Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 136, 25 April 1916 — Page 7
TBE'RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAli. TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1916
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PEOPLE
CASE OF LINCOLN BEFORE COURT SOON
.CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind- April 25.-1 E. V. Whelan and slater Miss Elizabeth, were guest Sunday of their brother Thomas Whelan and family of Richmond. .... Mrs. Leo Guard of Richmond has been spending; several days with her uncle, B. O. Paul, and family. ... .Mr. and Mrs. Walter Garrettson of Knightstown," were the ' guests of Mr. and Mrs. Forest Scudder, Sunday..;.. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Darnell of Indianapolis, have been spending a few days, with the tetter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Van Meter F. H. Ohmit spent Saturday In Richmond attending to business. Spend Week-end Here. Mr. and Mrs. O. U. Toppin and children spent tbe close of the -week with Mrs. Toppln's parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Cooper at Geneva. Ind..... Mrs.
Emil Ebert is the guest of Mrs. Chat. Cope at Richmond Mr. and Mrs. Robert . Wharton entertained Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Loren Helmsingand children, and Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Bavender of Indianapolis Miss Williams of Tipton, was the guest over Sunday of her mother, Mrs. Delia Will
lams..,.. Mr. and Mrs. Santford Wilson Gilbert of Hopewell...,. Mr. and Mn. Will Pike spent Sunday with tbe former's aged mother, Mrs. Pike at Hplceland.. ,. .Mrs. If. D. Bond and son John, visited, friends In Richmond Saturday. Return from Cellna, Mrs. Mary Kreuscb has returned from Cellna, O., where she was called early la the month on account of tbe illness of her sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Crone.... .Mr, and Mrs. John Albert of Terry, Iowa, are spending several days with the formers sister, Mrs.. John Sloniker Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Dronberger havo returned to their home in Anderson, after a visit of several days -with Mr. and Mrs. Charles "Elklor.....Mr, and Mrs; C. H. Smith and daughters,-Adelaide and Marion, attended the funeral of Mrs, Smith's mother, Mrs. Mary Oswald, at BatesVUIe, Sunday..... Mr. and Mrs, T. T. Romer and daughter, Mary, were
guests over Sunday of Mrs. Reiner's brother, Jules Kreuscb, at Cellna O. Leaves for Indianapolis, Will Cooney left for, Indianapolis Monday where he has been employed as a foundryman In one of the leading manufacturing- establishments of . the city.. ...Miss Vivian Shirker suffered a painful injury Saturday by having her band i in a glass door, suddenly closed by a strong current of air. Several stitches were required close the wounds made by the shattered glass.
. .Mr. and Mrs." Lee Pitman enter
tained at a family dinner, Sunday. Mr.
and Mrs. Wlllard Petro, Mrs. Delia Williams and family, and Mrs. Claude Heck of New Castle. .. .Mrs. R. A.
Hicks will represent the Helen Hunt club and Mrs. Joe Moore, tbe Domestic Science club, at tbe district meeting of Federated clubs at Shelbyvllle this week Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Somraers
entertained a number of friends from
Dayton, O., Sunday., . . .Judge Gray of
Connersvllle, was a Cambridge City
visitor Monday. -: , .
SCOTT MORA IS DEAD
M 1LTON, Ind., April 25. Scott
Mora, 0, died, at tbe borne of bis
grandmother, Mrs. Jennie Summers, at
this place Monday morning at
o'clock of hemorrhages of tbe lung. He
leaves bis father Carol Mora, who Is professor st music in the college at Key West, bis mother Mrs. lone Sum
mers Mora, who was at his bedside, and one sister. Funeral arrangements have not vet been made. The little
boy was always frail and he was sent here in hopes that his health would be better. He was taken ill Saturday night, one week ago. ; KILL 6,736 FLIES
JU-..1 -. . V
Arguments for the "'determination
for tbe appeal of Ignatius T. T. Lin coin, tbe so-called Gernfan spy, who it
resisting extradition to Great Britain,
will be begun April 30 before the
United States supreme court
COLUMBUS, Ind.. April 25 In spite of chilly weather hurting the fly crop, eighteen leaders in a contest killed 6.736 flies. - -
Woman's Eve
I J " II
Events in Economy
By N. H. Edwards.
Deaths In Preble
MIS3 MALINDA EARLY. EATON, April 25. Funeral serv
ices for Miss Malinda Early, SO. will
be .held Tuesday afternoon- . at 2
o'clock at. the homo of .Joseph off-
man; East Main street conducted by tbe Rev. J. C. Shaw of St Paul's
M. E. church. Burial in Mound Hill
cemetery. Miss Early died Monday at
the Coffman home, where she had lived for the last fifty-sef en years. Death, was the result of cariac asthma and other ailments. She was born and reared near W6st Alexandria, and had passed her entire life in Preble county. She is" survived by two Bisters, Mrs. John Tingle of Richmond,
Ind, and Mrs. Chris Huffman or camden, -v
HOLD ROSS RUN ERA L.
NEW PARIS, 0-, April. 25. The
funeral services over the remains of
Mrs. Ross Reid were held Saturday afternoon at the Christian church. Rev.
George F. Crites officiating. Mrs.
Reld was 86 years of age and was born
in Maryland, having lived here for seventy-five years. One son. Edward
B. Reid, four grandchildren and two
great grandchildren survive, besides her husband. " Burial was made In
Sprlnglaws cemetery-
HOLD WADE FUNERAL.
NEW PARIS. Ohio, April 25. The
funeral of Marion Wade, aged 20 years!
was held Friday . afternoon from the home of William Booher, Rev. -Pierce of Richmond, in 'charge. Young lady
friends of the young man were pall
bearers, interment being . made in Sprlnglaws cemetery beside the grave of his mother, who died & few, years ago. Charles Wade of Richmond, is the boy's father. . CHARLES DRULEY WEDS
EATON, O, April 25- Charles E. Druley. of Richmond, nd., and Minnie Viola Adams, near this city, were married Monday afternoon by the Rec Charles A. Hunter at the Presbyterian parsonage.
FALL FRIGIITEtlS THIEF
NEW PARIS. 0 April 25. An attempt was made recently to burglarise the CV A. Plerson pool room and cigar store, a . transom , in the rear being broken out The thief had 'climbed upon a stack of boxes and used an old broom to tear the covering-from the transom,-and then made an attempt to push a chair from under the knob tf the door. - In doing so, he lost his. hold upon the brodm and it fell into the store room, the noise must have frightened the burglar away. New locks and windows replaced the old the following day. Zinc production of the United States during 1915 amounted to $560,000 tons.
PLANT SPfCE TREES
f SPICELAND. Ind., April 25. To commemorate the naming of this city, each citizen la requested to plant apice tree. . . " ;
iVVapwtreataMforeoMtrottiaeeare .better than inters! mtdkuKo, tba va:pors carry tb vdioat!oa. diraet to the ng and air passages wrtboutt disturUag jtbe stomach. . When VWrt TapOJtoV- Salve to ep-' phad ever the throat and chest these va-t PVf1 bTtlhoitiibody,ar.' iwAaled with each breath." S5e.tsgl.oa
NERVOUi INDIGESTION. Mrs, J. F. Baldwin, Sandy Creek, N. Y., suffered a great deal from pains In the stomach due to nervous Indigestion. She writes, "Chamberlain's Tablets relieved me right away, and by taking three or four bottles of them I was cured of tbe trouble and have not felt any of the old symptoms since." Obtainable everywhere. Adv.
Charley Atkinson and son have four teams and a force of hands excavating for the basement for their new business building at the corner of Main and Maple streets . . . . Burnie Swain, proprietor of the Economy creamery, is making arrangements to install an ice plant Word was received here that Mrs. Lulu Rakestraw of Carlos City had undergone an operation for the removal of a tumor near her heart. ...Mr. and Mrs. Pete Woods were shopping in Richmond Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. Roll Hite and children- have returned to their home at Kokomo Miss Blanche Fennimore has returned from school work at Loeantsville, Modoc and Huntsville Mrs. Emma Harter, who has been critically ill with dropsy Is reported better. DR. JONES TO SPEAK.
MILTON, Ind., April 25. Dr. Jones pastor of . the M. E. church at Cambridge City, will preach at the M. E. church here . Wednesday evening. Everybody is invited.
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A charming garden fete frock is shown in white embroidered batiste. The lines are simple and youthful. Narrow ruffles are arranged on the bottom of the skirt which is distended by a hoop of boning. Long sleeves and a V neck are features of the bodice. A crushed ribbon girdle in Joffre blue affords a smart color note. The broad brimmed hat with ribbon streamers is a distinctive novelty.
Healthy Old Age Brings Happiness
Simple Remedy Promotes Health By Overcoming Tendency to Constipation. Advancing years impair the action of the vital organs. Old age should be the period of greatest happiness, but good health Is necessary. Constipation Ehould not be tolerated it is often the direct cause of ill health. . Headache, belching, biliousness, bloat, drowsiness after eatingand other symptoms of constipation can be readily rel-eved by the use of a simple laxative compound sold in drug stores under the name of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Mr. J. H. Bristol, 1412 Gedds Ave., Ann Arbor, Mich., who is 83 years old, says "Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is the best remedy I ever used for constipation and I always have a bottle of it in the house to use when I feel the need of it; it never disappoints." Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a mild laxatixe preparation, positive in its effect, acting easily and naturally without griping or other pain or discomfort. For over a quarter of a century it has-1een the standard household remedy in- thousands of homes.
f "-JSt.l.J
MR. J. H. BRISTOL.
Druggists everywhere sell it for fifty cents a bottle. A trial bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin can be obtained free of charge, by writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 454 Washington St., Monticello, Illinois. Adv.
With appetite keen, digestion normal, and no fear of any after eating distress helps very materially HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS in bringing a b o u t such, a condition. It is an excellent tonic . and appetizer. Try it.
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Every IVcnanShcald Use Every VJcck Shanpco
To Preserve Her Hair If women would use an Aati-Septie Oil Shampoo instead of the soaps and shampoos bow se eonunasly used, they, would improve rather than injure the delicate hair plants. r " j The hair plant is an. oil plant and towash it with , soaps or shampoos eon-, taining f ree alkali works great injury j It not only cuts the natural oil of the: hair but it destroys the fatty roots ofi the hair plant causing the hair to' tome out. . : ' EVEET WEEK AjnT-SEPTIC OIL SHAMPOO cleanses and purifies the scalp dissolves and rem ores dandruff, opens the clogged hair-eells and leaves the scalp soft and healthy. It leaves the "hair soft, lustrous, fluffy and easy to handle. Excellent for men and children also.' A large bottle holdiag 64 teaspoonf uls 50e at Thistlethwaite's drues -:
Fop
ncies
When you have a bilious at tack,' or when you feel illness coming on promptly move the bowels, start the liver working and put your entire digestive system in good shape with a dose or two of the time-tested
mm
putt
You will welcome the quick relief and often ward off a severe illness. Beecham's Pills are carefully compounded from vegetable products mild, harmless, and not habit-forming. Buy a box now. You don't know when you may need Beecham's Pills. A reliable family remedy that always Should Be at Hand Uf!?S Any KfeKciB. fa. thm World.
H. C Hasemeicr Co
Silk Sale
Month-End.
We are showing thousands of yards of all the new things in Silks in both the plain and fancy weaves, including plenty of the scarce shades. This has been the biggest silk season we have ever had and we are going to close the month with some exceptional values for Wednesday, Thursday,. Friday and Saturday
TAFFETA SILKS A. beautiful soft finish plain Chiffon Taffeta Silk in twenty different shades including black and white, a yard .$1.50 STRIPED TAFFETAS A large assortment of yard wide fancy striped Taff eta Silks In either the wide or narrow stripes, in all of the wanted shades; here you will also find a good line of the fancy checks and plaids. Many of these are regular $1-39 ind $1.50 values, a yard... $1.25 $1.39 PER YARD One counter of All Silk Crepe Do Chenes In twenty good shades including White, Ivory, Flesh and Black. .The width is full 40 inches. A cloth ihat would be considered cheap at $1.75 a yard. Priced for Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, a yd. $1.39 NEW PONGEES These are one of the season's most popular silks and we offer a complete line in either the plain or wide fancy stripes. On account of the wide width it does not require many yards for a Waist, Suit, Dress or Skirt. You must see the special things we are offering in this line. SILK POPLINS These goods continue in favor and we are showing a beautiful cloth in ten good shades. The colors are Reseda, Russian, Tan, Navy, New Blue, Brown, Silver, Prune, Rose and Black; the width is full 36 inch. Priced special, a yard S9 GEORGETTE CREPES V We show every wanted shade in our 40-inch All Silk Georgette Crepe in White, Ivory, Black and twenty other shades; a regular $2.00 value; priced special, a yard $1.69
CHIFFON CLOTH 40-inch Chiffon Cloth this Is a wash chiffon and comes in all the light or dark shades. Including white and black, a yard ...... j .,-$1.00
BLACK SILKS Yard Wide Black Messaline, a yard 9S . Yard Wide Black Taffeta, a yard ....S9 Yard Wide Black Peau De Sol, a yard $1.25 Yard Wide Black Taffeta, a yard $1.25 EXTRA SPECIAL Yard wide soft finish Chiffon Taffeta; we bought a few too many; a regular $1.75 value, a yard "$1.39 40-inch Black SaUn Duchess, a yard .-$1.50 27-inch Black Habutal, a yard . -50 36-inch Black Silk and Cotton Crepe De Chene, a yard v50 TUB SILKS We show a beautiful line of fancy striped Tub Silks for Ladies' Blouses, Men's Shirts and Children's wear. They come in either White or Tan ground with the fancy colored stripes. We have arranged them in three groups. Tbe widths are 32 and 36 inch. Priced special, a yard i---$1.00, 79, G9 ' CREPE DE CHENE 50c This cloth is made of Silk and Cotton and will wash it comes in Nile, Maize, Pink, Sky, Copenhagen, Navy, White and Black; the width is 36-inch; a yard . 50 " SILK MARQUISETTE" Five pieces of half Silk Marquisettes in White. Sky, Rose, Pink and Copenhagen, full yard wide and will wash, a regular 75c value, a yard 59c
The Store with Only One Price
H. C. HASEMEIER CO.
SUIT
SALE
After Easter
Real Reductions! Genuine Savings! Our entire line of new spring suits for Ladies', Misses and Juniors, all go at greatly reduced prices. No two alike. All sizes and colors. All suits received Easter week included.
Suits Worth up to $15.00
Choice
$8.98
Suits Worth up to $21.50
Ghoice$12.9
None Held Back
Not
an
Old-Suit in the Lot
Suits Worth up to $25.00
9
ChoiceS
Suits Worth up to $35.00
$19.9
Free of G
Permit us to suggest that you come in the morning hours if possible. It will be for your best interest.
L
The Store with; Qiraly One, Price
