Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 122, 3 April 1916 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, APRIL 3, 1916

T0BE3EB -t nmi am

HEADS ICJDiAfJfl CLUES at sioux city, mm

MILTON, Ind., April. 3. A, clipping

1 from the Sioux City, Iowa - Journal, i Inder date of March 27, refers to,a&

Indian Society, to have been organ

ized in' that city Wednesday evening,

March 29. One of the promoters of eald prganlzation is Frank Card, son

vi me late Mr. ana Airs. Joseph qard, well known her. Mr. flarrt waa rear.

ed at Milton, and is also a brother of Daniel Gard, of Richmond. All Hoosiers residing at, or in the vicinity of

oioux uiiy, were requested to meet upon the said date. Officers pre

elected and nrrancempnla marlo tnr

: . -

! permanent organization and future ; meetings.-. .".Mrs. W. H. Brown ha9 returned from Bluffton, where she spent-a few days - with her father. John North Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Hart spent Saturday with friends out of town. . . .Oscar Kirlln, W. L. Parkins, Chas. Wolfgang, Albert Anderson, Walter Templin, Frank Wallace, Root Beeson, C. J. Coppock, Benj. Doddridge, : Jesse Revelee, were a bunch of Masons from Milton Masonic lodge to attend the third degree work and chicken supper at the Hagerstown Masonic lodge, Friday evening. Organize Sunday School. The Union Sunday school at Harrisburg, five' milea south of town, was re-organized Sunday Mies Sarah Roberts spent over the week-end with ( her sister, Mrs. Emma Fulghum and : family, at Richmond. .. .Clinton Case - and son, Donald, were Connersville

visitors, Saturday Miss Daphne Dailey, east of town, who has been sick through the winter, does not improve rapidly Mrs. Lute Lantz was at Connersville, Friday, to spend the day with her mother. Mrs. M. E. KinBey.... Mrs. Wilbur Elwell and daughter, Mies Marie, were Connersville visitors, Saturday.

! Dri Squier In Party. ! Dr. and Mrs. Cullen Squier and ) daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hess. ! Mr.? and Mrs. Harry Manlove and family. Mrs. L. A. Bragg, Mr. and Mrs. ; Albert Newman, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Davis and son, Olin; Ralph Moore, the Rev. and Mrs. M. S. Taylor and son. Sylvan: Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Brown and son, Mrs. W. H. Brown and son, Dwight; - Mesdames Flora Ferguson, Albert Anderson, Messrs. George and

Frank. Rothermel, Will Scott and Sam Hoshour formed a party to see "The Battle Cry of Peace at Cambridge

City, Friday evening. . . . The Rev. F,

C. McCormick preached the funeral sermon 'of the late Jennings Cheney, at Centerville, Saturday; morning. The services were held at the grave Miss Margaret Thunnan of Cambridge City, w the week-end. guest of her grandparents. Mn and Mrs. Frank Doty..., Homer Bertsch and sister. Miss Laura, -Messrs and Mesdames Clark Faucett and Clayton Kimmel, of east of town, formed a" party to see "The Battle Cry of Peace." Friday ev. ening: . . .The Rev. F. C. McCormick attended a social given by the Christian Endeavor society of the Christian church-at Centerville, Friday evening Mesdames O. I;. Beeson. Boyer, .Will Daniel, Oran Bragg, Edward Wilson. R. W. "Warren, Geo. Klemm. .Miss Hattie Sills,. Mr. and Mrs. Theo Crist and Mr 8. W. L. Parkins, formed- a party to see "The Battle Crv of Pear r

Cambridge City, Friday, afternoon:

FAMINE OF r.:iLK THREATENS CHICAGO

CHICAGO,. April 3. More than one million quarts of milk "were diverted from the Chicago market today by producers of this district because the distributing companies refused to grant the dairymen's demand for $1.55 per hundred pounds. The lack of milk was not felt today, but it waa stated that wholesale customers would face a shortage tomorrow and that Individ

ual consumers would Degin surrering

sued statements saying, "that Babies

or tne city woum not go without milk, regardless of how much it cost to sup

ply lamnies witn iniant cnnare.n.

In Spring the Young Man's Fancy

i -

NEW PARIS

Mr. and Mrs. Francis "Via returned

Wednesday from a week a visit with U. T. Via, aged father of Mr. Via, who

lives near Eldorado Dr. and Mrs.

Carl W. Bean of West Manchester.

were Wednesday guests of Mr. and

Mrs. M. H. Pence. Dr. Bean is county

coroner and was summoned here on

the Horn case.... Mrs. E. C. Pence

and daughter, Martha, of Pittsburgh.

are visiting local relatives.... Miss

Essie Ballenger, who has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Colvin, returned to her home at Westville, Thursday.

Count Sent to Jail

News from Modoc

By Alice Hansom.

Charles Kendle of Richmond, visited relatives here last week... ..Mr. and Mrs. "Everett Howell will move to GreensforL this week Carl Dudley spent Sunday at Winchester with his family.. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Grubbs and children of Losantsville, spent Sunday here with Mrs. Grubbs' parents. Mr. and Mrs. James Strothers. Mrs. Myrtle Hunt has returned to the home of her daughter, Prof, and Mrs. Keever at Knightstown.. .. .Miss Mary Kem of Lynn, will begin a music class here this week Miss Bernice Howell has returned home from Ar

kansas. where she spent the winter with her sister. Mrs. Claude Davison. . Mrs. Alice Hanscom and son Lester, spent Thursday at Richmond and Hagerstown Mr. and Mrs. Smith Lee. were called to Galium, O.. last week on the account of the serious illness of their daughter. Mrs. Don Ward Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harter

and Mrs. Mosier will move to the

Harter farm U mile west of Modoc the coming week Mis3 Elizabeth Mendenhall of New Castle, visited friends here a week Silas Conarroe, who has been sick a year is very low at this writing with no hopes of recovery, Mrs. Bertha Lee and little daughter visited here last week from New Castle Rev. Harve Thornburgh of Farmland, delivered a temperance lecture to a well-filled house Thursday evening, the free will offering amounting to eight dollars Mrs. Inez Harris and son Keith, of Richmond, were guests of Dr. and Mrs. Keith over Sunday .Miss Alma Burrough. a clerk in pJhes and Gillium store, and Lloyd Whitehead, a teacher near Farmland, will be married this week. They will reside in Indianapolis.

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SAVANT LOSES MIND

COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo., April

3- -A nationwide search of three years

has ended in the finding of Cecil La-

veil, 44, former dean of Queen's col

lege. Kingston. Ont., and at one time professor of history at Columbia university. The former educator was washing dishes In a local hotel. He admitted bis identity, and saHd he had been suffering from amnesia. In Detroit recently, he said, he partially regained his memory, but he sent no word to bis wife, because he desired to experiment with his mind until his full memory returned.

News of Cambridge

By Harriet Ault.

LET ELECTION BALLOTS

EATON. O., April 3. When the board of election supervisors meet in Eaton next Saturday contract will be awarded for the 'printing of ballots for he coming primary election. It will require. 7,500 ballots. Charles O. Fisher of this city is clerk of the board.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wharton have been spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Bavender at Indianapolis Prof. Charles Woolard of Hagerstown, was a Cambridge City visitor, Thursday Mrs. Omer Huddleston of Muncie, is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mason. Mrs. M. E. Mason, who with her husband has spent the winter in Detroit, was the guest of friends here Wednesday and Thursday Mrs. Mary Mank

has returned to Cambridge City from Indianapolis, where she has resided the past two years, and will occupy the Charles Boyd property on Capitol Hill The Friday Night club has selected as a subject for studv the crim

ing year, "The Northwest Territory," which includes the five states north of the Ohio and east of the Mississippi rivers Thirty members of Cambridge City lodge No. 5, F. and A. M., attended the meeting and banquet of

Centerville lodge, Friday evening Mr. and Mrs. Omer Manlove and children will be guests over Sunday of Mrs. Jason Jones, at Muncie Mrs. Robert Hughes spent Thursday and Friday at Richmond, visiting her mother, Mrs. Addie, Bowman Geo. Callaway spent Thursday in Indianapolis, attending to business.

EATON Funeral services will be

held at 2 o'clock TueBday afternoon

in the M. E. church at Gettysburg for

Lydia A. Hickman, 1, wife of Benja

min F. Hickman. Burial will be in

Spring Lawn cemetery at New Paris.

Mrs. Hickman died at 10 o'clock Sat

urday night at the home of her daugh

ter, Mrs. William Gray, following an

illness caused by paralysis. Beside Mrs. Gray she is survived by thre other

cniidren, Mrs. .Lillian Karns and Wil

liam and Samuel Hickman.

FILM EEBVKS

MORE DRYS THAN WETS

The shrinking of "Count" Jean de ! "So vou are a count are vou" XlXLfJ era. K anUap

in swi ; Z:,: " '1 r1 waDlnis attorney for his re

INDIANAPOLIS. April 3. Dr. Albert Stanley has compiled a table which he declares shows there are 235,607 dryvoters in the state, compared to 166,586 wets.giving the wets a majority of 69.021. Dr. Stanley is a candidate for the prohibition nomination for governor.

Merit's Reward Merit's reward is often imitation. It is the article with character that is copied, but imitation is seldom more than label-deep. No reputable dealer ever offers to sell you a substitute for an article you ask for. You are justified, if the storekeeper trys it, in asking him whether there is not a little extra profit on the substitute. When you see an article advertised in this newspaper, ask for it by name and insist on getting what you ask for.

in Superior Judee ('

at Los Angeles, when the young man came up for sentence on a burglary charge. The revelation that the young man. who had posed as a French nobleman, was the son of an Ocean Park Height rancher was a shock to several young women who had gathered in the court room. They had come under his spell and attributed to him ancestral halls and a gilded coronet. Gianini looked around to see if a particular young woman was present, the one, in fact, who used to believe he was a verv fascinatinc-

also a count. She believed the latter

assumption so strongly that she married him and fancied herself the countess. She is Mrs. Maud Baker de Mar.

quette.

Mrs. de Marquette did not need the disillusionment, however, having penetrated the sham some time ago. When Gianini was convicted of a felony last week, she filed a suit for divorce.! naming that as ground for her action. !

lease that he might go back and fight

ior r ranee Gianini drew himself up somewhat haughtily and admitted that the title fitted. "Read that record, Captain Dodds," said the judge to his chief probation officer. The record showed that Gianinf had

oeen spending most of his ttmo

getting arrested and serving sentences

in me past ten years, also that he was born in Providence, R. I., and had never been to France. "You are the most unprincipled, brazen and foolish imposter I have ever seen in this court room," said the judge. "Five years in Folsom." The young wife was not in the court room, but when informed of the

situation said:

"I knew he wasn't a count. Rnnn

after our marriage his whole shabby

pretense was exposed to me. I am sorry he has to go to prison, but not surprised. That is as far as my concern extends."

ma

II

ItchingTorture Stops

We Always Have Exactly What We Advertise."

It is unnecessary for you to suffer with eczema, ringworm, rashes and similar skin troubles. A little zenio, gotten at any drug store for 25c, or $1.00 for extra large bottle, and promptly applied will usually give instant relief from itching torture. It cleanses and soothes the skin and heals quickly, and effectively most bkin diseases. Zemo is a wonderful disappearing liquid find does not smart the most delicate skis. It is riot greasy, is easily applied and costs little. . Get it today and 6a ve all further distress. Zemo, Cleveland. . .

Peii's Fine U Sl Wars

Rare, deep cuttings, in neavy. clear, white blanks, are the quality characteristics of our satisfying display of Hawks Cut Glass. Procured from Hawks the foremost manufacturers of the world whose work ranks first in artistic designs and novelty of pattern. ' For gifts, or for your own personal, comfort and pride, the disDlav offers many suggestions, and the low prices will certainly bppeal to Cuto'lass0 Vicil"ty we are exclusive agents for Hawks famous

raitfwims

1

"The Best Place to Shop After All.-

To little hearts and big ones, too the Wrigley Spearmen are calling, calling, every day: Their message is one of good cheer about this refreshing, beneficial goody that costs so little but means so much to comfort and contentment Send for the Spearmen's Gum-ption book for young and old, illustrated in colors. Address Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co., 1603 Kesner Bldg., Chicago

meal

ASSESORS COMPLETE

HALF THEIR WORK

Township assessors at . work throughout the county report that the assessing Is Dracticallv half

AH assessing must be done by the fist of May.

County Assessor Matfhewa m tn.

day that very little change has been noted In assessing property In Wavne Mm. ....

wumjr, ana mat me report will show practically the eama vninntw.

previous year. It any change whatever is noted. It probably will be a decrease. Assessment this year is only on personal property, which is being assessed less every year comnarerf wtth h

assessed value of real estate.

inis decrease in the value, nia

on personal nronertv is

ing. according to County Auditor Bow

man, wno nas made a study of taxing '

m mis county. He said that real estate is continually, increasing

and It will only be a matter of time

oen taxes wm be paid entirely on real estate.

The leading steel companies liar tn

hand contracts, which will enable them to run to capacity in the more Important products for the full year of 1916.

I j j Deaths in Preble

Fifty Per Cent are Rejected Fifty per cent of all applicants for Navy enlistment are rejected as physically unfit. Strong, healthy muscles, sound teeth and good brain are built out of the foods you eat. The most perfect "ration ever devised is Shredded Wheat Biscuit, the food that furnishes all the material the human body needs in a digestible form. Don't be re

jected! Keep yourself fit for

tne oajrs "work by eating Shredded -Wheat far breakfeat with hot or cold milk or

cream. -Eat it for luncheon

with sliced bananas, baked apples and other fruits.

Give nature a chance. Mada

at Niagara Falls, N. Y

rjjLl h) M L

in l I 1' "II -V- XV'f ff - "

M Y"r

Va

Use This Clear Soap

f or a Clearer Skin JAP ROSE

Ta wonderful "Sunday Morning Bath

SOAP

is wonderfully pure. The

lather absorbs that "dirty"

feeling and instills a delightful freshness.

Unexcelled for Shampoo, Bath and General Toilet Use.

Best For Your Oily Skin i

For Free Sample Write James S. Kirk & Co,

USE COOPER'S BLEND

Coffee

COOPER'S GROCERY

I S7. - jm

PHOTOS

722 MAIN St RICHMOND, ifs

The DENNIS Shop

TAILORS Suits or Top Coat $18.00 to $40.00.

Number Elaht North Tenth St.

kftK Jin!! Wa if

A fl, BBSS

I

D. E. ROBERTS Piano Tyner and Reitairer

For 5 years at the heao of the tuning and repair department in the largest Diano hnnso

In the state.

Don't send away for a tuner. Phone 3684

Whatever is Proper . For Men to Wear Iff It's Haberdashery Find It at

Lichtenfels InTheWestcott