Arnold Klein, Alexander Gordon, T. C. Harrington, Edna Jay and Frank McDonnell. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Hayes gave a prettily appointed dinner at the Hotel Arlington in honor of Misses Marie and Cecilia Smith of Vincennes, Indiana. Gladiolas and ferns were used in appointing the table. Covers were laid for Misses Loreta Korves, Cecilia and Marie Smith of Vincennes, Mrs. James Oates and Mr. and Mrs. Hayes. Mesdames Walter Ratliff, Preston Bishop, Inez Reid. Alta Macke and son Marshall, of Chicago, went to Dayton today for a visit with friends and relatives. Mrs. Walter Ratliff had as her guests yesterday, Mrs. Laura Bates and daughters, Misses Cornelia and Virginia, of Liberty. The sixth annual reunion of the Kamp-Thomas families, will be held August 8 at Beallview park. One hundred members live without the city and one hundred members are residents of this city. It is estimated that fifty per cent of the out-of-town members will attend. Last year one hnudred and twenty-five persons were present. The committee is endeavoring to make the attendance larger this year than ever before. Mr. Everett Macy, agricultural agent of Independence, Kan., is the guest of his parents, at their home on the National road, west.

WOMEN TAKE LEADING PART IN CONVENTION Members of G. A. R. Auxiliary Societies Will Attend Encampment Scheduled for Capital in September.

W. R. C. IS STRONG Organization Spends $4,000, 000 for Relief Work Among Veterans Since Its Inception After War. WASHINGTON, July 21. Women will take a prominent part in the forty-ninth annual encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic, which will be held in Washington, September 27 to October 2. Four organizations of women allied with the Grand Army of the Republic will participate in the encampment. These are the Woman's Relief Corps,'! the auxiliary to the Sons of Veterans, the Ladies of the G. A. R. and the Daughters of Veterans. Many thousands of members of the four organizations will be in Washington during the encampment and the grand review, which is to reproduce, as far as possible, the review of Union troops in Washington by President Johnson and General Grant fifty years ago at the close of the Civil war. Of the organizations of women connected with the Grand Army the largest and most important is the Woman's Relief Corps. Forms Important Part. The Woman's Relief Corps is auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic, and its only auxiliary. The Ladies of the G. A. R. and the Daughters of Veterans are independent bodies, auxiliary to no organization. The Woman's Relief Corps is the largest organization of women in the world under one eligibility clause, and one motto. It now numbers 167,000, with department organization in 41 states, divided among 2,601 corps, as local organizations are known. Besides these there are 37 detached corps, which thrive in ten southern and two western states, where there are no department organizations. The Woman's Relief Corps is the greatest philanthropic, charitable and patriotic organization of women in the world. It was organized at Denver, Colo., in 18S3, in response to the call of the veterans for the organization of women that would be auxiliary to them and .which would meet with them at national encampments, and assist them in the tremendous work Which was becoming burdensome to the Grand Army, that of helping to care for the aged veterans and their dependent widows and children. Pensions were very small at that time, and the hardships of war were beginning to tell on the veterans who suffered from wounds and other disabilities incurred in the service of the country. At the encampment in Denver, the Women's Relief Corps, comprised of "loyal women who never gave aid or comfort to the enemies of the Union," was organized and accepted by the Grand Army, which had called it into existence, and gave it the motto of the veteran body, "Fraternity, Charity and Loyalty," with the right to wear a badge with the medallion center of the G. A. R. badge. Since its organization the Women's Relief Corps has expended in charitable and relief work for veterans nearly $4,000,000. It built and equipped an army nurses' home in Ohio, where army nurses of the Civil war could be cared for. It has been instrumental in founding state homes in all the northern states where veterans and their wives may go together and spend their declining years in comfort.

Is Used by Probably 65

of the motorists in the Middle West. This estimate is based on the sale last year in the Middle West alone of nearly 7,000,000 gallons. Polarine is produced by special processes in the largest oil refinery in the world, where every facility known to make for high quality in a lubricant is available.

STANDARD OIL COMPANY (INDIANA) Chicago, U. S. A. Uee Red Crown Gasoline for Greatest Mileage per Gallon (3SS)

BEHIND THE TRENCHES IN FRANCE

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WOMAN INVADES SHELL AREA

BY LA RACONTEUSE. ; PARIS, July 21. I have just visited part of the front on the left wing of the long French line, nearly 300 miles of trenches, that run all the way from Flanders to the Swiss frontier. French officers of the general staff continually watched over me as if I were a royal princes rather than an ordinary American woman- journalist. I left Paris by train, going north until were were about fifteen miles from the front at a small station where one of the powerful automobiles of the general staff awaited me and seated behind two French officers, a lieutenant colonel and a captain, I was whisked towards the front. About an hour after sunrise we reached a small village barely one kilometer from the firing line. It had been raining the day before and now a heavy fog covered everything. If at first we saw nothing, we heard everything so much more distinctly. In the fog we could hear the deep growling of the German heavy guns. Now and then a shell from a French "Seventy-five" whizzed through the air above emitting a sharp high sound which made me think of Caruso at his best. Very soon we also heard the voices of the mitrailleuses grinding out their endless stream of projectiles. Now and then a heavy explosion of an aerial torpedo which filled the air with a sweet but disagreeable smell, which tickled your throat and made you cough, and through all these confused noises came the barking of the German "minenwerfers," or bombthrowers, squatty apparatus which placed in the bottom of a trench throw bombs into the trenches of the enemy opposite. I saw several of these which had been captured by the French. As we waded through the muddy fields, a shell fell into a school which had been made into a tea room for French soldiers, who have taken a strong liKing to this English beverage. The shell killed two men and wounded five. The ground we had to cover until we reached the sheltering earthen walls of the trenches was full of deep CARLOS, IND. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ballinger, a girl; to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bartlett, a boy. Mrs. Lucy Hutchins is very sick. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Morrison and daughter sepnt Sunday in Winchester. Miss Ruby Oler spent last week with her sister, Mrs. Hershell Brown, near Fountain City. A number of persons from here attended the silver medal contest at Union chapel Sunday afternoon. Miss Iona Wright of Bloomingsport won the medal. Mrs. Louisa Morrison and son and daughter are visiting relatives in Richmond. Mrs. Roe Pugh and children of Bradford visited her sister, Mrs. John Beard, last week. Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Morrison entertained relatives from Greensfork Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Ballinger spent Sunday with their son, Charles, and family. Mrs. Lizzie Adamson of near Winchester is visiting John and Earl Adamson. PILES! PILES! PILES! WILLIAMS INDIAN PILE OINTMENT Will cure Blind, Blpedinsr and Itching1 Pl'es. It absorbs the tumors, allays itchinjr a.t once, acta as a poultice, gives instant relief. For sale by all druggists, mail 50c and $1.00, '41? I MMS MFG. CO,, Props., Cleveland, Ohfr It maintains the correct lu bricating body at any motor speedor temperature, prolonging the life and increasing the power of every standard make and type of motor car, motor truck and motor boat now in use. Use it in your motor and learn the difference between merely "oil" and Polarine. il'l hi

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ruts, made by the wheels of the heavy automobiles that during the night supply the firing line with fresh supplies of ammunition, trampled down by the feet of the soldiers carrying . food, water and lumber, of stretcher bearera who collect the dead bodies and of the infantry men going back and forth between the firing line and the vil lages where they spend their intervals of rest. The ploughed fields were almost im- ! passable and so deep was the mud j that I went down many times to the knees and inwardly thanked the handsome young lieutenant of cavalry who had kindly lent me a pair of high boots somewhat too big for me in spite of a filling of cotton in the toes. Everywhere I saw holes in the ground from exploding shells. Some of them, made by the "marmites," or "Jack Johnsons" as the English soldiers call them, were more than six feet deep and many feet in circumference. Time and again we had to make a "detour" because the way straight ahead vs barred by barbed wire. The posts .had been upset and the wire cut, rolling itself into a maze of wires and thorns. Madam: Feel FitLive!! Got Health. And that clear skin and freshness that Dame Nature inj tended as yours will follow. Rid your system of the constipation poisons that are the real cauae of sallow complexion, pimples, coaXed tongue, bad breath, that heaTy, depressed feeling, indigestion, lassitude, etc. Let Sentanel laxatives Guard Your Health Keally wonderful mtlo performers. RiryTl oleaa out and clear up your system; tone v the blood, make you feel preat. Sentanol Laxatlres contain no calomel, no habit-foxining drugs. Just a universally recoenlied all-Tttgetable compound put up In eaay-to-taite tablet form, sucar-cocted. If you want to know the Itxcradxinia of Sentanel laUtaOras, bare your famUy physician write us for ttm formula. Let aim tell yon lust what he thicks of thorn. That's how much we think or Sentanel Laxatives. A trial will .giro yaa as pood an ophxlen. Start to-rJjrbt. Bare your Craggiat semi yon a box. 10 doses 10c. 1 Trial package mailed free if yon mention tfats 'advertisement when you write. The Santanel Remedies Co. (Ice.), 523 Union Central Bldg., Cincirr-.nt'. O.

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Picture to yourself this kitchen in operation the Ruud Automatic Gas Water Heater in the basement without any attention save the turn '

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see them in operation at our showroom or a postal will bring you complete information by return mail.

Richmond Light, . f '-ffifiTTi iTfifl'TT W'

If Noses CotiM Kick Many gold plated and gold filled mountings would be taken off the market. For ver 25 Years I have urged the use of solid gold mountings as the only safe and sane way to avoid trouble. And if you also want the best in lenses buy Tories, Toric Kryptoks and Ultex. Yours for the best,

(Dl 10 N. Ninth St

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YOUR GROCER WILL REDEEM YOUR COUPON FOR KIRK-S SOAP AT ANY TIME. i " FEEL FINE NOW" SAYS G. S. PAYNE Young Farmer's Grateful Story; Tanlac Restored Him. "Before I . leave for Reading. 111., where I am going to visit my aunt." said Grover S. Payne, who formerly worked for Bufus Raper, dairyman, on Liberty pike. "I want to tell you bow grateful I am for the good your Tanlac has done me." On entering Thistlethwaite's Drug Store, Sixth and Main streets, he inquired at once for the Tanlac Man, and said: "I want to be sure I can obtain Tanlac here in case its not for sale where I'm going. I was all run down, possibly from overwork on the farm," he continued. "My Fleep did not bring the required rest and upon arising I would sneeze severely. Was also troubled with headache, droppings in the throat and discharges from the nose. "I have not yet finished my first bottle, but am feeling like new. Have not had those sneezing spells for some time: I sleep soundly and feel rested in the morning. My appetite is excellent and I am feeling ambitious again. I intend to use Tanlac until I am entirely recovered." Tanlac, the "Master Medicine." it now being introduced at Thistle thwaite's Durg Store, Sixth and Mair streets. Adv. Palladium Want Ads. Pay.

of a faucet, supplying you with ujw limited, inexpensive, pure hot water. jHow convenient for cleaning and scrubbing and time-saving to start,, your various cooking operations. Think of the modern Gas Range f. especially equipped for any mode of . cooking heat easily regulated to a "just right" temperature no dirt

no ashes no excessive labor, and all this comfort and convenience at a low cost for gas. The best demonstration of the merits of these "comfort makers" is to

Heat and Power Co. 3! . . x.-..-;, ....... V TT I, Oplomeirisi Phone 2765.