Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 173, 7 June 1916 — Page 3

L A5TJ JbUH-LEGSAa WEDNESDAY,. JUNE 7, 1916

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Parade

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American flag, 50x100 feet, carried by employes of Marshall, Field & Co., and one of the largest flags in the United States. It was one of the features in the New York parade as well as in the Chicago march.

SEVENTEEN GRADUATE AT MIAMI UNIVERSITY TEACHERS' COLLEGE

OXFORD O , June 7. Seventeen young men and women were graduated Monday night from McGuffey high school of the teachers' college, Miami university. The exercises were held in Miami auditorium, and the address was delivered by William McKendree Vance, superintendent of the Delawar (Ohio) schools. The . graduates were Fletcher S. Brate, Earl T. Brier, Marjorie E. Coulter. Ethel E. Davis, Henrietta M. Falk, Helen V. Fleischer. Florence Glid?well, Clarence E. Falk. Sarah C. Haas, Anna M. Hann. Frak. K. Keller. Xaomt M. Pegg. Lillian W. Pierson, Richard E. Riley. George H. Smith. Helen J: Stephenson and Helen M. Wilson.

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In spite of the fact that this is the week of final examinations at Earlham, everybody, faculty and students, are busy working on the Centennial Pageant which is to be given one week from today. According to the

tions to accommodate the largest crowd of guests that ever assembled on the Earlham campus. The event has been extensively advertised in the Quaker communities all over the state, and has been especially emphasized in

FALUNS WALL HITS WORKMAN

CEXTEP.VILLE, Ind.. June 7. While carpenters were doing some repair work Monday on the residence of George Wolf. West Wralnut street, a partition wall fell upon Edward Green, one of the workmen completely burying him beneath plastering and joists. When the debris was removed Mr. Green was found to have escaped serious injury but had a very badly inlured ankle and a number of bruises.

OBSERVE CHILDRENS DAY NEXT SUNDAY AT WHITEWATER

WHITEWATER, Ind.. June 7. Miss Mattie Jackson recently entertained Mr. and Mrs. George H. Knollenberg and daughter. Miss Margaret, of Richmond.. ..Mrs. Jane Coppock is spending a few days with relatives at Glen Kara.. Leave Barton and family have moved their property here.... Ed Jordan of Richmond was here Monday. Taken to Her. Home. Mrs. Manda Hunt, who has been ill for some time at the home of Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Smith, was removed to her home Saturday. . . . W. C. Sourbeer and family motored to Centerville Sunday to visit relatives. Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Pyle attended the high school commencement at Richmond Friday. Children's day will be observed at the M. E. church Sunday evening.

DARRTOWH SCHOOL BOARD OPENS THREE YEAR HIGH SCHOOL

OXFORD, O., June 7. The board of education of Darrtown, five miles east of Oxford, has decided to open a three-year high school next fall. A $5,000 addition is being erected to the school building. Two new teachers have been employed for: next year, Miss Marie Beaton and Miss Sara Roudebush, of Oxford, both this year's graduates of the teachers' college, Miami university.

Russia's Caucasus district, with a population of more than 12,000,000 offers an excellent market for toilet soaps and perfumery, a consular report says.

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PEARL WHITE TLe Beautiful. Dzrmg ,d Talented Screen Star , VW Name d Fame Have Extended to Every Cone of LSe Globe in Vhka the Motion Picture

usual custom all Seniors who have attained a certain scholarship have been exempted from examinations and they are devoting their entire time to getting the production ready. The cut shown here is from a drawing by Walter Spahr, a recent alumnus, and it represents an actual scene in the pageant. It was soon after the Quakers settled in Indiana when they had a vision of the Friends school which they hoped to found on the banks of the Whitewater river. This vision was realized in the old Friends Boarding school which opened in 1847, and twelve years later became Earlham college. This, of course is only a very small part of the pageant, as it is merely a scene in one of the seven episodes. The pageant will depict the history of the Indiana Quakers from the time they left their old homes in the Carolinas years before the war down to the present day. There are to be a number of special features to the event. Great stress is being put of the musical parts, and there will be a number of choruses. Then the characters of the production are to have actual c ostumes of the Quakers and the people of the sections of the country they represent. These costumes have been secured from many sources. A large number have been loaned by the people of Richmond, who have been very responsive in assisting the college, others have been obtained by students from their home communities in all parts of this and neighboring states. Other special features will be a genuine prairie schooner, a yoke of oxen that has been secured from a man near Brookville, and a number of horses that are to be used in several different scenes. The authorities are making prepara-

thls and the neighboring counties as the Wayne County Centennial Celebration. Over three hundred people are to take actual parts on the stage and many of them will be used in two or three parts, so that the student body of the college will be able to represent the whole of about five hundred characters that have been playing parts in the pageant.

SERVICES HELD OVER ''WOFJAOFORtt

WHITEWATER, Ind., June 2 The body of Thnrman Radford who was killed in a railroad accident at New Paris early Sunday morning, was brought to the home of his sister, Mrs. Frank White, Sunday evening. Burial services took place Monday afternoon at Cedar Grove.

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Hagerstown Notes

By Mios Florence Boll.

Mrs. Mamie Smith and son Hugh, of Richmond, are spending a week here with Mr. and Mrs. Dan Smith in the country Mr. and Mrs. Ben Arnold and family and Mr. and Mrs. George Swallow and family of Muncie, drove here Sunday and were guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Swallow and family of Muncie, drove here Sunday and were guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Petty. Other guests of the Petty's were Raymond Petty and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lamar.

Chin Tao Chen, financial adviser to the Chinese government, is a graduate

i of the University of California..

Statisticians figure that Americans spend 45 per cent, of their incomes for food and 20 per cent, for rent.

AbsoIutelyPure Contains No Alum

STARTS FOR ENGLAND

CAMBRIDGE CITY. Ind., June 7. ! Mrs. Elsie Wood left this morning for ' the east, and after a visit with relatives in Pittsburg and Philadelphia, i will go to NewT0f k, from which "port she will embark on. the steamer Philadelphia for England to visit her sis-;

i ter, Mrs. Phillips and other friends, j Mrs. Wood probably will return in ; ' September, accompanied by her mother, Mrs. Fannie Smith, who has spent 1 the lajst two years In her native land.

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YOUR HOME NURSERY',

NoraRs the time to cometo th'e Gaatr Nurseries to get anything in trees, shrubs, hardy plants, vines, Etc. Finest you ever saw, Cambridge City, Wayne County, Ind, Richmond Reprise tat fv-J, E, Thatcher, t28 S. Ninth St.

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ongs our Mothers Sang

HE sweetest memories we cherish of

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A-1913 10-inch, 75c THE GYPSY'S WARNING (Henry A. Coard) Harry McClaskey, Tenor; WHEN" YOU AND I WERE YOUNG MAGGIE (Butterfield) Harry McClaskey, Tenor. A-5719 12-inch, $1.50 GOOD-BYE SWEET DAY (Kate Vannah) Julia Claussen, Mezzo-Soprano; ACH, WIE 1ST MOGLICH (How Can I Leave Thee)German Folk Song, Julia Claussen, MezzoSoprano. A-5733 12-inch, $1.50 LOVE'S OLD SWEET SONG Corinne RIder-Kelsey, Soprano; YE BANKS AND BRAES O' BONNIE DOON (Old Scotch Melody) Corinne Rider-Kelsey, Soprano.

The Col umbia list of ballad singers includes some of the most eminent "artists on the concert-stage today. The foremost artists in every field are making Columbia Double-Disc Records singers like Fremstad, Seagle, Graveure, and instrumentalists like Ysaye and Casals. You can hear their records whenever you want at any Columbia dealer's store. Columbia Records in all Foreign Languages. New Columbia Records on sale the zoth of every monlh. This advertisement was dictated to the Dictaphone.

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Are you going on a vacation this year? Then you will want The Palladium to follow you. Subscribe before you go.

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