Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 137, 26 April 1916 — Page 7

PAGE SEVEN liltdm Boosters Demonstrate Fire Apparatus

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1916

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300STER CLUB

WILL TRYOUT FIRE CHEMICAL

MILTON. Ind.r April 26. The Boostera club will ba ve a good program, Thursday evening. Everybody ? Is Invited.... Owing to rain last Thursday night the fire appartus was no demonstrated 'The demonstration -will be at 7 p .m. Thursday evening, Just before the Boosters club will meet. Every

body Is invited to witness it... ..The ladies of the Christian chnrch will give a- chicken supper at the church basement Thursday evening. Everybody is Invited.,. , . .The Rev. Walter Jerge, of .Ear l ham, was the guest of Miss Serena Hoshour Sunday and attended the baccalaureate services.. .Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lantz and daughter of Pendjeton, spent Sunday with Mr. Lantz's father and sister, L. F. and Miss Liiella Lantz.. ."-: Mesdames O. Ferguson and Oliver Tbornburg were at Richmond Monday.. . . .Mrs. " Clark Britain's company Sunday was, Mesdemes George Keever, Mrs. Clyde Milter-L-r east of town, and W. W. LeverVisit With Relatives. ..Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Newman and family spent Sunday with his sister and aunt..... Dr. and Mrs. Gentle and family of Richmond, were week-end visitors of Mr. and Mrs J. A. Brown. . Miss Irene Crook and guest Mr.

Wessel, of Richmond, were entertain

ed 4wun ,-nr. anu Mrs. ueorge wagner.

west of town, Sunday.. .. .The .schools here closed this morning. The following Is the program for Class week: School picnic, Wednesday, May 3; Class Day, Thursday, May 4. The ex-

eiJbes will be held at the M. E. church

beginning at 1:30 p.' ra. The graduates are Ruth McCormick, Paul Wert ing. Serena Hoshour, Firman McCor-

miCk. Juniors reception for the Sen

iors, the evening of May 5. The party will be given with Olin Davis, at the home of his parents, . Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davis. Commencement, at the Boosters hall Saturday evening. May 6.

.Tim class' address will be- given by

Itcy. Charles . Whitman, of Liberty. AJumnKannual meeting and reception for new members, on Monday evening, May S. - - . . Return to Brookville. i- Miss Amanda Baker of Brookville, time- this week to visit her sisters.

Mrs. Ij. E. Ward and Miss - Martha! Baker. Her niece, Miss Mary Ward, j Who has been the guest of her par- j ents. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Ward and!

other relatives,' returned also to Brookville. .v .. Mesdames O. H. Beeson, Lycrurgus Heson, Oliver Wallace and Miss Bertie, Kra7.ee, wtere guests atYne open meeting of the. Helen Hunt club a( Cambridge City, with Mrs. Krahl, ot McCtfay afte;mQiJhr."-.Mr.na Mrs. James Baker have returned, from a visit dith Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Weaver, of N-jw Castle.. .. ". . Mrs. Hattie Heis( entertained Mesdames Mary Walker and ' grandson Walker Langston, of north of Dublin and Vene Beeson at dinner Sunday. On Monday Mrs. Beeson entertained the same company. . C .Tbe Milton Mason lodge had a big time Monday night, conferring the Master Mason's degree on Henry Hess. There were, about 300 visiting brethren In attendance, the lodges represented being New Madison and (Elyria, O.; Oshkosh. Wis.; Fort Wayne, Eaton and Connersvllle. The lodges, this county

were, Richmond, Webb of Richmond,-

Centerville, Abington, Hagerstown,

Bethel, Williamsburg, Fountain City, Boston. Whitewater and Cambridge City. The work was given by visiting

brothers from Hagerstown, Richmond, Fountain City, Whitewater, Connersvilla and Cambridge City and was iell exemplified. The local lodge BQrved a fine banquet in the bantiuet hall. The tables were very .prettily appointed and graced by the early spring flowers, R. F. Calloway acting as toastmaster. Music was given on

Yankee Aviator Falls

But

Wins

Baroness

it s ' $if s ' ' L 1 - r V ''y", ' ' ' r - C-4 i ! 1 It' ' -: V - ?- ' - - " h ' fa ' , J, y - 1 t- V J,' K 4. "a. -t,y y' 'jfy 'X t Is i j? ' '4'.'i V S' ' ' 4 1 l! 1 v ?v jtf tfe . .' $ ...::... y y.-A-. v. .". .-X-.v.S . . K if wil M i a it fill 4 A II vLiLiL., lUt'iM & Ml P -' ' nrtt iti m tf. i 1 if - i f rtinmft rfynirr--ii AMfVOTMj;jiBMiiifc.!y H fjlWIIIIMHI " I MiM1.uVfr.,,iiiii;i;wmi...., . ,,,.- , . . .. B

lidcx EcoiioLiic : CLUB TO faEET wif ii -Mum

-ECONOArY, Ind.,;AprU 26. The W. C'-Y. U. society will go in a body to Dalton Friday with well-filled baskets and spend the day with Mrs. Hanscom,

who belongs to the. society, here

Saturday afternoon at 2

Home Economic Study club will meet i with . Mrs. Ruby Manning south ! of; town. . The full membership is desired to be present.. . . Wednesday, afternoon at 2 o'clock the Economy - Friends

Sunalatha club will hold a meeting in the U. B. church .The 'Economy OdiV Fellows will have their banquet Wednesday night Thomas Cain's seed corn tested 99 6-10. He commenced shelling it Monday. He's -certainly on time Dudley Bishop has a new bicycle that he "exercises on.... Ed 'Starr of Williamsburg, was here

Monday..... Mr. Anna Bishop will go to Bloomington to take up special work this spring.. . . .W. E. Oler was at

W illiamsburg Monday afternoon

High school closed today, .Wednesday.

... .Mrs. Hannah Kimball and Mrs,

Horace Kimball are visiting relatives

near Cincinnati.

week In Indianapolis on business. v. . . Walter Dunbar and wife of. Indianapolis, are guests of Mr. Dunbar's parents; for. a few days.: ...Miss Jean Dixon visited" Mrs. " Frances"; Fender Thursday Wyota Cook. Martha Adams and Bessie Buhl attended the musical - entertainment; at the Cambridge City Christian church . Friday evening, where Miss Buhl assisted in the program. - Miss Cook and - Miss

- - I Adams .visited Bernice Frlcker )f

Dublin over Sundy.. . . .Kathryn Fait of Indianapolis. Is staying with her sister Mrs. MargaretSeymore, who is in failing health. . Harvey Remodels House. Miss Marie Rodenberg and Master

o clock the; ,i ti.iii'n.imn)i

Mrs.' William Rodenberg.-. .VMrs. Fred

Weber of Chicago, is visiting her parents, Mr. and MrsJohn King.. .. .Mrs. Joseph Zea and daughter Helen, spent a part of last . week with " friends in Dayton. O.....WI11 Harvey, is putting a new foundation under his house and making other improvements. . WU1ard Addington of New Castle, and Eugene Trandall of Mount Vernon, visited their aunt, Mrs. Sam Lashley, Sujlday.'. . . .Mr. and Mrs. Dunkle entertained " the Misses Blajiche and Jeanette Bowen Sunday.

HELEN HUNT CLUB HOLDS RILEY DAY ' IN POET'S HONOR

y CAMBRIDGE CITY Ind... April .26. The Helen Hunt club observed Riley day Monday -with , a guest meeting at "the home of Mrs. M. R. Krahi. The rooms were decorated with magnolias and spring flowers. An attractive program had been arranged by Mrs.

. An electric process is being tried in Russia for the manufacture of gold leaf, heretofore made only by hand.

UUT.-J1RS THEODORE. MAJZBVUG U&. &4oZZl

War has not been wholly unkind to Theodore Marburg? Jr., of Baltimore, soij of the former United States Minister to Brussels. He has just returned on the American liner "StJ Paul with a pair of crutches replacing his left leg, which was amputated after an aeroplane accident, but he brought as his bride, the former Baroness Geselle de Vlvariof of Belgium. Mr. Marburg left Oxford when the war broke out to join the British flying corps, and made hundreds of dangerous flights. He was injured on December 6, last while making an ascension in Belgium to take photographs of the German position. His engine stalled when the aeroplane was but 200 feet from the ground, and Marburg fell. One, of ..the struts pierced. his knee, and amputation was found necessary. But even the loss of a leg had its compensations, chief among them being the visits of the sympathetic baroness, who since April 10 has been Mrs. Marburg.

NEEDLEGRAFT CLUB ADOPTS CONSTITUTION

CENTERVILLE, Ind., April 26. The Needlecraft met with Mrs. Thomas Jessup Friday afternoon, nearly all the. members being present. After a short business session, in which a

constitution was adopted, a social hour was enjoyed, and the hostess served an excellent two-course luncheon Mrs. Tracy Clark entertained at her home on South Tenth street, Richmond, Thursday evening, a number of her friends in honor of MissLetha Dunbar, who will be married' soon. The house was beautifully decorated in ferns, white and yellow flowers and gold colored bells. Those present were , Misses Norene Means, Jean Dixon, Gladys Stevens, Pearl Horner, Bessie Buhl, Myrtle Charman, Lizzie

I Lashley, Lois Brumf ield, Letha Dun

bar, Harriett Stanley, Mesdames Frank Howell, Paul O'Neal, Robert O'Melia and Joseph Zea. Joseph Hurst spent a part of-last

theTictrola at tlme'of the banquet, by Arthur Reese of Cambridge City. , In giving the program of the M. E. Sunday.' school Easter-- services, the name of Harold Daniel was accidently omitted. ' Harold gave a very pleasing violin solo.. ...Dr.1 and Mrs. Squier entertained at a duck dinner Sunday, Messrs. and Mesdames Edgar Beeson, Henry Hess also Charles Ferguson.... Delraad Doddridge; Olin Davis, Will Daniel, Colbert Ingermann and Harry Gause were at Richmond to attend' the symphony concert Monday ; night. . . . . Mrs. Jane Sills and daughter - entertained at -dinner Monday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hartshorn of Fort Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Benner of Richmond, and the Rev. and Mrs. F. C. McCormick; ,

RUINS HER BEAUTY

. EVAN S VILLE, April 26. Mrs. Perclval Pritchett testified when her husband's sight ; was failing he " tried to destroy . her, beauty so . other . men could not feast their eyes on her.

The senior class memorial at Indiana university this year will consist of electric lights mounted on bronze pedestals before the main entrance to the student building.

OFFERS STOLEN SUGAR

MUNCIE, Ind., . April . 26. Housewives missed a bargain when a thief tried to sell 100 pounds of stolen " sugar to Grocer J. E. White, for $6.

' "From the standpoint : of our tax system were a back state," says Dr. Frank T. Stockton of the department of economics and sociology, of Indiana Indiana university.

The Doctor Calls lt "Autb-intosi . Cation" It means self-j ! poisoning an ailment that is almost universal with! men .and women of sedentary employment Its cause is the daily intake of indigestible foods. Mineral oils and saline laxatives will not cure it. Help Nature to clean out the poisons, by eating Shredded Wheat Biscuit, a food that builds healthy tissue and keeps the bowels! sweet and clean. The per-;, feet food of health and' strength for youngsters andj grown-up, for men who) work with hand or brain.! It is ready -cooked and1 ready - to - serve. Made- at Niagara Falls, N. Y.

R. 'P. Lindsey, : and Miss EvaToms. Members responded to roll call '. with quotations from Riley. Miss Toms read a personal letter from Mr. Riley to the dub. which." had : been written In response to ' one .asking him to name. what he considered some of his best poems. Miss Blanche Boyd, with Mies Gaynell Hageman as accompanist, sang a .group of Riley songs. Miss' Marine Kennedy of Muncie gave Minumber of -readings from the Bard, in hervusual charming manner., the favor, a book of the author's verses,.;

(was given Mrs. .Thomas Butler for her readiness in recognizing quota

tions irom certain oi uis poems, m

the serving of luncheon by the enter tainment committee, dainty clusters of spring blowers were used as favors. Among the guests were ladies from Milton and Dublin. j ':. Hear Chicago Orchestra. " Among those from here who heard the Chicago Symphony orchestra at Richmond - Monday- evening were Dcand Mrs. Charles Kniese, Arthur Rees, Mesdames Frank Marson. May Boden, Charles Hageman. Ed Tweedy, J. E. Wright. Misses Gaynelle Hageman. Catherine Callaway, Harriet and Mary Overbeck. -

AN EMBARRASSING PRESENCE. Maud -The lamp is going out. Frank (absently) Good! We shall e alojae . ..'"i-. -- - .

NUXATED IRON ;

Increases strength . of delicate, nervous'

1 1 II T I rundown people 200 I I II 1 1 I per cent in ten d s

Mil j uu uvyw $100 forfeit if -It falls as per full explanation in large

article soon to appear in this paper . Ask your doctor of druggist about It. Conkey Drug Co. always carry it ' in stock. Adv. ' ' '

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lo Yon Ean I

Honey?

If you are no matter how small your income may be you can lay aside rroney. It isn't the size of your Income that counts it's the size of your Savings Account. $1 opens an account at our Bank.

3 INTEREST ON SAVINGS.

SECOND NATIONAL BMC , Richmond's Strongest Bank. Security. Service.

GIVES HEALTH O QO ":' Q' Good Salaries

for capable women to assirf local of fit f""N in the ua of IJ

Piqnified FbsiKons W

Experience orCapifatUNNGCESSASY SCADVEfiT1SCM0rraUWItK U THIS MKR

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9

It would he difficult-for -any parent to find a physician of modern education ; who- would contend that coffee and tea are not harmful, especially - to-: growing children. Tht fact remains, however, that many parents give these' beverages to their little folks and allow their use in older children at a time when physical and mental development is the most rapid. s ' ; The drug, caffeine, in coffee and tea retards growth and interferes with school progress. Disturbances of eyesight, headaches, nervousness, irritability, in-' digestion and other ills appear in many, seemingly without cause,-and the damage often occurs at the most impressionable period of life. No parent should permit the use of coffee and tea in the growing young; for the men and women of tomorrow will be what the parent of today makes the children by wise upbringing. . , Children as well as adults need an invigorating, warm drink, and in a growing number of homes it has been found that the most wholesome table beverage is

This pure food-drink, made of prime wheat and a bit of wholesome molasses is readily prepared at the table, a cup at a time. A level teaspobnful of Instant Postum in a cup of hot water, with cream and sugar added, makes an attractive, healthful drink, and its pleasant flavour, wins children and usually the parents. " . "There's a Reason" Grocers everywhere sell Instant Postum.

OF

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For the remainder of April we offer some unusual bargains in used pianos that have been taken in exchange on player pianos since the first of this year. We want to close out these pianos by May 1, and have made the prices very attractive, and every piano offered in this sale should sell at once as they are positively the best used piano bargains we. have been able to offer for many months. Do You Want a First Glass Piano At Just One-Half Price? If that's what you want then come to this sale, and if you can not pay all cash we will arrange terms to suit you, and you'll soon have your piano paid for and won't miss the money. In this special lot of six used pianos we have one Iver & Pond in walnut case; one Clough & Warren, in fancy oak case; one Singer, made by the Steger Co., of Steger, III.; one Trayser, in oak case; one Starr, large size, in mahogany case and in first-class condition; and one Style "G" Starr. This piano has been used at Earlham college, and is in fine condition, and we thoroughly guarantee it to be satisfactory. Every one of these used pianos are uprights and all in first-class condition. Remember, the sale closes Saturday night.

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Salesroom 10th . Main St. Richmond Indiana.

Salesroom 10th Main St. Richmondt Indiana.

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