Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 144, 4 May 1916 — Page 11
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM.' THURSDAY, May 4,19,16.
PAGE ELEVEN'
RELATIVES GIUE SUHPRISE PARTY for J. urains
"MUDDLEBORO. IndL, May; 4. A
A number of relatives and friends
of John Hawkins cave a surprise
party for him lait Sunday, when they
gathered at the home 01 earn uanner with - dinner already prepared and
epent the day in a general good tune. Dinner was served on the lawn.2 It sreinz Mr. Hawkins'- eighty-second
birthday anniversary, y Mr. Elmer
Hawkins of .- Richmond gave " several good : readings in 4 the afternoon.; Those present were Messrs and Mes-
dames Jefferson Addleman, Floyd Rnaran. 'Charlie Townsend. Henry
Pickett, Will Brooks, Sam Danner)
will Barton, George Baker, Mrs. nancv Hawkins. Mrs. Omma Carpenter,
Mrs. Goldie Evans, Misses May Pick
ett, Inez Townsend, Marie Barton, Verna Baker, Ester 'Albright, Grace Barton, Maude Baker, Irene Albright, Louisa - Barton. Velma Baker". Louise
Hawkins. " Messrs. John Hawkins. Wayne. Brooks, Wayne Barton, Hains Evans. r The afternoon callers were
Mr. . and . Mrs. A. J. Little. Mr. and Mrs". Charlie Little, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hawkins, Mr. and Mrs. Bert HawktnaMr. and Mrs., Walter Brooks, Mr. Fred. Gunckle. Mr. Joe Held, Mr,
Ralph Pyle, Mr. Clarence and Harry
Hawkins,. Mr. Earl Hawkins, Mr. uei mar Brooks. Mr. : Bert Williams. . . .
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Roe and family
were- Sunday guests or Mr. and Mrs EUm MlkeseH..,.Mr. Elwood Alexan der and family spent Sunday with Mr
and Mrs. John Fowble and family
near 8pring Grove. . , .Mrs. Zella coddlneton and two daughters of New
Paris, "spent a few days with her
brother and family, ,Mr. andirs Jarka. Addleman. last week, . .".Mr
and Mrs.' John Coblerits were the
guests ot their son, Clayton and faml iv at Camnbellstown. Sunday.... Mrs
Etta Newbern of Richmond has re
turned home after a few days 'visit
with her oarents.' Mr. "and Mrs. Isaac
Brooks. '...Mrs. Emma Carpenter of
M uncle, took dinner Monday wun Mrs. Sam Danner,...Mr. and Mrs. John WIckett, and Mr. and Mrs. Sam Wicrett and family' of Richmond, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter,
Brooks. v . - . , . -'
FEAR WHITE RUST; ON PINE FORESTS
WASHINGTON", May 4. The stock
of Eastern nurserymen is a menace to
the western white pine forests, the de
partment of agriculture has announc
ed. In an . effort . to preclude the
necessity for a federal plant quaran
tine, the department has asked eastern
nurserymen not to ship white pine
currant and gooseberry plants wes of
North Dakota eoutfr. Nebraska, -Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. The department fears the spreading to the west of the white pine blister rust. hlch has been found on ' eastern plants. . - - . ' " -. The department estimated the total value of far western forest3 at $240,000,000, which would be in serious
danger if the rust reached that section
o? the country. The rust has now gained a foothold
in six eastern, states, and is believed to be in the Ohio valley.. Gooseberries and currants carry "the rust as well as
the pine plants themselves. , ; . . WAR ON HOUSEFLY.
MUNCIE, Ind., May 4. The council
probably will pass an ordinance, pro
viding that if persons , fail to remove refuse in which flies breed, city authorities may remove it and charge the offending person with the expense.
I
LOOKS FINE. A. thing of beauty Is a joy High in the roster , t place the handsome soldier boy Seen on the poster.
Makes Flesh and Strength
j
N
Father
st .
a. j John's Medi-
m cine contains m t h e e x a c t
, is rwiiiu vi usi .
sua hmlHinar
food needed
i i by those
wno are mm we a k and r u n down. It make flesh. .v"-
No Alcohol or Dangerous Drugs., PILLS BEST FOR. LIVER - ' - Because they contain the best liver medicines, no matter hoWbitter or nau seating for the sweet sugar ieoating hides the taste. Dr. King's- New Life PiU3 contain ingredients that put the liver working, move' the'-bowels: freely. No gripe, no nausea, aid " Indigestion. Just try a bottle of Dr. Kings New Life Pills and notice how much better you feel 25c at druggists. ' -,
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Sketches from Life .V By TempI
k.'.. .... . ' - ' - T 1 f islsi r " W M
Philomath Events
By Gertrude McCashland.
Several from here attended the fo
neral of Mrs. Harry Turner at Abiagton Monday: . .Mrs,' Earl ' Doddridge
and daughters spent Saturday night
vith Mrs.: Samuel Fisher. .r; Mr. Em
met Do4drldg and Miss Monica Willets motored through our berg Sunday evening:.;. Misses Cora and Gertrude McCashland were in Richmond Saturday and their sister Mrs. B. C. Manley and son William have returned -home with them for a few days visit.... Mrs-. Nancy J. Ranck has been confined to her room for the past few days with a strained hip. ...Mr. Earl Doddridge was in Milton on business Saturday. ..Mr. and Mrs '.Ray Rodenburg aid Charlie were In Brownsville Monday;'. ..Miss Cora M. McCashland spent the day monday wlth Mm Nancy Ranck. . ..Mrs. Black of Ohio came Saturday
for a visit with her sister, Mrs. Her-
Darlie were Liberty Shoppers Friday.
CEIlTEnVILLE-ALU";ir DAI J QUET AT: SCHOOL
Uniforms .
CHURCHES TO HONOR -MOTHERS MAY $
Flowers to honor mother will be
worn May 14,- which has ' been an nounced at Mothers' day.
Services are being arranged in. the Richmond churches. In most of the churches, the children will give a
special program at the Sunday school
service. . . .
One of the regular church services
will be given over to the observance
of the day. Most of . the ministers
are preparing special sermons.
MISS RADADOUGH WEDS LEHMAN AT EATON 0.
WEST MANCHESTER; Ind.,May 4. On Thursday, April 27, . Miss - Belle Radabaugb. of .this .place and Harry Lehman of Brookviile were married at high noon,-at the .UB. church at Eaton. O. They 'left Immediately on the honeymoon , trip, which . will be SDent in St Louis, Miss . Radabaugh was .In the . local 'exchange here the past two years, Mt recently resigned, while-Mr. Lehman has a position with the Pennsylvania Railroad Co. at Dayton, where they will make their future Tome. . . . Miss Susan Guenther visited Sunday at the home' of Mr. and Mrs. Mart Miller, near Pleasant HiU.w. Charles Lightcap and. wife of Lewisburg and Jesse Clarke and family of
Ithica, jpent ; Sunday with Mr; and
Mrs. D. A." Locke.... Mr. and Mrs. Clate Emerisk and daughter, Alice
were Sunday guests of her, father, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Campbell.... Mr. and Mrsv William Guenther entertained his father, John - Guenther, Sr. - and
Mrs. : Milwood of Sti Louis, at their
home Sunday. The Rev. Mygrave "of
Van Wert, who filled his regular ap
pointment at Wares chapel, was also
a, guest, . ...
TREES ARE WITNESSES.
HAPPY MAN. "To what do you attribute your renarkabl health?" "Well, I reckon I got a good start oa most , people ..by beln. N born ..before "Terms waa discovered, thereby bavin less to worry about."
MEMPHIS, Tenn-.V May 4. Trees were used as witnesses in determining the state line between Mississippi and Arkansas, during a hearing before O. K. Jewell, special commissioner of the United States supreme court here.
Arkansas has brought suit against Mississippi for a great Island Inthe
Mississippi In 1848. Aged trees on the Arkansas side proved that part of the island to be the oldest The trees on the Mississippi side were all. young indicating it to be "made land." Timber experts estimated some of the trees are from 100 to 175 years old. Before-the-war steamboat pilots were among tbewitnessesvv r THIEVES TAKE WHISKEY. '
ROACHDALE, -Jnd., May IDurlng
the time the Skillman drug store was closed while an estate wasbeing set
tled up, thieyes entered the etore and
took all the whiskey in stock, touching nothing else. '
. Whooping Cough. ' "When my daughter had whooping cough she coughed so hard at one time that she had hemorrhage of the lungs. I was terribly alarmed about her condition, r Seeing Chamberlain's Cough Remedy so highly recommended, I got her a bottle and it relieved the cough at nee. Before she had finished two bottles of this remedy she waa entirely well," writes Mrs. S. F. Grimes, Crooksville. Ohio. Obtainable everywhere. Adv.
4 CENTER VTLLE, Ind-, Mar 4. The alumni banquet waa held In the nigh school buUdinff Tuesday evening with a much larger attendance than usual. There were 150 present. That address of weicome' waa; made, by Claude Kitterman l of Cambridge -City, and the response waa given by Beulah Bowers of the class oM916 Muaical number were furnished by. Howard Meek, Er-
pha Lundy. Edith Spahr and Robert
and ; Clarence Jenkins, rand 'readings
were given by ' Haxel - Mathews and
Mildred McConaha. The roll call show ed the death of one member. Horace
Commons - Refreshments were served
by the class of 1915, after' which a so
cial time waa enjoyed.
China's new department of airricul
tnre and forestry Is being conducted
by graduates of American colleges.
A RETORT PRACTICAL DIacontented Wife--Severai of th ten whom I refused when I "married u are richer than you are now. Husband That's w'hv;'. ,
STUBBORN ECZEMA
r HEALED BYAMOLOX
We are daily, receiving, letters of
praise from peoplg who . have been .cured by Amolox.'Many of tthem tell how, for years, they have tried different remedies and doctors in "the vain effort,l,o;';tind relief. Some become discouraged and lose 'all hope of ever being cured. E. R. Frlsbee, 17 Sycamore St., Mansfield, O., -writes: "Our baby's face was covered with eczema scales, sores and- scabs." She was a pitiable sight. ' We tried everything Took her to Pittsburg, doctors but were unable to find any. relief until we used Amolox. It cured her within a short time." Amolox ointment will quickly heal pimples on the face, red nose, and minor skin troubles. Ch,ronic cases of dry or moist scaly eczema require both the ointment and liquid to effect a cure. At all drug stores. Trial size, 50c. Recommended and guaranteed by A." G. Luken.
Sjiop Demands New Efficiency
of Employees
' Efficiency is the watchword of modern, industries. Practically all of the larger enterprises are demanding that applicants pass a physical examination before they are admitted to em
ployment.". . They -are adopting -the
theory that without health a man is unable to give his employer, the. best
that is In him, . There Is no place In
the modern business world lor the
nervous, fagged out, listless man or
woman. - This it an age of speed; we haven't time to take care of ourselves. These run-down men and women are not exactly sick, but just tired out,' languid and overworked. Their business, their home and their life suffer. They need, something to build them
up; something to. throw off these symp
toms of a weakened, debilitated condition produced by mental or physical overwork, or by the abuse of a vital organ more, of ten, the stomach than any other. . . . Chemists and scientists have gone to- endless pains to discover something that would, combat this serious condition, i It was left ,to Joseph Von Trimbach, the noted chemist and giver of health aids, to solve this perplexing problem, and heid- He -has given the American public ' a vegetable preparation composed of herbs, roots, flowers and barks, which he has called Tanlac. Since its Introduction a trifle over a year ago, men and women, from the highest to the lowest walks of life, by the thousands everywhere, are testifying to the relief Tanlac has brought them.
Tanlac,:, the tonic, appetizer and invlgoraht, . that builds newtissus, vitalizes the blood, and acts s'o favorably on "ailments of . the stomach, liver and kidneys, and catarrhal affections of the
mucous membranes; has been met with favor wherever it has been introduced.
Tanlac Is being especially lntroduc
ed In Richmond at Thistlethwalte's drug stores, where the Tanlac Man
dally explains the merits of this Master Medicine. Tanlac may be obtained in the following near-by Ohio cities: New Paris, E. M. Kessler; Eldorado, Q. H. Mastln; New Madison, ThomaB Ewbank; Eaton, Lake Drug Co.; Camden, J. H. Bonn: West Alexandria, H. N. Price;
Greenville, Kipp Drug Co., Hollans-
burg, . A. J.. Downing. Adv.
butt
THE BEAUTY SPOT OF RICHMOND 18th and Main.
oonnnnon no dp a
a a a
ace Mramf
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ale
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This has been a successful sale. The extraordinary values have been appreciated and we can promise you for the last two days of its duration a host of
alluring bargains. A seasonable sale that affords
many money saving opportunities. : V
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ANNUAL
SALE
-.a..ii.ua,t,u1tll.illMjMjnBm irl "till '11 Till jiMisnrnirJ
Ueoeirwesnr
50c Gowns, V neck of slipover styles, Sale. . . .40c .Women's 50c Muslin Drawers, Sale .... . ... .39c r Women's .25c Muslin" Drawers, Sale. . .... ... .19c $1.00 Gowns, high aeck or slipover, Sale. . . . ..;79c $1J50 lace and embroidery trimmed Gowns, Sale 98c $2.00 extra. full embroidered Skirts, Sale. .. .$10 $1.50 embroidery or lace trimmed Skirts, Sale, .98c $1.00 extra wide Muslin Skirts, Sale. ...79c Princess Slips, $1.50 grade, Sale. ,98c $1.00 Princess Slips, May Sale ..79c Women's Envelope Combinations, Sale. ..... . .50c. Children's 39c Muslin Gowns, Sale. . . . . . . . . . .25c Children's Princess Slips, lace trimmed, Sale. ..25c Misses embroiderey edge' Muslin Drawers, Sale 10c"
w uiucii o vuinuiiidi.iyiia, pi.ju giauco .. .FOC q Misses Muslin Skirts, Sale . . ....... .25 & 50c o
n n n Q n D D D D n o
a
$10 Wool Fibre Rugs, 9x12, Sale $5.98 $15 9x12 Tapestry Brussels Rugs, Sale $9.98 $18 best room size Tapestry Rugs, Sale $11.98 9x12 Smith's Axminister Rugs," Sale $18.98 $35 Body Brussels Rugs, 9x12, new patterns; Special $24.48 75c Wool Ingrain Carpets, Sale, yd. .58c 3-4 Wool Ingrain, 65c grade, Sale yd .45c 1-2 Wool Ingrain, worth 55c yd., Sale .39c 60c Linoleum, 25 new patterns, Sale yd. 39c 50 Velvet Rugs, worth from $1.48 to $1.98;. . .$1.00
10 to 20 off on Lace Gur tains during sale. See our line.
ISO
.00 Heavy 2 inch continuous post steel Beds, in
all colors, Sale Price .$5.50 $3.00 Heavy.Bed Springs, full size, Sale. .. ..$1.79 50 lb. Combination Mattress, sold at $6.50 Sale $4.98 Window blinds, Sale each .25c We will save you money on Beds and Bedding. Jt
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