Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 249, 30 September 1915 — Page 7

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY SEPT. SO, 1915

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' WILSON MAY WATCH INDIANA U. BATTLE . WITH EASTERN TEAM

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- INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 30.- Encourhv thA renort from Washington

that President Wilton will come to

Indianapolis on October 29 ana speaK before the State Teachers association, and remain over the following day for the football game between Indiana university and Washington and Lee, has caused the executive committee to set plans in motion for the proper entertainment of the president at the game. Senator Kern told the committee this week that he had every reason to believe that President Wilson would be here.

If President Wilson does attend tne game two presidential boxes will be built, one on the Indiana side and one on the Virginia side. During one half the president will occupy the Virginia side and the second half move over to side. These boxes will

necessarily be large to accommodate the presidential party. , ' President Wilson, who is a native of Virginia, was a football enthusiast

while president or rnnceton univer

Bity. .

Society

The Young Ladies Mission Circle of

the First Christian church, meets Sun- ' day afternoon at 3 o'clock with Miss Meta Richards,, 40 South Eighteenth i street.

The TIrzah Aid society of the . Ben Hur lodge met yesterday afternoon with Mrs. Clarence DeArmand of North Fourteenth street. Miss Rhea Beeler of Hamilton, Ohio, assisted the hostess in entertaining. Flowers ornamented the rooms. Refreshments were served. Next week Mrs. Anna Holcomb entertains the aid.

Announcement is made of the marriage of Mr. Charles W. Shutz and Miss Elizabeth Wissler, both residents of Cambridge City, on Wednesday aft

ernoon, at the parsonage of the First

English Lutheran church, Rev. E. G. Howard officiating. The groom is a son of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Shutz of Milton, Ind., and the bride a daughter of Benjamin F. Wissler. Mr. and Mrs. Shutz were formerly residents of

Richmond,-After a few days' wedding

trip they win be at home to their friends in Cambridge City, where Mr. Shutz is engaged in the hardware business.

The Lutheran Home Circle of the

i St. Paul's Lutheran church, will meet

Friday afternoon at the Chapel. Com-

Kfforts for the Oesterlin Orphans home

will be knotted. Members are asked to come prepared to sew and it is also -..desired that fruit donations be brought.

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f Misses Mary and Blanch Dillon, Gertrude Maley, Mary Barton and Marcella Luken went to Cincinnati yesterday to see "The Bird of Paradise."

Mrs. Douglas Graham, nee Miss

Dorothy Dill, of Chicago, arrived this afternoon for a few days visit with Mr. and Mrs. Howard Dill. Mrs. Graham will reside on the National Road, West, for the winter.

" The Junior choir of the First "ng!ish Lutheran church will meet " "riday afternoon at 4 o'clock at the i f church under the direction of Mrs. - ' Ben Bartel and Miss Alice Knollenberg. Favors went to Mesdames Andrew i Roser, Harry Metz and Edward Cooper yesterday afternoon at a meeting of the Sheepshead club at the home of Mrs. John Youngflesh. Mrs. Luke Bowing will be the next hostess.

Sixty-two ladies attended the thimble party given yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Charles Bell. A number of beautiful pieces of fancy work were shown. Among the most attractive was a handsome counterpane made by Mrs. Bell's mother sixty years ago.

WOMAN DEPUTY "TOTES" REVOLVER

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Rockefeller and Gorey Head New Combine

Jill

Details of the greatest steel transaction in years in the sale of the Cambria and Midvale plants, reveal the fact that the Rockefeller family, through Percy A. Rockefeller, son of William Rockefeller, has made a new departure by entering the steel field and that William Ellis Corey is to return to the industry to which he devoted himself from the age of sixteen and which he has only recently left. Mr. Corey is president of the new. company which proposes to enter the business of making war munitions. The present capitalization of the Cambria and Midvale plants is $9,750,000 and this is to be greatly increased. y

Her Husband's Widow

County Deaths

HIRAM L. J0NE8. MILTON Hiram I Jones, SO,' died at his "home here this morning. He is survived by a wife and one daughter. Nellie, two sisters, Mrs. Sarah A. Woodbnrn, " Claysville, Pa., and Mrs. Mary E. Davis, Richmond, and three brothers; F. M. Jones, Milton, Alex. Jones, Camden, Ind., and Schuman Jones, Los Angeles.? For a number of years Mr. Jones held a government position at Washington. Services will be held from the home at 2 o'clock Saturday, conducted by the Rev. F. C McCormick, pastor of the Christian church. , The Masonic lodge will conduct its ritual at the grave. Interment will be in the. West Side cemetery. ARM IS FRAGTUED 8Y BACK FIRE FROM CRANK OF AUTOMOBILE

ARBA. Ind., Sept. 30. Back-fire from the Ford which he was cranking Friday evening at a gravel pit, north

of Chester, where he had been work

ing, resulted in a fracture of an arm

above the wrist for Mirey Burt.

Mr. and Mrs. will Deflbaugh and

daughters, Eva and Ruth, were in Rich

mond Saturday. Gaynelle Thomas spent Sunday with

her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will Smock. John I. Thomas of Lynn, was here

Monday.'

Earl Wiggs and Ray Ketring spent

Monday in Richmond.

Miles and Donald Elliott went to

Chester Saturday. Mrs. Anna Burkett called on Mrs. Gaynelle Thomas Monday afternoon. A large number of citizens from

Gun-toting sheriffs of the wild and

wooly west have a rival in Miss Frances Seitz, truant officer of Patcboqua. L. I., who has just been appointed deputy sheriff of Suffolk couni.ty. Miss Seitz is a crack revolver shot and she carries her gun with her.

BARBER DODGES CONSTABLE

.... NOBLESVILLE, Ind., Sept. 30 Constable Dick found George Waddell, an Arcadia barber, carrying four quarts of whisky in a basket and arrested him. The barber asked the constable jto wait with him at the barbershop Juntil $300 .bond could be provided. 5vhile Dick was sitting in the barbershop, his daughter, passing by, saw him and called him outside. Waddell took the opportunity to dash out a hack door and has not been seen since.

"Why didn't you tell me this be fore?" asked the baronet angrily.

"I didn't know that this was the

woman you were after. Besides, I

wanted to find out who this Leslie Varney was the coincidence in the

names interested me" "Oh, did it?" snapped Sir Ralph.

"Well, I'll thank you to leave my cous

in's wife alone. I dare say Steele paid her some attention on the boat, and that has evidently made Mrs. Melas jealous. What we are interested in is why she should say he belonged to her." "For much the same reason that she's in love with him," suggested Erdsley. Sir Ralph caressed his. long mustache. "Well, if she's as keen as that, there doesn't seem to be much chance for poor old' R. G. Still, I think I'll have another shot." "Let's get off to London at once," urged the other man, his face wrinkling with irritation and impatience. "We must take our chance of a warrant being out. They would have warned us from the office if things had been as bad as that." Three hours- later the enterprising financiers were seated in a secondclass compartment on their way to London by way of Dieppe. As the train neared London Erdsley rudely jerked at his friend's newspaper and asked abruptly: "Don't you think it funny that your cousin's wife and that kid Steele got mixed up with at Hastings should both be called Leslie?" The baronet did not trouble to raise his eyes from his paper, which he continued to hold tightly in both hands. "Nothing very funny in the coincidence. It would be much funnier, not to say idiotic, to suppose that Oswald's wife and the Hastings nurse girl were the same person, if that's the idea you have got into your head." Thus rebuked Erdsley relapsed into silence. Sir Ralph Decides -To Have a New Try. At Victoria the confederates separated. Erdsley after reconnoitering the position by means of the telephone, screwed up his failing courage and proceeded to the city offices of the Aquidaban Syndicate. Sir Ralph telephoned at once to the Royal Grand. Mrs. Melas was not in, but he directed the clerk to make an appointment for him at three o'clock that afternoon. He sauntered slowly down the Haymarket and reached the hotel seven or

eight minutes to the hour. He met

Mrs. Melas coming out. She stopped, confused," at seeing him. Then she extended her hand.

"Don't think I was going to dodge

you," she said in a shaky voice. "I was just going out for a minute to send a telegram."

"HTni. T iiralb Q little wav?"

XIO-J X ..ALU ' W I .ILL. . he said in his tenderest manner. She nodded, and as she seemed un

certain in which way to go he deftly

steered her through the Admiralty Arch into the Mall.

"It's impossible to talk amid that crash and roar," he remarked with a backward glance toward Trafalgar

Square. "What do you want to talk to me about?" she asked peevishly. She lifted her veil and he could see, for all the scientific measures she had taken to efface them, the marks of tears. "You know what I want to talk about, Jenny," he said quietly. She made a petulant movement and looked away from him across the park. His pride was revolted. Was it possible that she considered him. Sir Ralph

Gaveston, a bore? It seemed absurd impossible. "Don't you care for me a little?" he asked, groping for her nand. "Oh. really, Sir Ralph," 6he protested, fretfully, "I don't feel a bit inclined for this sort of thing. No woman does so early in the afternoon. Of course, I like you you're a good sort, but " "Can't you give me an answer yet, Jenny?" he pleaded. ' "No, I can't so there!" She stopped and stamped her foot on the gravel. "You are spoiling your own game by bothering me like this. Why are you in such a hurry to marry me? You are not in love with me the least bit." The baronet's . tenderness melted away. He profited by the ; pause in their walk to light a cigar without asking her permission. He assumed a nonchalant air. They resumed their walk.

"I don't know about, being in love with you," he said dryly. "I like you very much and I thought we should get on well together. It's that man Steele who has come between us, I suppose. He made a vicious cut at the air with his cane. "A ranker," he ejaculated, contemptuously, "without a penny to his name." She broke into a ripple of ironical laughter. "You think that the title of Lady Gaveston tempts me eh?" "It doesn't sound bad. It might conceal a multitude of sins." "It can't conceal yours. They seem to be pretty well known." "It might." he continued, deliberately ignoring the interruption, "conceal one's identity it might even conceal a multitude of crimes." He looked at her with a cold, cruel smile. She met his eyes defiantly. "I haven't any crimes to conceal!" she declared boldly. "No? I seem to remember an awkward little transaction-at Kimberley. I never quite understood it myself. Something about diamonds-. I had forgotten it until the other day when 1 met a man inquiring after Jenny Heston." She stopped, clutching at the railing and turned ghastly pale. "You yon brute!" she cried, "to threaten me. There is nothing in that affair nothing criminal." "Well, the man may have been mistaken. He is still inquiring into the matter, I believe." "Let us sit down," said Mrs. Melas, in a faltering voice. They sat down on a bench. Sir Ralph whistled a popular air. Jenny's head had sunk forward. He could hear her labored breathing. She looked up at last and shrugged her shoulders. "I don't see how it would help me if I did marry you," she remarked. "Only that a man can't give evidence against his own wife." They looked at each other, a quiet triumphant smile on his face, an expression of mingled fear and contempt on hers. To Be Continued.

HEMO IS MORE THAN MALTED MUXCOSTS SAME A Delicious Food Drink Get 50-cent Package at the Drue Store

this place attended the Friends yearly meeting at Richmond Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Burkett and Mrs. Maria Burkett were the guests Sunday of Fred Oler and family of Richmond. Mrs. Early of Centerville, who, has been visiting friends here, returned home Thursday. -.:. Mrs. Lena Ketring and family called on Mrs. Will Start and family Mqnday. ; Earl Hart spent Saturday and Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will Hart. ; , , Mrs. Clem Pedan Is sick of congestion of the lungs. Harry Riener and Edgar Mote of Richmond, will be here Sunday afternoon and evening to speak at the Christian Endeavor rally..

BOOZE CAMP DESTROYED

Columbus, Ind.. Sept. 30. After he had been fined $299.25 for operating a "camp" on White river, in violation of the liquor laws. Charles Brown, while

in jafi. unable to pay the fine, learned that the camp had burned down. Although the contents were insured for $500, Brown compromised with the insurance company tor $300. After paying his fine Brown had 75 cents left from the $300.

Plowing is Illegal on certain days In India.

Action of Single Spoonful Surprises Many

Richmond people who bought the simple mixture of buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc.. known as Adler-l-ka,

are surprised at the INSTANT effect

of a SINGLE SPOONFUL. This remedy Is so complete a bowel cleanser

that It is used successfully in appen

dicitis. Adler-i-ka acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel and ONE SPOON

FUL, relieves almost ANY CASE of

constipation, sour or gassy stomach.

ONE MINUTE after you take it the

gasses rumble and pass out. Clem

Thistlethwaite, druggist Adv.

I TONIGHT 3 Bis Reel COMING NEXT WEDNESDAY THE SPDENDTHRIFT In Six Acts. -

Save Youi4 Teeth Prevent U Pyorrhea (Riggs' Disease)

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Pantiles lik thil arroaipnr Pioithf. khtniixd 2000 tUMS.

T"ONT let this parasite enter your gums. Sozodont, famous dentifrice for 64 years, contains Emetino, that extract of the Socth American plant, now used in the scientific treatment of Pyorrhea. The daily use of Sozodont will dean, whiten and polish the teeth, preserve the enamel, purify the breath, end fight Pjorrho. Paste, Powder or Liqaii. 23c. Take' home a tube or bottle today. You and your children should be using it now.

Sozodont Paste, Powder or Liquid Fights Pyorrhea

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I tETDIt E ADJUSTING

CRASH DAMAGES GARS

An automobile driven by G. M. Douglas of Oxford, O.. collided with the automobile driven by Roland Ball at North D street and the C. & O. crossing Wednesday , afternoon. Both cars were damaged. Ball was driving east across the railroad tracks, when the car driven by Douglas cut in front of him. The steering apparatus and the fender of the Ball car was damaged, while one of the spokes in Douglas' car was broken and one of the fenders badly bent.

ATTENDS CONVENTION.

x County Auditor Bowman left this morning for Indianapolis to attend the annual convention of the County Commissioners' association. None of the Wayne county commissioners will attend the session. All of the county, town and city officials have been invited to attend the convention.

Chile has 250,000 acres devoted to vineyards.

Rheumatism A Honi Can Shen t; One Wti Hit It la ibe iprlns of 1893 1 vu attacked by Muscular and Inflammatory Bbeumatlsm. I offered aa only those who hare It know, for orer three years. I tried remedy after remedy, and doctor after doctor, bat each relief aa I recelred waa only temporary. Finally. I found a remedy tnat cured me completely, and It baa never returned. I bare siren It to a nnmber who were terribly afflicted and eren bedridden with Bhenmatlim, and it effected a- cure in ererv case. I want every sufferer from any form of rheumatic trouble to try this marvelous healing power. Don't tend a cent; simply mall your name and address and I will send it free to . try. After yoa have used tt and It has proven Itself to be that long-looked-for means of curing your Rheumatism, yoa may aend the price of It, one dollar, bat, under stand, I do not want your money nnless yoa are perfectly satisfied to send It. Isn't tnat lalrT Why suffer any longer when poattlre relief la thus oTTsred yoa free? Don't delay. Write today. - - 51 irk H. Jackson, KoS45B Gurney Bldg., ' Syracuse, jr. r.

II?. Jackson la responsible. Abort ESt true. Pnb.

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Is tf I W Main and 9th TONIGHT j Reels -A MESSAGE FOR HELP" One Reel "IT ALMOST HAPPENED"

PALAC

TODAY An American Distinctive Creation. Feat u ring Irving Cummins and Harold Lock wood In "The Luro of . the Mask" By Harold McGrath. Pour Parts A Battery of Mystery ThrillsA Picture of Class ADMISSION S CENTS. TOMORROW Rex Beach's Fascinating Drama of the Alaskan Gold Fields. "Tho Spoilers" A drama of life in the raw of the days when might was right, and the best man won. featuring William Farnum and Kathlyn Williams. A Picture Worth Seeing Twice. . Nine Reels. Admission 10 Cents COMING Next Tuesday and Wednesday The Limit . In . Stupendous Sen-, sationaltsm 'The Juggernaut' A 5-Reel Vltarraph Blue Ribbon Feature With Anita Stewart and Earl Williams Showing the Most Wonderful Train Wreck Scene Imaginable. An engine and three coaches plunging off of bridge 100 feet high. The picture that startled the world. Italian Harp Orchestra will play at this theatre afternoon and night, Sunday, October 3.

Palladium Want Ads. Pay.

Cor. 6th and Ft. Wayne Ave.

tie stai mmmi

Phones: 1105 1106

YOU'RE NAMED ! In the will of Caesar was a startling statement to the old Romans which gained their attention for Antony at once. They were as ready to hoot Brutus as they had been before to stop Antony if he said anything derogatory about Brutus. It would make anyone have a kindly feeling toward another to know that he had left something in his will. That we all like to get something for nothing is, I suppose, the fact at the bottom of this kindly feeling. We are in a good humor all day if we have been able to gain five cents the advantage in a deal. Now, we want you to have this kindly feeling all the time, and are going to tell you how to get it. We buy such large quantities of groceries for our immense trade that we can command prices that smaller buyers cannot. We keep our patrons by giving them the benefit of the saving prices. We will give you the same advantage 25 per cent on every dollar's worth of goods ought to make a man feel just as good as though he had inherited a fortune.

fancy new york Edacmonl Crackers I 0LD DUTCH CLEANSER ELEEMTAS in p sy PerCan'9c;2CM"1Sc The Largest You Have Seen Yet. OIA ISiCiZtn( CREAM LAUNDRY SOAP We Have Them. "A 7 Large 5tnt Bars, 24c Northern Spy Apple. FANCY HOME GROWN WTftAf WTTOAV EXTRA NEW YORK POTATOES LA 1 14 1 Cream Cheese (p Cra2wJ2CpofatoM Friday and Saturday . bushel Sls 25c pound 60 CeettS Bananas

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