Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 250, 1 October 1915 — Page 9

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. FRIDAY, OCT. 1, 1915

fAGDMNG

RECORD CROWD ATTENDS RACES AT EATON FAIR

j EATON, O., Oct. J. The estimated

attendance at the Preble county fair

Thursday ranged all the way frbm

15,000 to 25,000. The track was in fair condition for the race. The three races of the afternoon were won in

straight heats. ,

Homer S., owned by C. E. Sheridan,

of Washington C. H., won the 2:11

pace. Woodrow Wilson, owned 'by

William Heron, of Wyoming, O , won

the 2:18 trot. No Chance, owned by

Lackey & Sizelove, of Camden, O.,

took the 2:15 pace.

In the third heat of the 2:11 pace Colonel Allen stumbled and fell at the turn after leaving the post. Stuard, the driver landed on the sulky of Craig, piloting Homer S., and Craig

brought his horse to a standstill on

the back stretch, and Stuard escaped

without injury. Both horses and driv

ers were reinstated for the next heat, hlch was won easily by Homer S.

rummarie8 of the race sfollow 2:11 Pact., Puise 30O.

, fHomer S.. g. g., by Homer , W. (Craig) v Dandy B., br. g, by Coastman (Jones) StiUeta Pratt, blk. m., by Stilleto C. (Patt)

The Twister, blk. g., known (Kinney) Colonel Allen, br. g. Allen, Jr. (Stuard)

Time: 2:124. 2:124, 2:20, 2:14.

2:18 Pace, Purse $300. Woodrow Wilson, b. g , by Dr. Wilson (Herron) 1 Dan Medoc, g. g., by Medoc (Cherry) 6 Delicatessen, b. g., by Kenicum (Compton) 2 Cute, ch. m., by Wesley (Stroud) 3 fled Ball, br. g., by Red Will (Ball) 5 Aliean Wreath, s. m , by Bay Wreath (Badger) 4 L6rd Constantine, b. g., by , ConstanUne (Douglas) .... S Hesitate, br m., by Wilask (Goodwin) 9 Hickory Jim, b. g., by Allen Downs (Sellar) 7 Time: 2:20. 2:194, 2:19. 2:16 Trot, Purse $300. No Chance, b. g., by Allen Downs (Overly) 1 High Mack, br. g., by High Downs (Bashore) 2 Denver Downs, b- g., by Allen Downs (Bashore) 4 Charley C, b. g., by Coastman (Gaston) 5 Orrison, blk nu by Ormonde (Cherry) 3 Edna K., b. m.. by Ed S. (Kinney 7

Billy's Brother, s. g., by High wood (Taylor

un-

by

110 1

4 4 1 3 2 5 3 2

3 2 5 t

5 2 0 4

1 , 1

2 2

5 4

3 3

4 6 7 5 8 . 7 8 6

9 9

1 1 3 4 2 2 2 & 5 3 7dis

6 6 dr

Rockefeller Jr. Inspects

His Mines at First Hand

if ? ' sT L 11 ( l4wMMmMMMaK8MM """"""" ' n' "- rrm mt mtm

win be held at the H, E. church Sanday. . ' .

Rev. and Mrs. Zerbe aad family was

entertained by Webster friends Wed

nesday evening.

Miss Hampton spent weflneeaay

evening with her parents In Webster.

Charles Ferrell of Indianapolis, was

in town Thursday.

This photograph shows, left to right : Ard ine Dennison, representative of the miners working at the Rockefeller Mine at Valdex, Col. ; W. L. McKenzie King of the Rockefeller interests in New York, and, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., about to descend into the Frederick Mine at Valdez, where the young multi-millionaire worked as a miner in order to study the working conditions of the miners in his employ.

NEW PARIS

I

WARNING SIGNS

Continued From Pap One.l have left a pleasant memory of the place in the visitor's mind. Bulletins at the entrance of some towns remind the motorist that "Safety first" to himself and to others requires a decrease in speed or requests that automobile drivers pilot their ears at a reasonable pace. On the reverse side of the beard the words, "Thank You, Come Again," attract the motorist's attention and make him feel that the town appreciated his conduct. He feels that he has done the town a good turn be-

WILLIAMSBURG

4rese-hefwanted to- and Trot because t ,jay

Mrs. Lora Mercer spent Monday with Mrs. Victor Neal. Enos Veal spent Wednesday in Economy. Mrs. Iva Ball was shopping in Richmond Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. A. Franklin motored

to Richmond Thursday. Mrs. Franklin Oler spent Wednesday and Thursday with Mrs. Ollie Scantland. Mrs. Omar Pearce spent Wednesday in Richmond. Miss Pearl Kelley is visiting friends near Bath, Ind. Miss Mary Duke and Miss Lillian

Reynolds were in Richmond Thurs-.

Edith Stegall motored to Hagerstown Thursday. TLe Sixth Annual Home Coming

Mrs. Fuller of Massachusetts arrived Monday night for a visit with her uncle, Thomas Foster and family. This waB the first time either of the two relatives had seen the other and the meeting was a happy one. One of the young Greek laborers on the Pennsylvania Railway who was a member of the Greek colony on the north edfce of town, left Monday for

his homeland, in response to the call of the Greek ruler for men for his army. William A. Brown returned home Tuesday evening from a three months' trip to Kansas and Oklahoma. "Uncle Billy" as he is familiarly known, is is very much : improved in health, weighing nineteen pounds heavier than when he left New Paris. Word received Tuesday from Mrs. Katherine Potts who is at the home of her son. Perry, at Monroe, Ohio, states that she is in quite a serious condition Charles Wieland. wife and small son of Hamilton, Ohio, were here Tues day attending the funeral services of their uncle, Francis M. Wieland. H. W. Chenoweth and H. B. Miller motored to Cincinnati Tuesday and brought back a new auto for the Chenoweth sales rooms. Miss Katherine Marrinan spent Wednesday at home, after spending some time with her sister, Mrs. A. Brown. Mrs. Sarah Harvey still remains in a serious condition. She makes her home with her daughter, Mrs. Albert Haller. The aged Mrs Harvey will be ninety years old in April. Miss Edith Keelor of Liberty came Wednesday for a visit with her sister, Mrs. Ethel Mann. Daniel Horrigan is erecting new buildings on his recently acquired farm near Gettysburg. The lime stone crusher at the

Ground Limestone Fertilizer plant has

been overhauled and a set of new con

caves installed, which make the pro

duct of finer quality than before. The

fertilizer was coarse in make-up but

this overcomes the difficulty.

Mrs. James Hensley who has been

quite ill for three weeks does not im

prove rapidly. The Hensleys moved to

a farm east of New fans rrom oun tain City this spring. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. A. Day entertain

ed Mrs Ekinner of Richmond at sup-

Der Monday evening.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shuler of Fort Wayne spent Wednesday here on business.

he was forced by and punishment.

Motorists Want Courtesy. Located on the National Road and being the center of a system of good roads unequalled in any other section of tbe state, Richmond is annually visited by thousands of automobiles from near and far. These machines

are visitors of the city and their occupants will remember Richmond

kindly if the city extends to them the

courtesy due guests. As they enter

the city they would prefer that instead of being warned "Don't speed," they were told, "Motorists while in the city will please operate their cars at a reasonable speed for safety." When they leave they would like to be invited to return. It is this spirit of courtesy and thoughtfulness that has put many towns on the map. On Main street where traffic makes it advisable to limit the parking of cars, the farmer and the tourist would prefer, "Please Park Cars on Side

Streets, Thank You," to "Don't Parks i

Cars in This Block." If he can not park his car "in this block" the visitor wonders where he can leave it with

out running afoul of a city ordinance

and having a patrolman come along and say: "You can't leave your car here, don't you see that sign."

Public spirited citizens of Richmond t want tourists and persons to feel theyj

are welcome 10 come to me city, wei-j come to park their cars on the side i

streets for any length of time, and that Richmond trusts Them to operate their machines with reason and consideration for the safety of themselves and others. This would be conveyed, it is believed, by signs which request observance of the law, rather than by threats and warnings.

threats of arrest; Mr and Mrs. Grant Watkins, Mrs.

Use Nothing For Corns But GETS-IT.

GETS-IT That's It. Note how the name is spelled, G-E-T-S I-T, and say no to anything offered you with a name made up to sound like "GETS-IT." There is only one "GETS-IT." Get it and nothing else. All good druggists know the wonderful results of "GETS-IT," the world's greast corn-cure. They wouldn't try to sell you something else. Every drug store in the land sells "GETS-IT," the first and only

HAIR ON FACE NECK AND ARMS WHAT CAUSES IT Nature does not produce coarse, stubborn growths of superfluous hair. They are caused by the unwise use of so-called hair removers. The only way to gain control of such growths is to devitalize them. It is impossible to accomplish this result with pastes and ruL-on preparations because they only remove hair from the surface of the skin. DeMiracle, the original liquid depilatory, de

vitalizes hair by attacking It under the skin as wefl as on the skin. Imitations of DeMiracle are as worthless as pastes and rub-on prepations because they lack certain ingredients tht DeMiracle alone contains which give it the power to rob hair of its vitality its life-sustaining force. Insist on the genuine DeMiracle and you will get the original liquid hair remover. Others are worthless imitations refuse them. DeMiracle is sold in three sizes, 50c, $1.00 and $2.00 bottles. The larger sizes are the most economical for dermatologists and large users to buy. If your dealer will not supply you buy a bottle at Clem Thistlethwaite's drug stores or order direct from us. The truth about the treatment of superfluous hair mailed in plain sealed envelope on request. DeMiracle Chemical Co., Dept. C, Park Ave. and 129th St.. New York Adv.

Rotirod Business Pah Now Lauds Mastor nodicino Digestion Improved tnd He Enjoys Hb Food "Tanlac Worked . Wonders for Me" He States

Cincinnati citizens of the highest honesty and integrity, who have been benefitted by Tanlac. are now testifying daily to the merits of the 'Premier Preparation.' John , Scollan, sixty years qf age, a retired business man, residing at 2645 Observatory Road, has Just said: "I have had stomach and liver trouble, which has been of a decidedly violent nature during the past three months. I was also extremely nervous and generally debilitated. "To date, I have taken two bottles of Tanlac, and, as a result of the medicine, the improvement of my health is fine. I have a better appetite and digestion and enjoy what I eat. In fact. I am cured. Tanlac has worked wonders for me." So many of us have been looking for something to give our 'old folks' that will be all for their good and in no way harmful. That something has been found. It is Tanlac nature's greatest boon to those passing down the hill of life. That is why it is simply self-destruction to let debility sap your com

fort and health. It is a miserable idea that debility, which is so common among both young and old, men and women, will wear itself away, as it

gathers force and nourishes itself

upon your very life blood.

Nervousness, headaches, depression

of spirits, lost appetite, constipation, backache, listlessness, sleeplessness and that rundown, good-for-nothing feeling, are characteristic symptoms of this trouble, and Tanlac acts like magic when it bringB back restful sleep, sound digestion, more vitally and away that detested, despondent

feeling so quickly that it actually

astonishes you.

Tanlac, the 'Master Medicine' is now

sold in Richmond through the four Thistlethwaite drug stores, where the

demand for the Premier preparation

is very large and steadily Increasing adv.

"Sore Corn Bumped f ' Ul TT.m X

1 Gts-It,'Corn, --x 1

corn-cure ever

Boy Wanted With bicycle at once COOPER'S GROCERY

Carl F. Weisbrod Piano Tuning and Repairing. Phone 2095.

9K

O

Round Trip to Cincinnati Via C. & O. SUNDAY, OCT. 3 Train leaves Richmond 8:32 a. m.

I Returning leaves Cincinnati 7:25 p. m. ; Trains arrive and depart from Central

Union Station, Cincinnati.

C. A. BLAIR.

Home Tel. 2062.

Ticket Agent

known

removes

The tusks of the African elephant i any and every corn or callus without

sometimes weigh as much as 100 i fail, without thick bandages, toe har-

pounds each, and reach a length of

eight or nine feet.

PLAN ANNIVERSARY.

EATON, O., Oct. 1. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Cottingham, well known residents of this city, are planning to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of their wedding. Fifty years ago, October 8, the ceremony was solemnized in Eaton by Rev. George Webster, a well known local minister of the earlier . days. They were married in the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Pryor, both of whom have passed to the beyond. The only witnesses surviving who witnessed the ceremony are Dr. W. E. Pryor of Camden, and Mrs. Hattie Wooster of Waynesville.

The butterfly, like the bat, invariably goes to sleep head downward, its eyes looking straight down the stem of grass on which it rests. It folds its wings to the utmost and thus protects Its body from the cold.

Sterling Gum wmmm - am wm Cinnamon -kmmuwnh

nesses, corn-swelling salves, irritating ointments. Applied in a few seconds. The corn loosens, your corn agony ends and quickly the corn leaves. The limping, the pains that dart to your heart, the crucification of having to wear shoes over screaming corns, the danger of blood poison from making them bleed by using knives, razors and scissors are gone at last! "GETS-IT" is the new, the sure, simple, painless way. Don't let anybody argue you out of it get "GETS-IT."

Avoid useless substitutes. "GETS-IT" is sold by druggists ev

erywhere, 25c a bottle, or sent direct

I by E. Lawrence '& 'Co., Chicago. Sold

j in Richmond and recommended as (he

world s best corn cure by A. G. Luken & Co. Adv.. I

O D

M

K

STANDARD UPPLY CO.

Line Brick Hard Brick Soft Brick

.POSTS

TEL 2459

M ED Rd

The First National Bank

WE MAKE FlVfci YEAR MORTGAGE LOANS. NO COMMISSION CHARGE. WHY NOT SEE US ABOUT YOURS?

"see start" when we are hit oo

the head? IS THE LARGEST CLOCK IN THE WORLD?

WHY Do we

WHERE

WHAT CAUSES NIGHTMARE? UAUf DO FINGERPRINTS "GETTHE rivJ W CRIMINAL ?

Coupon with 98c. brings yon this $4.00 Wonderful Knowledge DcoIl

BOOK OF-WOarDEBS COCKMt

Regnllar prta

and iccvrc a copy C tk Bfc ma SI. IS. KMidar artaB S4.00.

It answers thousands of sasttons of tasaoat a4

; Ana

oC Wonden. By mU $1.18.

value and tells the story i tbo Weaden of. Xaaava and those produced by Maa. - Slse ot kaok 10T : Inches ; weight nearly four pounds ; superior paper ; Urn type ; profnsely lUostrstsd : bopjat In cloth, with sold tarn stag. Honey nlliM If resists ars

ot satisfied.

Why? BCSS9 Hindi's ssfl nothing bet hih grcds end ctyliih issrchscdbe ct cash ctcre prices, -in fcet, ererybedy c&lb then thtx fcfy Ccab Frfcc Credit State In RIrfr::-3 Look at thM price for Saturday, and you can bat tha goods ara Juat aa rapraaantad.

81X3. Weekly un WedOy aco Weekly sixo Wetkly

I S1.C3

Weekly

Slots

Offered everywhere at $25 to $30

which ara not only oood looking but high grada In quality aa wall. Fur tiimmod and plain tailored. Evory popular color and material. All sizoa. Special

LSKQllKES

In combination allk and serge. Beau tlful assortment. Special

NS1.C0

I Weekly

S"3

$1X0

a. ' Weekly

Don't r.liss This Extra Special LIMITED QUANTITIES. White Chinchilla Sport Coats 05.00 White Golphin Sport Coats 02.98

This Is Everlastingly True: WKen a "Rainy Day" comes, the $100 you did save is worth more than the $1000 you were going to save. we will offer you a new plan. Come in and let us explain. First National Bank Cor. of Seventh and Main Streets

THE UNIVERSAL CAR,

Prices lowered again, but the same Ford car. The record of satisfactory performance for more than 900,000 owners surely makes it the "Universal Car" the car you want. It meets the demands of professional and business men and brings pleasure to the whole family. Simple, strong, reliable economical in operation , and maintenance. Runabout $390; Touring ing Car 45440; Town Car $640, f. o. b., Detroit. On sale at BETHARD AUTO AGENCY, 1117 Main St., Richmond, Ind.