Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 236, 15 September 1915 — Page 10

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 15, 1915'

JUST ONE DAY UNTIL CIRCUS REACHES CITY Kids Must Rise Early Thursday Morning to See Flying Squadron Unload Mammoth Cook Tent.

CIRCUS DAY AT A GLANCE

- Show Lot Old clrcuB grounda. Arrival In three sections Thursday morning over the G. R. & I. railroad. First section expected before daylight. Parade Leaves show grounds at 10 a. m., Thursday and will pass through the principal down-town streets. Tickets On sale Thursday for. both performances by a special circus representative at Leo H. Fine's drug store. Performances At 2 and 8 p. m. Doors open an hour earlier. Departure Soon after midnight for Piqua, O. Show grounds illuminated at night by special plant carried with circus.

Novelty will be the keynote of Thursday's Carl Hagenbeck-Wallace circus, the best elements of the dear old-time circus, with the newest things in the way of European thrills. Monotony and repetition have been eliminated, it is said. Three trains of double length cars, twice the size of the ordinary car. are used to transport the circus. The first section, known in the parlance of the circus as the "flying squadron," is scheduled to leave Portland. Ind., where the show plays today, soon after midnight. The dining tents which it conveys will inaugurate the encampment at the grounds, and food will await the hungry hundreds when they reach the show grounds. Parade Moves on Time. The circus parade will make its f tart from the show grounds at 10 o'clock Thursday morning, or as near that hour as conditions will permit. The pageant stretches three miles in length, and its beauty, promise . is given, will surpass the expectations of the young and old. A score of camels will tread the route, and of zebras, sacred cattle, yaks and other "led" animals there will be legion. The allegorical and tableau floats

and other aDDurtenances with the

pageant are resplendent with gold-leaf and all represent the best efforts of distinguished designers, sculptors and decorators. Eight bands and two steam calliopes will give ceaseless harmony, and the nonsense of the clowns will pervade the long line.

The circus performance will begin

promptly at 2 o'clock in the afternoon and at S o'clock at night, and the Hagenbeck-Wallace management an

nounces that their mammoth new arena tent is weatherproof. It is 450

feet in length and is declared to be

in Aladdin-like canvas palace. MRS. VANDERBECK CHAMPION IN GOLF

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LOCAL PASTOHS LEAD SESSIONS OF PRESBYTERY

CAMBRIDGE CITY. Ind.. Sept. 15.

With an adoption pt new rules which t

changed the entire method of conducting Its affairs, the Whitewater Presbytery closed its annual fall meeting here last night. The laws pro

vide for . new forms of electing committees and for new committees. An adjourned meeting was called for Oct.

27 at Connersville, when the Rev. William D. Lewis, acting pastor of the German church there, will be Installed as pastor. -, ; The Presbytery extended a vote ' of thanks to the people-of the city for the splendid entertainment given ' in their homes. . . . . ..... : Richmond ministers ' and laymen were appointed to the following positions on committees: Publication and Sunday school work, Rev. J. J. Rae, chairman; evangelism, Rev. E. E. Davis, chairman; ministerial relief, A. A. Mumbower; foreign missions, A.

L. Smith; examining board of church history, Rev. J. J. Rae. These committees will serve for three years. T. M. Campbell of Aurora, was elected clerk for three years. Rev. John Glenn was released to the Presbytery of Cincinnati, and Rev. A. K. Staiger was received from the Presbytery of Cincinnati. . Elders from Richmond churches who attended the sessions were Dr. C. S. Bond. H. S. Weed, J. Howes.

VON BERNHARDI SENT TO FRONT

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BALL

President Wilson opened a game of amateur baseball ther other day, and many members of his cabinet were there to see him pitch the ball into the diamond. The game was arranged between employes of the Washington office of the Southern Railway company and the St. Theresa church team, to raise funds for entertaining the G. A. R. veterans during the encampment here at the end of the month.

County Deaths

MRS. ELIZA MONGER. CENTERVILLE Mrs. Eliza Monger, 81, died Tuesday night late after a long illness which became critical through the contraction of pneumonia two weeks ago. Services will be at the Friends' church at 2:30 o'clock Friday afternoon, conducted by the Rev. Probst. Interment will be In Crown Hill. Mrs. Monger is survived by eight children: John, Washington; Mrs. Effie Harvey, Centerville; Theodore, Cambridge City; Douglas and Naomi, Centerville; Earl, Forrest and Mrs. Ella Harris, Richmond, and one sister, Mrs. Mary Roll of Hanover, O.

LUTHERAN DISTRICT TO MEET AT ANNA

tion of conditions and practices at the county jail. Members of the committee are Rev. J. J. Rae, Firs': Presbyterian church; Rev. E. G. Howard, First English Lutheran, and Rev. Milo Hlnckle, East Main Street Friends.

True Secret of Keeping Youthful Looking

The annual session of the western district of the Lutheran Synod of Ohio and other states will be held at Anna, O., beginning September 12. St. John's church is affiliated with this body. The Rev. A. J. Feeger will read a doctrinal paper on the "Highpriestly 'Office of Christ."

COMMITTEE MEETS

The new evangelistic committee of the Ministerial association will meet Friday morning for organization and will Immediately take up an investiga-

' (Tha Beauty Seeker.) Tit real secret of keeping young-look tag and beautiful," aays a well-known hyglenist. "is to keep the liver and bowels normally active. Without these requisites, poisonous waste products remain in the system, polluting the blood and lodging in various organs, Urauea, joints. One becomes flabby, obese, nervOU8, mentally sluggish, dull-eyed, wrinkled and sallow of face. "But to get liver and bowels working as they ought, without producing evil after-effects, has been the problem. Fortunately, there is a prescription of unquestioned merit, which may now be had In convenient tablet form. Its value is due largely to an lngrediOt derived front the humble May apple, or its root, which) has been called 'vegetable calomel' because of its effectiveness though of course It is not to be classed with the real calomel of mercurial origin. Therci Is no habit-forming constituent in 'sentanel' . tablets that's the name and their use la not followed by weakness or exhaustion. On the contrary, these harmless vegetable tablets tend to impart tone and elasticity to the relaxed intestinal wall. . Sentanel tablets, which may be procured from any druggist a diina.s) worth will do will prove a revelation anv constipated, liver-troubled porso7

Mr. and Mrs. Cal Howell entertained Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Hunt of Baltimore and Mrs. and Mrs. Sam Hunt of Ithaca Sunday. School will begin here next Monday. The opening was postponed on account of the non-arrival of text books. Mr. Eisle of Arcanum has been, engaged to teach the Seventh, Eighth and Ninth grades, Miss Flannigan having accept

ed a position at Oxford.

A cent dated 1794 brought the remarkable sum of $245 at a recent sale of rare coins. That is much better than could have been done at compound interest with anything like the usual rate.

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EIMIEERS ATTECD NATIONAL l'EETIKG

GIN. FA I VON eXNt-IAHDI General F. A. J. von Bernhardi, author 'of "Cavalry," "Germany and the Next War" and other books, and generally accepted in England and the United States as Germany's military prophet, has been granted permission from the Kaiser to engage in active duty at the fighting front, and has already left for the. trenches..

THEATRE Main & Ninth.

LYRIC

TONIGHT

Everybody Should See This Big Feature. ADMISSION 10 CENTS

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G E N N

E A T R E

Mrs. C. H. Vanderbeck of the Philadelphia Cricket club, whose victory over Mrs. A. W. Gavin of Shirley Park, England, the British woman champion, won her the woman's national golf championship in the tournament on

the links of the Onwentsia Golf club I

at Lake Forest, 111.

START NEW PAPER

CENTERVILLE, Ind., Sept. 15. Robert Peelle has moved the printing press, formerly owned by the Progressive publication at New Castle, to this place preparatory to beginning publication of thi Old Trails Traveler, a veekly newspaper. Mr. Peelle will probably issue the first edition in two .weeks.

CARLOS, IND.

John Beard and family motored to New Castle Sunday and were guesti of Thomas Lee and family. A. O. Hardwick underwent an operation at Reid hospital, Richmond, last week. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morrison accompanied Gus Weyl and family to Bradford, O., last week. Wash Edwards and wife and Will Edwards and family of Huntsville attended the funeral of Mrs. Cox Sunday.

Mr. I, a fisherman in Hawaii, has the shortest name in the world. He wins over Gen O of Mexico by a valid technicality, as headline writers can rttost.

REMARKABLE CASE of Mrs. HAM Declares Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Saved Her Life and Sanity.

Shamrock, Mo. "I feel it my duty to tell the public the condition of my

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J VMA lUVUIVlill A 11 OVA falling, inflammation and congestion, female weakness, pains in both sides, backaches and bearing down pains, was short of memory, nervous, impatient, passed sleepless nights, and had neither strength nor

anergy. There was always a fear and dread in my mind, I had cold, nervous, weak spells, hot flashes over my body. I had a place in my right side that was so sore that I could hardly bear the weight of my clothes. I tried medicines and doctors, but they did me little good, and I never expected to get out again. I got Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifier, and I certainly would have been in grave or in an asylum if your medicines had not saved me. But now I can work all day, sleep well at night, eat anything I want, have no hot flashes or weak, nervous spells. AH pains, aches, fears and dreads are gone, my house, children and husband are no longer neglected, as I am almost entirely free of the bad symptoms I had before taking your remedies, and all is pleasure and happiness in my home." Mrs. Josie Ham, R. F. D. lr Box 22, Shamrock, Missouri. If you want special advice writ lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co, (confidential) Iivnn-Mass-

E T T T H

ONE NIGHT. THURSDAY.SEPTEMBER 16. Opening of the Regular Theatrical Season. A. H. Woods Presents "KICK I ISJ " Comedy Drama in Four Acts by Willard Mack. PRICES 25c, 50c, 75c, $1.00 and $1.50. Seats Now On Sale at the Murray Theatre.

THE SKY DOME Main Street, Near Eleventh TONIGHT The Throbbing Living Inevitable Question WHO PAYS

8TH EPISODE "Today and Tomorrow"

In 3 Big Thrilling Reels ALSO ONE REEL COMEDY EACH DAY.

And Special Music by Weisbrod's Saxaphone Orchestra ADMISSION, oc

The members of the local association of the national association of Stationary Engineers that are attending the national convention at Columbus, are: Howard Gluys. city light plant; George Don son. Light, Heat

and Power plant; William Mutchner. T. H., I. & E. Traction Co.; Lee Davis, Starr Piano Co.; William Jeffry. American Seeding Machine Co.; G. W. Gentry, superintendent Cambridge City light plant; E. O. Craig, salesman of the Great Western Oil Co.

The cat. sheep and turkey are exceptions to the rule that animal species increase in size after domestication. An average wild sheep weighs 100 pounds more than his farmyard cousin.

PALACE

TODAY

Charlie Chaplin In a Whooping '2-Reel Comedy And the Kings of Laugh Makers WEBER AND FIELDS In the Scream "The Delicatessen Shop" 3 REELS ALL COMEDIES

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Jessie Lasky and David Belaaco Present The Supreme Modern Dramatic Hit, "THE VOMAH" An Extraordinary Plcturization in 5 Reel of the Great Dramatis Success A Wonderful Story Dramatically Pictured. A Powerful Cast . A Broadway Production

TONIGHT 2 Reel Comedy "MISTER PAGAN INIOne Reel Comedv "THE LIFE GUARD"

The Biggest and Best Circus Ever in This Section of the State will be at

Thursday Sepl. . 16

THE SEASON'S BIGGEST HOLIDAY Reserved and admission tickets on sale circus day at Leo H. Fine Drug Co., at same prices as charged on show grounds.

HAGENBECK-WALLACE

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Three Shows in One. Reliance Drama "The Turning Point" Cub Comedy "Making Matters Worse" Thanhouser Drama. "From the River's Depths"

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.WALLACE

WJ&S Of 1KJ1 wonders

FILLING 0 ARENAS! VS1

tO 1 1 IHIIIII9 I WWIOO UVJVIN WWW WW NOTHING ELSE LIKE IT IN ALL EARTH'S HISTORY!

Capital Invested, S3.000.OOOt

More scts,iMfv tfoatws, mors VhfBto (H&n ywj evtf m fc for; S rlnfl. 2 taif, sraat atrial fiBdnara: aj rtaf aiSa Maaafram trade and staal tJnM araaa (Wat wMk CAM. HAGENBECICS parfanalna liana, laoaanh. pa i. aaafa. Palar baara rayal Sanaa! Tipara a untawaMa baaata.

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100 ACTS, FEATURES and SENSATIONS-100

3 RAILROAD TRAINS 3 22 TENTS 22

60 RIDERS The Greatest In the World 60

400 PERFORMERS 400 8 BANDS 8

60 Aerlalists, the 6 Flying Wards

00 CLOWNS, ft WarM'l Fumy Maa M

eo ACROBATS 6u

Carl Hafanaaok't blaaMt im man

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HIGHEST CLASS CIRCUS IN THE WORLD!

DOORS TO CARL HAGENBECK'S ZOO OPEN AT 1 AND 7 P.M. PERFORMANCES BEGIN AT 2 AND 8 P. M. ONE 50c TICKET

A GLITTERING, BEWILDERING STREET PAGEANT. THREE MILES IN LENGTH, REPRESENTING AN EXPENDITURE OF $14)00.000 AT 10 O'CLOCK, A.M. CIRCUS DAY.

ADMITS TO EVERYTHING. CHILDREN UNDER 10 Years, 25c

F

REE LECTURE

ON

Christaiiii Science

BY

Wm. D. McCrackan, m. a. g. s. b. MURRAY THEATRE Thursday, September 16th, 8 R M. NO COLLECTION

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