Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 59, 19 January 1916 — Page 3

THE xtlCHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 19, 1916.

PAGE THREE

IES IN CHAIR EARLY TUESDAY

EATON, O., Jan. .19. Sitting in an upright position In a. chair,' the lifeless body of CorneliuB Reece, 75 years old, was found early Tuesday morning by members of lit family when they arose. The body was warm when the discovery was made and it is believed he died only a short time before following a heart attack.

Reece had been a sufferer from the effects cf the grip and was unable to recline, so Informed members of bis family that be would spend the night

in tne cnair.

Re3ce was a .veteran .of the Civil war, having served an enlistment in

the Fifth Ohio cavalry. He was. well

Known throughout the county.

Besides his widow he is survived by

six cnnaren,.tnree of whom' reside in

the family home, three miles south of

JSaton. , . -

r unerai services win ; be held . at

10:30 Thursday morning in St. Paul's M. E. church, conducted by the pastor, Rev. J. C. Shaw. The body will be

Dunea in Mound Hill cemetery.

Mining Gamp Owners Were Killed in Mexico

Boston Nuggets

By Miss Grace Parka.

Mrs. A. H. Piper and daughter Elvira, Mrs. Ora Short and Miss Sada Pottenger spent Saturday in Rich

mond...".. .Gage Rife of Richmond vis ited his mother, Mrs. Mary Rife, Fri-

""j cuiug. . . . . . mi . auu ivii b. Vari Simmons and little son spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. William Simons.... John Druley of Summit, O., spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. S.-D.- Druley. Oscar Glenny of Richmond visited with Mr. and Mrs TCnnch Rnherta

Saturday and , Sunday Frank Rife ,

was a Kicnmona visitor Saturday..... i ' run i i i . u . i i i

uo luuuwiug icatjieia opeiii me weeK end at their homes: Miss Ruth Tay- ' 1am T"W V. ,t . f TIT , XTIaI.. A

Connersville; Russell Behr, at Eas Germantown; Miss Alpha Hinshaw and Cecil Scantland at Williamsburg .... . Miss Florence Stanley visited Mr. and Mrs. Lester Parks last week j i Mrs. Robert Ketron has returned home j ' from visiting relatives at Cincinnati.

MAKE LAND TRANSFER

EATON, O.. Jan. 19. One of the biggest real estate deals of local interest was consummated Tuesday when Councilman James O. Welsh gained possession of a sixty-acre farm owned by Al ' I. Cotterman, local feed store

proprietor. Just outside the east corporation line. The deal also calls for

KNIGHTS COfl'ITTEE ARRANGES MEETINGS

. The Joint commute of the lob. Couer de Lion and Triumph lodges a the K. of P. will meet at the tempi. Thursday night to make plans for'i visit to all of the K. of P. lodges fa Wayne county preparatory to thi

Building at Palmer mine, near Chihuahua; for which Americans were burned when massacred.

the transfer by Welsh to Cotterman county-wide meeting to be held hen

of the Welsh residence on Norm Bar

ron street and a 120 acre farm on Banta's fork, east of this city. It conld not be ascertained whether the

trade was even or if cash was includ

ed. The farm Welsh becomes possess

or of through the deal was sold to Cot

terman by G. F. Grlrfis for a consider

ation of 118.000.

Events in Economy

By N. H. Edwards.

Centerville Events

Dy Mrs. Lenna King.

EARLY LIFE OF COUNTY

Contributions on Pioneer Days Will Appear in This Column.

RICHMOND, PROUD OF HER SONS. A number of young men have gone out from Richmond and taken promin-

ent positions in the work of the world. I One who has chosen a peculiar line

. . . . of investigation is James Mooney, of church began a series of th(l TT s Kthnnlneloal Bureau. Wash-

The M. E

meetings Sunday evening conducted by Rev. Preiffer, pastor of the church. He will be assisted by Rev. Elmer Dunbar of Penville, and Rev. West-

dian women who sewed the skins together with sinews showed great skill, the seams are as regular as a twisted cord and pressed until they can hardly be seen. It is eighteen feet in height and fifteen in diameter at the base and faces the east according to the Indian custom. The most import ant articles of furniture are three couches, each with matting woven of willow switches. A splendid buffalo robe covers each couch. Between the couches and the wall hangs a curtain of the cowskin ornamented with beads and small bells. These curtains serve as a protection from the cold. The couch to the south of the fire belongs to the master of the house. With

in easy reach are all the accoutrements of a warrior, his resplendent tobacco pouch, his red stone pips, his medicine charms, his trophies of the warpath, . his weapons, his shield and his saddles. The other couches were for different members of the family. Nearby is a small tepee to house ai the little puppies belonging to the family." Professor Mooney's work has been preserved in several large published volumes. MRS. SARAH A. WRIGLEY,

London's exports to the United, States for November were more than J 14,574,000, as against less than $12,000,000 for October.

SPEAKS HERE FEB 7.

Miss Blanche Fenimore, teacher of Domestic Science and drawing, has

been appointed as assistant postmaster here From 7 to 14 degrees below zero Monday.. .Mrs. Alice Fraisee was called to Richmond Saturday on account of the illness of relatives Rev. Oliver Frazer visited Edgar Maning and family Sunday Miss Minnie Cain, who. has been the guest of Mrs. Ada Ballenger the past several days, has returned to her home at Anderson Raleigh Townsend was the Sunday and Sunday night guest of the Frazee boys Everet Clark and John Oler were out early Monday morning circulating a petition to have the rural route 23 re-established out of Economy with the same old carrier, Lee Lamb Mr. and Mrs. Gua Weigh and Sam Carl were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Olia Weyl. ...Galand Saunders of Carlos City; and Charles Edwards were Sunday

j afternoon guests of Ed Martin.

COLD SLAYS SOLDIERS.

Feb. 18. The committee has heaH

from only three ' lodges. Cambridgi City, Centerville and Hagerstown, ii response to Inquiries sent out regard ing the weekly night upon which t holds its regular session. Clarenci D. Mote is chairman of the Joint com mittee.'

California's 1915 rice crop Is valued at $1,000,000.

INDIANAPOLIS. Jan. 19. J. A. M. Adair, the Democratic machine candidate for nomination for governor, will speak at Logansport, January 22; South Bend, January 24; Marion, January 28: Richmond, February 7.

CLASS EATS VENISON.

DANVILLE. Ind., Jan. 19. The Twentieth Century Bible class of the Christian Sunday school will eat venison at their annual banquet tonight. The deer came from the deer farm owned by Otis Gulley in this county. Seventy turkeys also have been provided for the feast.

LAFAYETTE, Ind.. Jan. 19. Seven old soldiers died within a period of two days at the State Soldiers' Home here. The grim reaper has been unusually active in the ranks of the veterans this winter, the variety of weather probably being the cause of so much illness.

BUCKEYE "The Best Incubator Made

I I 111 IB

Seven Szies Seven Prices. 60 110 '200 Egg Size. Egg Size. Egg Size. $7.50 $12.50 $17.50

Sold on 40 Days' Trial.

Every Size Guaranteed to Hatch Every Hatchable Egg. We have Buckeye Incubators on display for your inspection. Also Colony Brooders, Feed- ; ers, Fountains and Leg Bands.

IEACHH

MAIM i

APIUJAPr1,

JOHN C. BOCKMAN, CHIROPRACTOR Investigate Chiropractic for that old Chronic Trouble. Knollenberg's Annex, 2nd Floor. Phone 1368.

ington, D. C, where he has been employed a number cf years. From his

earliest boyhood he was interested in the North American Indians. He std-

nafer of Connersville, during the next ; ied their habits, their traditions and

M eek. A cordial invitation is extended

(o the public to attend these meetings. Mr. and Mrs. William Dunkle enit tertained Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. .Tamoo Horn, Miss Genevieve Horn, Mr. a--,T

Marcellas Beitzell. has been vt y sick for the past three days.

EXPLAIN ROAD BUILDING.

LAFAYETTE, Ind., Jan. 19 Instruction in the different phases of highway work will be offered in a special course by the school ,of civil engineering of Purdue, January 24-27. The road school is open to all persons '..interested in read work of Indiana.

RUN'S SPECIAL TRAIN.

INDIANAPOLIS. Jan. 19. The Columbia club will have a special train over the Monon to the national Republican convention at Chicaeo June

7. The special will leave here June medicine tags

4 and besides the local members Re- of twenty-six cow hides

publicans from over the state will be invited to go. If the attendance warrants it there will be two specials. .

i their religious rites, frequently living vi!h them six months or a year, making notes for the reports that were aftnvrrd published by the U. S. governnenf. He, ha3 become an authority h'- particular line of investigation -iS really enriched the histori- . ' : c l'.ection in" tho national museum. ' fry ytnrs a?o the United States r.iinr'.it. employed him to reproduce . tyira! tepee which would represent and preserve the true type of the Indian home such as was .'owned by a chief many years ago. ' "This tepee cost a thousand dollars and is historically accurate. .It may be seen in the Smithsonian institute j at Washington, D. C. At a distance it appears to.be covered with white duckling cloth, but really it is cowhide tanned so soft that it could be4 rolled in the hand like a woolen blanket, and colored a rich, creamy white.. At in

tervals on the outside are, fastenings for . the customary scalp ; locks and

The tepee was made

seventeen in

the walls and nine in the interior cur-

tainst The tepee is cone shaped and the covering is in . one . piece. .The In-

SOLE SURVIVOR IN MASSACRE OF AMERICANS Thomas B. Holmes, the only man who escaped in the massacre of American .mining men by Villa bandits. He is a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a son of Judge L. W. Holmes of Keen, N. H.

;-:;';'::;::: ' ' !: ' '

8 Don't Be Misled By "So-Called" Sales d

W Conducted in "Biff and Bang" style by out-of-town parties, here today, gone tomorrow, or W sales which seek to dispose of twenty-year -old merchandise which is not value at any price. J If you have money and want-to make the most' of it; if you want to buy merchandise at the JC price of merchandise; if you want clean, fresh seasonable merchandise at the lowest nri 11

Is. Life V

WorttHi Livamig? It Depends Upon the Liver Wrongliving is the cause of most physical ills and generally stomach and liver are first to suffer. Coffee drinking is very common cause of digestive disorder, but it usually takes the user some time to fully realize it. Fact is some people drink coffee with seeming impunity, but when disturbances of the digestive organs result in headache, biliousness, irritability and other common symptoms of caffeine poisoning it's time for the coffee drinker to look to his morning beverage for the true cause. For any coffee drinker who finds that his health is wrong, but don't know just why, it's a good idea to quit the coffee and use FdDSTIUM the pure food drink Made of wheat and a small amount of molasses, Postum has a rich, snappy flavour much like that of mild Java coffee yet contains no caffeine (the drug in coffee) nor other harmful element. There are two forms of Postum. The original , Postum Cereal must be boiled; Instant Postum is soluble in boiling water and can be made in the cup at table. Both kinds are equally delicious and the cost per cup is about the same. A change from coffee to Postum is a good move toward right living. "There's a Reason"

Send a 2-cent stamp to Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Creek, Mich., for a 5-cup sample of Instant Postum.

at BatUe

$4 and $4.50 Skirts

All Wool Serges and Poplins in the newest styles; with coupon, 12.88. P

nnre.

mM A. 1 1 W 1 w . . . . r '

jz come 10 me urano i,eaaer, inaiana s ureatest underselling Store. Note No goods sold at

2T mese prices witnout coupon. CL.lf THESE UOUrONS. BRING THEM ALONG.

O o o o o o o o o o a a 8 O o o o

Bfflgl

$3.00 Comforters

$1.78 Big full double bed size Sanitary. Cotton filled; with coupon. $1.78. P

o o A

o o o a o Q

a a o o 8 O P o o o il o 0

$1.50 Child's 7gc Sweaters . ,

Good wool sweaters for boys and girls, 6 to 14. with coupon, 78c. P

42c

75c Men's Shirts . . .

Of heavy flannelette, plain and striped, made well, cut full. 42c. P

19c

39c Boys'

Caps

Good heavy warm caps for boys, all colors, with coupon, 19c. P

42c

ic school Dresses . .

Of fine ginghams.

in

beautiful patterns, ages 6 to 14, with coupon, 42c. P

$1.78

$3 Kimo

nos . . .

Beautiful patterns In silk, serpentine, crepes, flannelette. $1.78. P

Hi

jys

29c

50c

Hats

In plushes, chinchillas, velvets and fancy mixtures. With coupon, 29c. P

59

42c

75c b lannel Gowns

Women's flannelette grown s in pink and blue stripe, well made and out full, 42c. P

62c

$1 Women's

Union Suits

Women's' pure white fleeced Union Suits, short or long sleeves.

with coupon, 62c

$1.19

SKIRTS .

For ladies and misses In shepherd checks. With coupon. $1.19. P

Mnest $2 00A Corsets Front or back lace, several famous makes, with coupon. 88c P

BOYS' 75c Knickers . .

All wool, fancy mixtures, extra well made, all sizes. 42c. P

Boys' 50c OOn Blouses Finest gingham, blue, chambray and black sateen, full cut. 33c. P

75c Women's AOn Union Suits Women's fine ribbed Union Suits in medium weight, special with coupon. 42c. P

$2.50 Wool $1 QQ Sweaters For boys and girls, targe roll collar and heavy knit. $1.39. P

$3 & $3.50 ei 7c PANTS :9UtO Of fine serges, heavy mixtures and fine quality corduroy, $1.78. "P

31c

50c Flannel

Petticoats

For women, pink or blue, beautifully embroidered and scalloped. 31c. P

29c

Best 50c

CORSETS

Of fine coutil in low or high bust. 29c. P

$3.00 Wool ei 70 Sweaters x For men and women, all sizes, Norfolk style and plain. $1.78. P

one Window g Shades c Of fine quality. 6 feet long, come in green only. Coupon. 22c. P

44c

75c Night

Shirts

Of heavy flannelette, nicely trimmed for men. Coupon 44c. P

i.u men's Pants , Men's heavy pants in blue and mixtures, coupon. 2c.

92c work serges With P

rw3

OOR oi J

75c

MOPS

Mop, bottle of oil and stick. With ' coupon Thursday, 31c. P

r 3

50c Dressing OQn $2.00 Flannel Q4g Sacks f2r SHIRTS In light and dark color Men's Wool Flannel percales also flannel- Shirts, extra well mads ette, all sizes. With and cut full, with coucoupon, 29c. P pon, 94c

88c

l.o0 Men's Dress Gloves

Men's kid gloves, well lined, all sizes. With coupon. 88c. P

33c Boys' 1 fjr Underwear ..121 Good heacy fleece lined shirts and drawers, the garment. 17c. P

l.ol & 2.00 QQn Waists oot Beautiful new waists, embroidered voiles, all over organdies, etc. With coupon. 8Sc. P

18c

35c Boys Blouses .

In light colors, blue chainbrays and black sateens. With coupon, 18c. P

$3.00 Wool e-i 70 Blankets .j2iii Good heavy wool nap blankets in grey, tan and white, size -2xSO. $1.78. P

$1.68

j.i Serge Dresses .

For girls to 14 years, beautiful all wool serge with coupon. $1.68. P

$3 BOYS' SUITS ..

Come In blue

and mixtures, ail atxes. With coupon, fLM.. P

an

$1.88

up to $U) eo. Velvet Hats JOC Fine quality velvets, in the newest shapes. With coupon. 58c P

8 O 8 p 8 8 o o o o 8 ( () ) o

9