Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 142, 2 May 1916 — Page 7
rttbl K1CH210ND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TlSJLEGliAM. xufcSDAY, May 2, 1916.'
PAGE StiVhH
FSHDTAIffG
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FOUNTAIN ' CITY. Ind, May 2. Rer. Ferry' Case, pastor of the Christian church, has tendered - his realisation to iifie Sunday v school board, to Uke effect September U Rev. Case will go to Wilson, S. C . to take charge of the science department of Atlantic Christian' college, at an advanced salary; His many friends will regret his departure. . . .Miss Naomi Edgerton entertained Misses Dot and Pauline. .Marine, Esther Brooks and Celia Barnes Sunday. . . .Mr. and Mrs. Ij. O. Anderson entertained in honor of Mr. and Mrs.,. F. M, Lacey -and daughters,-Messrs. and Mesdames Bert Lacey, Frank Skinner Forrest Lacey, F. M. Lacey, Lanra Bertsch ot-Cen-
NAME VIEWERS TO PASS UPOM CONCRETE ROAD
Viewers were appointed by the board of county commissioners Monday after, rtoon for eleven of the fifteen miles of proposed concrete road on the National highway west of the Wayne- , Center township line. , ;;, Five petitions have been presented to the commissioners, and two others are In preparation and will be; presented as soon as a section of the road located west of the poor farm is made a free county turnpike, thereby legalizing the petitions. Enough signatures have been secured for the-entire lmprovement from the Wayne township line to the Henry county line, approximately fifteen miles. ; v The commissioners appointed Kearney Cofleld of Cambridge City and Hiram Crook of Milton as viewers for all sections of the proposed Improvement. The commissioners agreed to appoint the same men as viewers for the entire road so that the benefits and damages that may be declared may be assessed equally throughout the entire fifteen miles. SCHOOLS ABANDON DAYS FOR VISITING
tervflle, John .Shoemaker, Misses Aletha, Zella and Sylvia Lacey, Gwendolyn, Martha and Geraldlne Lacey.. . . . Isom Elleman and wife of Richmond were the week end guests of relatives here. , Carrels Surprised.". Mr. and Mrs. Roy Carroll were pleasantly surprised at their home Sunday by a number of relatives and friends.
, . . . Joshua Chenoweth and L. O. An
derson have purchased automobiles i..
nuwmu .eia ana iamiiy spent Saturday and Sunday with Frank- Longlellow and family. ...... . Two cars collided on Main street Sunday. Little damage was done..... Relatives from New Castle motored to Fountain City Sunday and were guests of Merrill Edgerton and -wife.. . . .The New Garden township Sunday school convention was held at the Christian church Sunday. Dot Marine of Richmond spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Marine. - . .
RELIEF VESSEL SINKS
LONDON. May 2. The ' Swedish steamer Fridland,- a Belgian relief ship has met with disaster and is sinking, according to an announcement issued by Lloyds. Te first report gave no details. The Fridland recently sailed from the United States for European ports. It - is a" steamer of 4.960 tons, hailing from Gothenburg, and was built ia I9iq. , DELIVER NEW GRAVEL.
DARS OLD TEACHERS FR0I.1 OUTSIDE UNIT
The county commissioners, Monday afternoon, awarded the contract to supply the road department with? a gravel dip to the Greenfield Bridge and Sewer company for 1437. The machine will be delivered the' first of next week and put in. operation in the northwestern part of the Yxnmty.., '.
GOOD SHIP
DRAW PLAN
Teachers In the Wayne county schools will not be given the benefit cf a day's vacation next year as is customary when the teachers visit otter schools. On request of the inductors themselves, who do not care lose their day's pay as required by Vv. the board of education decided to fltpense with visiting day nex,t year. ' The county schools will open on September 4, according to the action taken by the board.; Two days vacation will be given during October during the state teachers' association con"vention and the schools will close on December 23 for the Christmas vacation.
KLINGMAN INVENTS PHONOGRAPH DEVICE
A phonograph reproducer, the invention of John E. Klingman. 1117 North H streets is said to have interested local capital. The Invention, according to n local phonograph agent, will prove immensely valuable in the phonograph industry. Klingman, who. is janitor of the Whitewater grade schools, is rated as on of the best mechanics of the city. He has made numerous minor inventions.The exact nature of KHngman's Invention has not been divulged pending the arrival of patent rights from Washington. The Invention, it is said, will mean an immense, saving to producers of phonograph supplies.
Continued From Page One. instructed to prepare an ordinance providing for the issuance of the refunding bonds. v v Report Outlines Plan.' . In the report a plan is, set forth for the retirement - of - these bonds, year, by year until 1925, . which. Is somewhat different from the plan previously agreed upon by the ordinance committee of council. The first plan provided that: the first bond retirement should be in .1918, when $29,000 was to have been applied to the $139,000 refunding bond debt; exclusive of interest, reducing the debt to $110,000. Then each insulng year for the following six years $15,000 of bonds were to have been retired. The last year the remaining $20,000 of bonds, were to have been taken up. r The plan provided in the report submitted last night makes the first payment on the refunding bond debt on July 5, this year, of $4,000 taken from the plant's sinking fund, which is $1,000 a month from the plant earnings. The final payment -would be made in October. 1925. ' The following table shows the method provided in the report for the retirement of the refunding bonds:.
Am't Debt. Int. " Total.
Continued From Page "One. when he was a regular resident of the Quaker city. - For some time Marx had. looked-forward to the day ha should come over to Richmond, obtain the wedding license and return to Dayton with the Quaker, City bride. , And yesterday , was that day. Marx arrived In Richmond yesterday morning and immediately made all arrangements for7 the ceremonies which were necessary before Mr. and' Mrs. Marx could return to Dayton. Yesterday afternoon, Marx In . company with his bride-to-be started for the court housi in quest of the necessary documents. ' . ; As the story goes the two got as far as Fourth and Main streets before the courage of the prospective Mrs. Marx began to wan?. 1" ' The bride-to-be was scared and she admitted it. - Persuasive Towers of the Kroom-to-
be availed little in the quieting of the bride-to-be. : Just how long the couple discussed the momentous question is not known. At any rate the records i the county clerk's office show nothing that might lead one to believe that the bride-to-be had later changed her mind. Marx, it is said, returned to Dayton on the first traction-out of the city.
The county board, of education has passed a - resolution ' which will be taken as a precedent by the township
trustees fn the hiring of teachers fof the county' schools. No teacher will be Appointed hereafter who has taught; more ban eighteen yeara outside the; county? pension unit. The rule ; was' passed by the board of education to prevent, what might be termed an Imposition on the teachers living within the pension unit in having an outside teacher receive the benefits of this pension law 'when she has nov given her services in the "Wayne county schools, " .
ASKED TO ARBITRATE
f.'OTOn ORDINAGE
AMSTERDAM, May 2. It has been suggested in German political circles, says a dispatch from Berlin today, that King Alfonso of Spain has been asked to arbitrate in the dispute which has arisen between the United States and Germany over the tetter's submarine warfare.
Continued From Page One! Burdsall,: whose business has taken him out of the city." - The vote on the bond issue ordinance was as follows:
Ayes Carter Howells. 0"XeaL Wil
liams, Waidele and 'White. -
Nays Handler. Steiribrink. TCalter-
man. Wllkina and .Weishaupt. -The council rule oertalnine to the
enactment of ordinances reads as ttit-
lows: -v, : -
"A quorum shall, consist of a majority of all members elected, but no ordinance, order or resolution shall be passed, or ordinance engrossed, which shall not ' have -received the votes of a majority of all members constituting the common council." ' . A xnaority,of the council members
elected is - seven, there being twelve councilman. .Burdsall v- known to be in favor of issuing the fire department bonds' and ha" may arrange to attend the next council meeting to break the' deadlock on this' measure: m ' -The administration is keenly deslrousof putting through - this, ordinance and President Bavis of the "board urged its adoption. ? He declared the bond issue would not be a debt against the city but an investments Ha said the. motorization of; the fire department would save the city $500 a year cm horse feed, or five per cent on the amount invested in the improvement , Councilman Waltennan opposed the adoption of the ordinance because he did not think the amount to be issued
! sufficient He said tre cost of the
ambulance-patrol had been figured at $1,500 and investigation had -shown that $2,S00 was the least amount a satisfactory ambulance-patrol " could be . purchased for. : Handley v favored
July. 1916.,$ 4,000 ' $ 4,000 Oct., 1916.. 1,350 1,350 April, 1917. 15,000 . 2.700 2,700 Oct., 1917.. 15,000 2,700 . 17,700 April, 1918. " 2,400 2,400 Oct.. 1918.. 15,000 2.400 17,400 April, 1919. - 2,100 2,100 Oct.. 1919.. 15.000 2,100 17,100 April, 1920. 1,800 1,800 Oct.. 1920.. 15,000 l,80O 16.800 April, 1921". " ' ' 1,50.1" 1,500 Oct., 1921.. 15,000 1,500 16,500 April, 1922. 1.200 1.200 Oct.; 1922.. 15,000 1.200 16,200 April, 1923. .. , 900 900 Oct, 1923.. 15,000 900 15,900 April,' 1924. ' 600 600 Oct., 1924., 15,000 600 15,600 April, 1925. 300 ' ' 300 Oct, 1925.. 15,000 300 15,300 Totals ..$139,000 $28,350 $167,350
As originally provided, the refunding bonds would bear 4 per cent interest Interest Runs High. If the . $139,000 plant construction bonds now held by the Second National bank were permitted to run to their maturity in 1927, the city would pay out a total in principal and interest of $198,219.92. In the report the committee states that a readjustment and reduction of electric rates .will be possible under the refunding bond plan after the retirement in August,-1917, of the $80,000. bond issue recently floated for the purpose of financing the deal for the purchase of the electric plant of the Light Heat" and Power company . These bonds will be retired out of the earnings of the combined plants for a period of eighteen months. The refunding bonds will be retired, year by year, out of the funds of the city plant's sinking fund.
Severe Kidney Troubles Yield To Popular Remedy About four years ago I had a severe attack of Kidney trouble and Gravel of the Bladder. I was afflicted this way for one year and had severe pains in my back and shooting pains in my bladder; I got so had that I was not able to work for about two months; I could not rest at night; I would have to get up several time3 during the night to urinate, and at these times it caused me grett pain. I read so much and heard so much of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root I decided to try SwampRoot ; after taking several bottles I was restored to good health and I haver not been troubled' with my kidneys and bladder sin-e. I cheerfully recommend Swamp-Root to others with kidney and bladder troubles. Yours respectfully, . F. H. FLEMING, 802 E. 14th St., Pittsburg, .Kansas. Personally p:-peared before me this 5th day of May 1915, F. H. "Fleming, who subscribed to the above statement and made oati that the same is true in substance and In fact Joseph Keys. Justice of the Peace. In and for the County of Crawford and State of Kansas.
Letter to Dr. Kilmer A Co, Binghamton N. Y.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer A Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a -Eamnla r1t hnttia i, ..m
b ,b VV11I . CUU I vlnce anyone. You win ic
ceive a booklet of valuable information telling all about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention the Richmond . Daily Palladium; Reguljr fifty-cent and oneollar si2e bottles for sale at all drug stores Adv.
Tanlac's Good Reputation is Now Valuable
A good reputation is the best thing in life, and a good reputation is worth as much to medicine as It is to an in
dividual. - The truth of this Is clearly brought out by the fact that business men, professional men, artisans, and- women in all walks of life whose common, practical judgment guides them i all acts and conclusions, are daily testifying to the merits of Tanlac. "Tanlac" has become- a household word. Its. success is unprecedented
and its fame is based very solidly on its accomplishments in nearly two millions of homes. Tanlac is nature's own remedy. It is purely a vegetable compound, made from roots, herbs.
flowers and barks. The ingredients for 'this wonderful remedy are. gathered in the remotest parts' of the
world. From the far north woods to
Argentine, below the equator; in Rus sian Asia, the Alps, Pyrennes, on the Bunny shores of Italy. From Brazil, Sumatra, Peru, the West Indies, and the slopes of our own timber-topped Rocky Mountains come the ingredients that under the personal direction of the noted chemist, Joseph Von
Tflmbach, are compounded . into
Tanlac. ... 7 Tanlac acts like rnafgic against stomarh trouble, gas fermentation, dizziness, bloating, and heavy distressed feeling ; after meals. It attacks poisons in the blood. corects diseased conditions of- the liver and kidneys, and tores them to normal condition. : Tanlac works wonders where men and women suffer from catarrhal troubles, which may he "indicated by any one of the following symptoms: coughing of mucous, offensive breath, dizziness, loss of flesh, ringing in the head or ears, headaches, pains In the side or stomach regirzs, indigestion, bloating of the stomach, constipation, or dyspepsia, Tanlac is an invigorant appetizer,
l tonic and builder of . tissues. It
cleanses the entire system of wastes and vitalizes the blood and brings
back color to the cheeks and sparkle
to the eyes. . Tanlac is now being especially in troduced In Richmond at Clem This tlethwaite's drug store where the. Tan
lac Man dally explains its merits to
hundreds of men and women. Tanlac may be, obtained in the fol
lowing nearby Ohio cities: New Paris, E. M. Kessler: Eldorado, O. H. Mas-
tin; New Madison, Thomas Ewbank; Eaton, Lake Drug Co.; Camden, J. H. Bonn: West Alexandria, R. N. Price; Greenville, Hipp Drug Co; Hollansburg, A. J. Downing.
ALL oak:
$1.98
ains and hooks.
y ::
ROWN
Will last for years in all kinds 'of weather. Roll Arm, very flJO Qg comfortable, only ...pUO
DO YOU LIKE TO SHOP WHERE: Everything suggests a welcome. New things are shown and where order and neatness prevail always. Salespeople show interest in their work and show goods with pleasure. You can make comparisons and where choosing is interesting; where you are treated as a guest. Appreciation is shown by conveniences that make shopping a pleasure. . Service welcomes your entrance and courtesy bids you come again. WHERE THE GOODS YOU BUY ARE EQUAL QUALITY WITH THE MONEY YOU SPEND.
Durable Rubber Hose
inch and inch sizes
' : ' - from 9 to 16 cents per- foot. FRESH AIR AND SUNSHINE FOR BABY
WnM& Sl Liholciim Stock Was Never . to '. ISfY m IPIJPS Better Than Noyv select - f '. ;f, Fj. i I J 3. a-?3 FROM " j ' 'Pnr i X'jr$f 'f r We can please you with a wide range of patterns. The price Is very f .vvi-' if ' Lr" reasonable for quality goods. f ' M l3:M shop at M r
Mm M9 MS
During. Reconstruction of North 5th Street, Fair view and West Richmond Cars Will , Be Routed Over Ft. Wayne Ave and North 8th Street
a gradual motorization cf the fire department and Weishaupt objected to. the ordinance because no provision was -made' for the sale "of the touring car; now ".operated by; the police department. .-' -
PALLADIUM WANT AOS PAY.
MAKERS OF "THE KIND. OF CLOTHES GENTLEMEN WEAR' ' V
Appearance . dont count, but Just try wearing shabby clothes that don't fit you. and you will soon: say that appearance doe count. - - . . THE DENNIS TAILORED MAN is looked upon in his locality as a well-dressed man. Join HIM this spring by ordering your next suit here. We make them for you at v - 818.00to$40.00
T"RoyV. Dennis sko? TAILORS 8 North Tenth, Opposite Hotel.
T Mr am
FOR FINE SUMMER UNDERWEAR LINGERIES 15c FINE STRIPED CREPE Beauti- 1A ful finish, per yard XUC YARD WIDE LONG CLOTH Fin- " OX ished for fine wear XiSj&C Special Values at 15c.
DAINTY NEW SUMMER COLLARS Of Organdie, Voile and Georgette Crepe Materials, in all the Latest Shapes for Summer 'Wear 25c and 50c
NUSB
May Day A.
.May
ctiyities Mean
Day Economies
The first week of the month of May, the lightest, brightest and cheeriest month of the year, finds the store full to overflowing with bright, new snappy merchandise. There's a scarcity of goods in many lines and higher cost of of materials 'effecting prices. However, you'll find Nusbaum's, . as always, holding prices to the lowest possible level, while rigidly maintaining quality. 'Tis to your interest and advantage and means "more toxur customers than ever before. Start now and prepare for your summer needs. It means economy.
100 ELEGANT
Tirrm
QUJI
on Sale Tomorrow
The Best of Our New Models, 50 SUITS worth up to $20.00, Priced at $12.50
The Best of Our New Models, 50 SUITS
worth up to $30.00, Priced at $18.75
Never before has sucb a suit opportunity been presented so soon after Easter. Every woman who needs a spring suit may buy just the suit she desires, just when she needs it most at theprice she would expect to pay only at the very end'of the season. All exclusive models. Come Early for best choice. Need
say more t .
we
Fine
Millinery
Redueed
We have taken 50 of our best Hats and have greatly reduced their prices In order to make room for the display of the new white summer millinery and sport Hats now arriving- every day."
In the lot are our finest models, worth up to $10.00. Tomorrow ... 1 .......
$3.98
STRIPED SILK SHIRTINGS 25 pieces Fine Striped Silk Shirtings, 85c grade, in all the new color effects, Qp
Ail j ax KL 0
i
FINE BLEACHED TABLE DAMASK 2 yards wide fine linen finish Table Damask; all splendid new designs, washes like and looks like fine linen, KQn per yard .... ... .......... . . .... OUk' WOVEN'STRIPED SKIRTINGS Fine Awning Striped Skirtings in all ; the prettiest woven stripes, a bargain, 1 (n
WIDE STRIPED LISLE TISSUES 18c Striped Tissues in the popular wide stripes, only a small lot to offer, ' 1 Hp while they.last, per yard ......... . iHii 32-INCH IMPERIAL CHAMBRAY GINGHAMS 18c -Fine Imperial Chambray Ginghams, 'most all colors, priced at 11 peryard IPl 25c NOTTINGHAM LACE CURTAIN MATERIALS 25c Nottingham Lace Materials in.wjiite, Arabian and cream colors, fine, neat 1 designs, special only, per yard. . . . iOL
at per yard, only
The Merry Month of May Offers Great Opportunities. Watch for' Them. ; Read of Them. Them in Our Windows and Throughout Our Store.
Come See
Nusbaiim Go,
