Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 85, 25 February 1916 — Page 7

THE RICHMOND. PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, FEB. 25, 1916.

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MRS. SCHAEFER DIES AS FRIENDS CHAT WITH HER

Mrs. Margaret B. Schaefer, 64, wife of Christian F. Schaefer, died suddenly fit her home, 206 North Ninth street last evening at 8:45 o'clock. Mrs. Schaefer had been an Invalid for the last twelve years, but her death came as a chock to her family and friends. Acute indigestion was the immediate cause of death. The sudden attack came upon her as she sat in the front room of her home in conversation with several neighbors who had come to visit her. She had complained of feeling ill early in the day, but in the evening she felt better. A few minutes before her death she had told her friends that she felt much better than she had earlier in the day. Her husband was out of the city on business. Besides her husband she is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Edgar Iliatt and Miss Abbie Schaefer, and two uons.Colin Schaefer of this city and Stanley W. Schaefer, a student at the Harvard Law school. Funeral arrangements will be announced later. KENNEDY Funeral services for Mrs. Katherine Kennedy will be held 6t 9 o'clock Saturday morning from St. Mary's church with Rev. W. J. Cronin officiating. Interment will be in St. Mary's cemetery. Friends may call at the home, 831 North Twelfth street, at any time. FIRE BURNS ROOF. Fire caused either by a defective flue or mice chewing matches, caused damage to the roof of the house, 1414 North II street, occupied by Mrs. Edna Hill, to the extent of $100, today. Slight damage was also done the furniture in the .second floor rooms.

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CITIZENS ASKED TO GO-OPERATE WITH INDUSTRIAL SURVEY WORK

E. M. Haas gave out the following rlulement today: "The corps of industrial surveyors that lire now at work in Richmond should bo cordially received by all citizens. Each one should endeavor to loam the scope and purpose of the survey, which In brief is to construct a procram for vocational educational in the public schools of this city. "The workers are all experts and are in the iservice of the state. They are not here for the purpose of getting trade sccrefs, or to learn new methods of doing things to take away with them for the benefit of others, but they are here for the purpose of aiding this community by collecting this information for our especial benefit, and for this service they are being paid from public funds. There is no selfish or ulterior motive behind It. They are simply public servants the same as any other official assigned to special duty. "As best evidence of the character or this WQrk, you need but look at the high character of the workers employed here. No city of this size has ever been ho favored. The corps of workers consist of the following: "Doctor R. J. Leonard head of Industrial Education department, Indiana university; experience, research work. New York factory investigation commission, director of Hammond survey. Miss Jeanette Eaton ot Columbus, O., grad late of Vassar college and Ohio State university; experience, vocational research Cleveland, O.. Minneapolis vocational educational survey, joint author of "Commercial Work ;ind Training for Girls." Miss Melon Dart, Chicago. 111., educated in Obtrlin college and Qhicago School of Philanthropy; experience, Minneapolis vocational educational survey, Chicago United Charities. Mr. R. D. Fleming, education; Stanford university, California, and University of Pennsylvania; experience, immigration commission, U. S. census of manufacturers, J. S. -tariff board, national civic fed ration, IT. S. commission on industrial relations; Cleveland school survey. 'it would scarcely be possible to find a corps of workers who would be better equipped for this work, and these four irt-ople should have the mcst courteous consideration in their efforts while lu re. In addition these workers are supported by the following experts for the Richmond survey who will meet from time to time to direct and advice. We would like for our citizens to look at this list of notables: "Dr. W. T. Bawden. Washington, D. V., U. S. Bureau of Education, director Throw Away Hair Dyes! Apply Q-Ban Instead AH Your Gray Hair Then Turns Dark. Lustrous Without Dyeing Hair. When your hair turns gray, streaked with gray, premature or just turning gray,, or if your hair is falling: if you have dandruff and your head itches, a few applications of Q-Ban Hair Color Restorer to hair and scalp quickly turns all your gray hair to its youthful dark shade. Entire head of hair becomes clean, fresh, lustrous, wavy, thick, soft, full of life, evenly dark and handsome, without a trace of gra showing. Q-Ban also stos itching scalp, dandruff and falling hair, and promotes its growth. Q-Ban is harmlessnot a dye but a delightful hair (olor restorer. Give it a trial. Sold on a money-back guarantee. Only ?0c, a big 7-oz. bottle, at Fihe's drug store, Richmond, Ind. Out-of-town folks supplied by mall. Adv.

116 FARMS AT FIRST

One thousand ears of corn representing the samples of 116 farmers, constitute the entries made in the corn display being held' under the auspices of the Wayne county Better Farmers association in the Jones & Williams building, South A and Sixth streets. Contestants had registered their Eamples at noon tody when the entries closed and Ernest Thornburg immediately began the judging of the exhibits and listing of premiums which will be awarded. The exhibit will be open until 9:30 o'clock tonight and Saturday all day until tomorrow night. The general public is invited while a special invitation is given to women. Samples of the corn submitted in the contest are In the main above the average in quality in the estimation of the management of the show. Several of the products are of high pedigree and will yield more than 86 per cent n the shelling. Some of the samples however are of poorer quality. In the mixed corn class there are samples of flesh corn or bloody butcher corn, in the yellow class the Reed yellow dent and the Learning corn and there are also samples of the Johnson county white corn. List of Exhibitors. Following is a list of the farmers who are entered in the show with samples, some of whom have as many as three entries: II. Newman, J. A. Hockett, I Baumer, Earl Crawford, Walter Parks, G. Williams, Waldo McCashland, Lawrence McCashland, Ab Barton, B. B. Duke, J. S. Green, Frank Raper, Robert Morris, M. Lawrence, Homer Williams, Ed Deitemeyer, Oscar Lamb, Earl Helms, Earl Johnson, D. W. Foster, K. D. Foster, Will MatTi, Charles Culbertson, Earl Mitchell. Lester Parks, Charles Williams, E. Lambert, Harvey Stanley, John McCoy. E. Clayton, Arch Davis. Claude Davis, Cal Davis, H. B. Willams, Joseph Kempton. A. B. Heiser, John Macey, Henry Uindbaugh, James Endsley, Harry Niewoehner, Roy Williams, of field work In Richmond, Va. survey; John Lapp, Bureau of Legislative In formation, Indianapolis; Mrs. Clea Murtlant, New York secretary of National Society for the Promotion of Industrial Education: W. F. Book, state director of vocational education; Dr. R. J. Leonard, head of Industrial Education department, Indiana university; Dr. F. C. Bonser, Columbia university; Prof. J. T. Giles, euperintendent Richmond city schools. ' "There has been appointed in addition to the above a local committee as follows: II. R. Robinson. P. A. Reid, Geo. Knollenberg, A. C. Allen, B. F. Williams, Miss Sarah Hill, Prof. Frank Pickell, Mrs. Clara Graves, Mrs. E. E. McDivitt, Mrs. J. T. Giles. "We feel sure that when business men see the importance of this work they will most heartily co-operate." DECIDE ON METHOD , OF ASSIGNING SPACE Definite arrangements for assigning space lor the automobile show to be held March 22-25, will be made at a meeting of the committee Saturday morning, when Raymond Mather and J. W. Carnahan, who are in Indianapolis today, will report on the success of their solicitation of automobile firms there. If enough firms are induced to place automobiles on exhibit, the committee will recommend to the general committee nt its meeting Monday that the show be made an exclusive automobile show. Jump fiom Bed in Morning and Drink Hot Water Tells why everyone should drink hot water each morning before breakfast. Why is man and woman, half the time, feeling nervous, despondent, worried; some days headachy, dull and unstrung: some days really incap acitated by illness. If we all would practice Inside-bathing, what a gratifying change would take place. Instead of thousands of half-sick anaemic-looking souls with pasty, muddy complexions we shoula see crowds of happy, healthy, rosycheeked people everywhere. The reason is that the human system does not rid itself each day of all the waste which it accumulates under our present mode of living. For every ounce of food and drink taken into the system nearly an ounce of waste material must be carried out. else it ferments and forms ptomaine-like poisons which are absorbed into the blood. Just as necessary as it is to clean the ashes from the furnace each day, before the fire will burn bright and hot, so we must each morning clear the inside organs of the previous day's accumulation of indigestible waste and body toxins. Men and women, whether sick or well, are advised to drink each morning, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, as a harmless means of washing out of the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowl3 the indigestible material, waste, sour bile and toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire ailmentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. Millions of people who had their turn at constipation, .bilious attacks, acid stomach, nervous days and sleless nights have become real cranks about the morning inside-bath. A quarter pound of limestone phosphate will not cost much at the drug store, but is sufficient to demonstrate to anyone, its cleansing, sweetening and freshening effect upon the system. Adv.

MBIT GORCl SHOW

Clark Crowe, Clem Endsley, Charles Showalter, Dan .Medearis, Charles J. Kanffman, E. C. Howell, Henry Tieman, Frank Pardieck, Homer Estelle, Richard Davenport, L. Goeble, George Early, Ellis Norris, John Jordan, Howard Hartman, U. E. Norris, Charles Waedick. John Jloffett. W. D. White, Charles Wolding, Guy Davenport, Caleb Duke, Norman Ewbank, Frank Williams, Charles Duke, Howard Schlenker, E4 Schlenker, Russell Schlenger, J. D. Snediker, L. W. Trouse, W. D. Rich, Forest Rich, Oscar Rich, L. Deitemeyer, T. Martin and Ed Brandley. MUELLER PREPARED TO ANSWER PEACOCK County Surveyor Peacock refused to say this afternoon whether he would appear before the county commissioners tomorrow morning in the hearing which is to be held on the appointment of a bridge engineer for the south side bridge as well as other bridges that are to be built in Wayne county this year. It is understood, however, that both Peacock andv Mueller are prepared to present testimony. Mr. Mueller has been in the city since Wednesday and as he now has a contract with the commissioners for making the preliminary plans for the squth side bridge, he will ask for the appointment as regular engineer for this bridge. If given the appointment he will proceed immediately to prepare final plans, specifications and estimates to be used by the county council in making the appropriation. BIBLE SCHOOL HEADS TO BANQUET TONIGHT Sixty members of the Wayne County Sunday School association are expected at the supper which will be served at 6:30 o'clock this evening at the East Main street Friends church. The program to be delivered at the conclusion of the supper consists of addresses by Ed Hasemeier, state president of the association, E. P. Jones of Milton, president of the county nssociation, who will preside as toastmaster, and by the heads of the temperance; secondary, elementary and other departments. SPEAKS AT RUSHVIUE Judge D. W. Comstock, of Richmond, candidate for the Republican congressional nomination, will address a Republican meeting at Rushville this evening. The Comstock candidacy has developed great strength in Rush county, and Republicans there have been very anxious to hear Judge Comstock speak. Judge Comstock spent today campaigning in several of the smaller towns of Fayette county and will return to that county tomorrow.

These Three Women Tell How They Escaped the Dreadful Ordeal of Surgical Operations.

Hospitals are great and necessary institutions, but they should be the last resort for women who suffer with ills peculiar to their sex. Many letters on file in the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., prove that a great number of women after they have been recommended to submit to an operation have been made well by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Here are three such letters. All sick women should read them.

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with female troubles that I could not do anything, and our doctor said I would have to undergo an operation. I could hardly walk without help so when I read aBout the Vegetable Compound and what it had done for others I thought I would try it. I got a bottle of Lydia E. .Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and a package of Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash and used them according to directions. They helped me and today I am able to do all my work and I am welL' Mrs. Thos. Dwter, 989 Milwaukee Ave., East, Detroit, Mich. Bellevue, Pa." I suffered more than tongue can tell with terrible bearing down pains and inflammation. I tried several doctors and they all told me the same story, that I never could get well without an operation and I just dreaded the thought of- that. I also tried a good many other medicines that were recommended to me and none of them helped me until a friend advised me to give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. The first bottle helped, I kept taking it and now I don't know what it is to be sick any more and I am picking up in weight. I am 20 years old and -weigh 145 pounds. It will be the greatest pleasure to me if I can have the opportunity to recommend it to any other suffering woman." Miss Ikexb Fkoelichek, 1923 Manhattan St., North Side, Bellevue, Pa. If you would like special advice write to t,ydia E. Pinkham Med. Co. (confidential ),JLynn, Mass. Your letter -will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence

BECK DECLINES TO DISCUSS BILL OUSTING AUTOS

After three months of wrangling over the rural route situation in Wayne county, it has now developed that the entire county may return to the old horse-drawn system. The amendment to the postoffice appropriation bill which passed the house of representatives Thursday, by an almost unanimous vote, provides that no appropriation is to be made for motorized route systems in Indiana. Not only would Wayne county be affected but also Tippecanoe and Marion counties. ' Flnly Gray, congressman from this district, supported the bill and has talked in favor of the amendment. Postmaster Beck refused to discuss the merits of the proposed change. He said that the- only statement he would make would be in a sealed envelope to the postoffice officials direct. The bill, providing for the change has not passed the senate and tb.e amendment affecting the local situation may be stricken out before the appropriation ij finally made. 44-TON VAULT INSTALLED BY TRUST CONCERN Installation of the safety deposit vault and equipment in the new Dickinson Trust company's building was begun yesterday. The entire weight of the vault which is of most modern style and construction, will be approximately forty-four tons. The main door which is made of steel in circular design and weighs seventeen tons alone required four teams to haul it from the cars to the building. The hinge on the door weighs two tons but is so adjusted that it requires ro strength to open it. The door is equipped with twenty four bolts which are used for locking pur poses which are controlled with two combination and four time locks. The walls of the vault are of steel and weigh twelve tons. A steel casting encloses the entire vault. In addition the vault is surrounded by walls of reinforced concrete for burglarproof and fire protection. The vault is divided into two compartments one for the exclusive use of. the bank and the other for the safety deposit box customers. In the bank's private compartment there is a battery of chests in which the funds will be kept. Each customer's box will be opened by an individual key. No duplicates will be made. The banks' books will be kept in a separate fire proof vault which has been built for that purpose. ERECTS BRICK STORE. Extensive improvements by J. H. Menke, flour and feed merchant, in clude the replacing of a corrugated iron structure by a modern brick store room at his business site on Fort Wayne avenue.

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Marinette, Wis. "I went to the doctor and he told me 1 must have an operation for a female trouble, and I hated to have it done as I had been married only a short time. I would have terrible pains and my hands and feet were cold all the time. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and was cured, and I feel better in every way. I give you permission to publish my name because I am so thankful that I feel well again." Mrs- Feed Behnkjs, Marinette, Wis. Detroit. Mich. "When I first took Ivdia E.

I Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I was so run down

SCHOOLS FIGHT SPREAD OF DIPHTHERIA EPIDEMIC

"All precautionary measures will be taken, to eliminate possibilities of a diphtheria epidemic which is threatening Richmond schools." The announcement was made today by Superintendent J. T. Giles of the city schools and by the medical inspectors. Dr. J. E. King and Dr. A. L. Bramcamp. The authorities do not seek to hide the seriousness of the situation disclosed in the discovery of cases of diphtheria in Starr and Vaile schools recently. And yesterday following the discovery of "carriers" the possibilities of an epidemic assumed more threatening aspects. The school fficials, however are hopeful that the measures now being taken will result satisfactorily and the conditions in the schools will gradually become better. Teachers have been instructed to send home all pupils who complain or show evidences of colds or sore throats or other similar slight affections, and many pupils are virtually quarantined in their homes. Fifty pupils from Garfield school alone are absent from school as a result and today several more, it is un THREE MEN TAKEN INTO RED MEN LODGE Ritualistic work for three candidates. Samuel Burton, George Burton and Howard O'Bailey was conducted by Osceola tribe, Improved Order of Red Men. last .light. About thirty-five members of the tribe were present. The sachem, J. E. Reber, presided. The chief's degree will be conferred at the meeting next Thursday night and a banquet will be part of the program for the occasion. SUED FOR $10,000 BEDFORD, Feb. 25. Sada Huff of Marion, sued Dora Strickler of this city for $10,000 for alienation of the affections of her husband. She was awarded $175. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT State of Indiana, Wayne County, ss. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has duly qualified as the executor of the last will and testament of Henry Nolte, deceased, late of Wayne Couny, Indiana. Said estate is supposed to be solvpnt. DANIEL NOLTE. Executor. KELLEY & KELLEY, Attorneys. feb 25-meh-3-10 c:

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derstood were told to remain at home temporarily. The "carriers" (persons having diphtheria germs" in their throat) are declared by the rjedical inspectors to be more dangerous agents for the transmission of the disease than actual cases.

COLEMAN SENTENCED TO CLEAN COURTHOUSE With the commitment of George Coleman, of .ML Auburn to six months in the county jail with instruction to the county commissioners to place him at work at $1 a day which is to be paid to his farcibr, the commissioners will eliminate the appropriation for a special janitor at the court house. The county council recently made an appropriation for a special janitor at $10 a week and two weeks ago Herbert Bundy was appointed. He resigned. Since the commissioners are required, under the provisions of the lazy husbands acL to place Coleman at work, they believe that Coleman, who is a strong, healthy man, will be able to do the janitor work. Gus Kroma. who is also serving a sentence as a "lazy husband," is also working HOW SHE ENDED TEN YEARS OF SKIN - TORTURE If you have an itching, burning, unsightly skin-trouble, you can imagine the feelings of Mrs. C. C. Roberts, when she wrote "I had eczema on my face for ten years. Little red pimples formed irr a small spot on my chin and then spread all over my face. They itched and burned me awfully. It was certainly embarrassing to me, and I would not go amongst people. I tried almost every remedy and treatment th-.t could be used for this trouble but nothing did me any good. I used Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap, and was relieved in a day or two. In one month I was cured. This was six months ago and the trouble has never returned." Weatherford, Okla. Oct. 28. Every druggist sells Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap and doctors have prescribed the Resinol treatment for over twenty years. Adv.

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at the court house. until the weather permits him to work on -the county roads. ' ' '

RECEIVES PETITION. The board of public works today received a petition for cement sidewalks on each side of South B street from Sixteenth Btreet, to half -way between Twentieth and Twenty-first streets. NOT A PIMPLE ANYWHERE IN SIGHT And Any Woman May Become Fres From All Blemishes of Face' or Skin by Using Etuart's Calcium Wafers. One of the greatest blessings a woman can have is to be possessed cf h fine fair skin on face, neck and arms. A little attention now and then to the blood condition makes this possible. Women are great sufferers from blood disorders and hence their complexions are marred because of this facL "A Beautiful Complexion Always Is A Center of Admiring Gaze." Stuart's Calcium Wafers, which are as pleasant to take as a peppermint, give in an exceedingly fchort time a complexion that will rival the ideals of an artist to produce. They act in such a natural way, by cleaning out the pores, throwing off all skin discolorations and blood impurities, that they do their work of beauty building almost before you can believe it possible for them to act at all. You may obtain a box of these delightful wafers from any druggist anywhere. Price, 50 cents. FREE TRIAL COUPON. F. A. Stuart Co., 322 Stuart Bldg., Marshall, Mich. Send me at once, by return mall, a free trial package of Stuart's Calcium Wafers. Name Street .... City , ... State 99 J. SIMPLE PERFECT WORK EASILY v OPERATED UNQUALIFIED GUARANTEE COVERS ALL POINTS

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