Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 207, 18 July 1916 — Page 12

PAGE TWELVE

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM ' AND SUN-TELEGRAM, "TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1916

LAWN FESTIVAL GIVEN TO RAISE ' FUNDS FOR AID

FOUNTAIN CITY, led., July 18. Mr. and Mrs. John Boren of Toledo, are expected to arrive In a few days for an extended visit with friends and relatives.... Mrs. Chas. Clark of Bluffton, and Mrs. William Garber and daughter, Mary Louise, of Buffalo, are visiting William Brooks and family. ....The M. E. Aid society has announced an ice cream social Saturday evening, July 22. to be on the church lawn.... Mr. and Mrs. White were recent dinner guests of Mr. Herman Thomas and wife. Mrs. Barnes It III. Mrs. Samuel Barnes has been quite ill the past week. .. .Naomi Dwiggins is the house guest of Mildred Baldwin of Muncie. . . .The little daughter of Prentice Becktel is visiting Bessie and Jessie Foreman. Minister Has Guests. , Visiting Rev. Aaron Worth this week are Mr. and Mrs. John Orr and daughter of St. Francisville, 111.... Frank Taylor and wife spent Sunday with ,Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Skinner and family. HOME MAKERS MEET THURSDAY NEW HOPE, O., July 18. Several from here attended the social at Campbellstown Saturday evening.,... Omar Stamback spent Saturday evening In Eaton The following spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stamback: Joe Stamback and family, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Stamback and family and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Call Mr. and Mrs. Al Goodwin and family spent Sunday evening with his brother of Eaton Miss Glena Leary and Miss Treva Renner spent Saturday evening In New Paris A. L. Goodwin spent Saturday evening in Eaton. ....James O'Hara spent Saturday afternoon in Eaton The Girl Home Making club met last Tuesday afternoon and will meet again Thursday. . . . .James O'Hara spent the fore part of the week at RusseH'B Point.... Mies Marjorle Quigg of Richmond, Is spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Kramer and family, James O'Hara and Mr. and Mrs. John O'Hara spent Sunday afternoon in Richmond Joseph Bresher, who has been confined to his bed for several days with paralysis, shows little or no Improvement. , ACCIDENT VICTIMS RECOVER RAPIDLY MlB3 Mary Males, who suffered a dislocated shoulder blade and a fractured left arm when she leaped from a moving automobile Saturday, is reported today as recovering from her Injuries. No other injuries have been found, except for slight bruises. Miss Males Jumped from the auto when some gasoline on the engine blazed up. Mrs. Joseph Mills, who fell Sunday evening In getting out of an automobile, Is recovering from her injuries, which consisted of painful bruises. M'CONAHA COMPANY IS 8ERVICE STATION Announcement is made by McCon'aha's garage, 418 Main street, of its appointment as a special service station for the Prest-O-Lite storage batItery In Richmond. Facilities have been provided for 'giving expert battery service on the ! Prest-O-Lite battery and for handling ' charging and repair work on all makes ! of batteries. Much Importance is attached to the free battery service which the McConaha's garage offers to all automobile owners. TO ADMINISTER ESTATE. Letters of administration have been Issued to the Dickinson Trust company on the estate of George M. 'Little. APPEAL FOR PAGEANT. OXFORD, 0., July 17. Officials of the city of Hamilton have asked Miami university to put on a historical pageant at the celebration of the one hundred and twenty-fifth anniversary of the city, to be held during the week of August 21. ARRANGE FOR OUTING. A committee to set a date and arrange for the annual picnic of the Knights of St. John was appointed at the meeting last night. One new members was admitted into the society. Why Society Women Wash Their Own Hair Few realize how many society women now wash their own hair, not because it is a fad, but because they wish to obtain the greatest possible hair beauty and be sure they are not using anything harmful. The thousands who have found that in washing the hair It is never wise to use a makeshift but is always advisable to i use a preparation made for shampooing only, say they get the best rel suits from a simple home-made can- ! throx mixture. You can enjoy this, i the best that is known, for about three cents a shampoo by getting some canithrox from your druggist, and disI solving a teaspoonful in a cup of hot i water. Your shampoo Is now ready. ! After its use the hair dries rapidly i with uniform color. Dandruff, excess j oil and dirt are dissolved and entirely 'disappear. Your hair will be so fluffy that it will look much heavier than it 'Is. Its lustre and softness will also j delight you, while the stimulated scalp gains the. health which insures hair (growth. Adv. , ,

Citizens Try Life on Ocean Wave H ,fmm '

IHAVAT.'MIITrEIA MEN AT WQRIS' OJf. U.S.S. KJ&MTVCKY. 5 CAPE. '(..SXS&uj&MrCtX9.S)a4

Lawyers have banged their office desks shut; brokers have neglected their market tapes;, clerks have aban doned their pencils and ledger book; and all are ready for a life on the ocean waves.' New York state has a naval militia to the number of 1,275 officers and men, who are now on their annual practice cruise which will last until July 29. The above picture shows a group of citizen-sailors at work on board the battleship Kentucky. Tney comprise the First Battalion, and are under the command of Captain C. L. Poor, whose picture is also shown above. .

CHAUTAUQUA CAMBRIDGE GENERAL CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., July 18 Dr. Kepner and family and Dr. Paul of New Castle were guests of O. U. Toppin and family Sunday Mordecai Doddridge and daughter Miss Ethel, and Misses Florence Spahr, Elizabeth Pierce and Clara Watt of Milton were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Judkins Sunday Miss Mary Metts of New Castle spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Dillon and daughter, Miss Mary. Leaves for Michigan. Mrs. J. W. Judkins, accompanied her niece, Miss Nora Doddridge of Doddridge Chapel, to Battle Creek, Mich., leaving Monday evening Miss Flossie Hazelrigg of Indianapolis spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Hazelrigg Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Porter and Mr. and Mrs. Will Anderson motored from Richmond Sunday and spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Pusinelll and daughters. Conduct Mundell Services. The Rev. Mr. Stean of the Presbyterian church conducted the funeral services of Mrs. Martha Mundell Sunday afternoon at the home. Miss Gertrude Routh and Mrs. J.E. Wright sang several impressive songs. The pallbearers were the sons and two grandsons, Boyd, Burns, Ellsworth and Allison Mundell, Charles Crocker and Howard McGeath. . . .Roy Snedllng of Indianapolis was the guest of Miss Elizabeth Pusinelll Sunday. Invited to Hagerstown. Cambridge City people are urged to attend the Hagerstown Chautauqua, which town has been well represented at the Chautauqua in this city Among the relatives and friends from a distance at the funeral of Mrs. Mundell were Roy Mundell of Washington, D. C, Mr. and Mrs. Burns Mundell of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Mundell, Mr. and Mrs. Allison Mundell and two daughters of Indianapolis, Daniel Bradbury, Miss Emma Bradbury of Indianapolis, William Bradbury, Mrs. Elizabeth Harned, W. K. Bradbury, Clarence Bradbury, Miss Susan Harned, Miss Emma Leeson, Miss Belle Leeson of Richmond, Mr.' and Mrs. John Lashley of Centerville, Luther Bradbury and Miss Emma Bradbury of New Lisbon and Martindale Boyd of Dublin. .. .Miss Inez Funk of Dublin and Miss Mary Nation have been selected as teachers 4n the Third and Fifth grades of the public schools. Please at Chautauqua. The Chicago Artists, assisted by Miss Wlckes, reader, were most pleasing features of the Chautauqua program Saturday afternoon, while the lecture, "India's Millions," by Mo

l A Mothers WishNwS

is that she trying ordeal

little pain as possible this can be

a reality when "Mother's Friend"

has been used regularly preceding

T2 confinement. Get Mother's SOlJmar'BfdjJlifaakj

EVERLASTING

STEPS WALKS WALLS

PTPR fTTPrvTrm drives A W 4 COPINGS VuliJluiLILilX 11 floors

MATHER B. KELSEY

Cement Work.

PLEASES CITIZENS; NEWS NOTES

hammad Ali an Oriental, was one of unusual interest. The speaker wore the garb of the upper cast of Hindoos, and in his lecture depicted the natural features of his far away country, and the manners and customs of his people. Mr. All also added to his address by conducting a question box. The evening session was opened with the presentation of t.he opera, "Martha," Miss Margaret Wickes, accompanist and reader, giving a sketch of . the opera, the rendition of which was charming. A portrayal of Dickens' characters was given by William Sterling Battis, who brought back to memory the characters, or rather gave both a mental and visual view of the author, then of the characters, Martin Chuzzlewlt, Dombey & Son, Micawber, Uriah Heap, Oliver Twist, Fagin, Pickwick and others. The Sunday afternoon 'program opened with a popular concert by Bland's Chautauqua band, with Miss Jean Macdonald, entertainer. Mrs. A. C. Zehner, a southern orator, delivered a lecture on "American Ideals," wherein she argued for adherence to the higher principles for which it stands, protesting against the mercenary spirit which is too often manifest. A vesper service was held at 7 o'clock. Rev. Joseph Garvin of the Redpath Chautauqua Bureau, and a former Cambridge City boy, conducted the service," assisted by the Rev. R. J. Jones, a local pastor. Prof. H. M. Kabel directed the music, which was given by members of different church choirs. A grand musical festival, featuring Earl Hippie, the wizard of the xylophone, with readings by Miss Jean Macdonald, was the most artistic entertainment ever given in this city. Selections from II Travatore by a quartet and selections from two other operas were given, among which the violin solos, flute and vlclln duos, especially "Silver Threads Among the Gold," a tenor solo, with orchestra accompaniment, with a range of selections from the classical to ragtime, solos duets and quartets. The selections on the xylophone, under the skillful manipulation of Mr. Hippie, were the. finest ever given in this city. The program closed with the Grand Military band, the Stars and Cured of Stomach Trouble. "Two years ago I was an Invalid due to stomach trouble," writes Mrs. R. G. Neff, Crooksville, Ohio. "I took three bottles of Chamberlain's Tablets and have since been in the best of health." . Obtainable everywhere. Adv. may go through the of motherhood with as Friend" at your druggist. Phone 3807

Stripes being, displayed as "The Star Spangled Banner" was played as the finale. A short' business session "was held, at which B. F. Wissler, president of the local Chautauqua, gave a short talk on the business or financial standpoint of the Chautauqua. Charles Kniese, E. O. Paul, Will Judkins, Harry Morris, G. E. Calloway1, E. R. Calloway,' M. R. Krahl and Prof. H. M. Kabel went through the audience securing pledges for the Chautauqua next year. . ; :

a O (r

W.C. T, l). CONDUCTS PICNIC AT HORSE SHOE

MODOC,' Ind., July 18. The picnic which the .Women's .Christian Temperance Union held at Horse Shoe Bend, between Economy and Modoc,' was a complete success" After a sumptuous dinner the state president of the Union, Mrs. Culla Vaylnger, gave an instructive talk. Rev. Ballard also participated in the afternoon services. . . . .Mr. and Mrs. Moore are here from .Oklahoma visiting at the home of their daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Fay Cable.:... Harold Hernley of Chicago, is here visiting his grandparents.. . . . Mr. and, Mrs. Tetter have been visiting in Dayton. .... Miss , Ef fie Jones has been visiting her brother and family, Rev. Bert Jones, at Alexandria. .... Mrs. Culla Vayinger of Upland, state president of the -Women's Christian Temperance Union," who 'gave a lecture at the M. E. church was entertained at , the home of Rev. and Mrs. Archer. Mr. and Mrs. John Howell and Mr. and Mrs. Dave Gollier of Muncie, motored here Sunday to be at the bedside of Mrs. Ed Hunt, who is seriously ill Mrs. Elizabeth Warwick, whose home is in Union City, is sick here at the home of her sister, Mrs. Phoebe Edwards.!... Frank Howard, Big Four agent at this place, has gone to Illinois to visit relatives accompanied by . Rex. Edwards. They made the trip on a motorcycle. Events in Liberty Miss Catharine Farley of Indianapolis, spent Sunday in Liberty with her parents, Patrick Farley and family Mies Mary Bryson returned home Saturday ;from a .visit with friends in. West Germantown, and Dayton, O.. . . .Miss Mary Shock has returned to her home in Indianapolis after an extended visit With F. W. Shock and daughter, Clarissa and Mrs. G. K. Crocker and daughter Maxine, were . shopping in Richmond, Saturday Mr. and Mrs. L. K. Carson " of Winchester, are visiting Charles Beard and family.. .. .Mrs. Fred Snyder came Saturday from Toledo, to make an extended visit with her mother, Mrs. Clint Hollingsworth Garrett Williams of Milan is the guest of relatives here Mrs. Albert Fahrlander and little, daughter, Margaret Louise, are the guests of relatives in New Castle.

The prices speak for themselves. The high character of the merchandise is assured by the reputation of this store. Below we mention only a few of the special bargains.

MEN'S LOW SHOES Men's $4 Oxfords, newest styles, dark tans, gun metals and vici; Sale CQ price Men's $3.00 Special Oxfords, English or High Toe style, Neolin Sole and Heel ; Summer Sale CJO K

ii SEflOlE STOKE CURME-FELTMAN SHOE CO., 724 MAIN STREET Five Stores rlndianapolis, Richmond, Muncie, Cincinnati

ECOIIOHYTJOrifJ PLfll

TO FOUND ECONOMY, ' July 18. The M. .' U. Brotherhood meeting Friday night drew a fair sized crowd ol members. Some of the women think-it an opportune time to organize a Sisterhood, because they are not permitted to attend ; the Brotherhood meetings . only when the men have something special in the entertaining line on for - the evening. It; will be no great surprise to people if a Sisterhood is organized very soon. Miss Avis Haywood of Queenston, a little girl " of many accomplishments was the night guest of Miss Grace Garrison recently Mrs. Aseneth Osborn has returned -from Winchester. Prof. Henry H. Runge and wife, Mr. MANCHESTER ALUMNI HOLD BIG MEETING HAGERSTOWN, Ind., July 18. The program for the special Manchester college day held at the Church of the Brethren here Sunday follows: Opening exercises; introduction, Elder L. W. Teeter; ','Relation of Nettle Creek Church to Manchester College," Clcmmie Miller;, song; "What Manchester College Has Been Doing," Clessie A. Miller; poem, "We Were Once at Old M. C," Bertha Dilling; "Advantages of Attending Manchester College," Perry R. Hoover; brief talks from others; "Needs of Manchester College," William Hampton; offering for M. C. Sunday school endowment fund; closing. CAT LIN sat r t s-kw r AKKUW COLLAR THIN, LIGirr YET STARCHED AND SIGHTLY 15c each 6 for 90c CLCBTT. VK4BODT ft CO., IPC, MjIKFII AILED IS LADIES' LOW SHOES Ladies' $6 Pumps, white, ' gray and champagne, (J4 Summer sale ....... VOD. $5 Bronze Colonials and Pumps, best French bronze, dQ Q(? price pOcD $4.50 Bar Strap, cut out in dull and patent; Sale 1Q QK price POU EXTRA SPECIAL Ladies' mahogany calf lace Oxford, English style, Neolin sole and heel, $4 grade; Summer Sale QK price $UaO One lot of Baby Doll Pumps In dull and patent, $2.50 p- rA and $3 values, price. P-LOvJ Ladies $2.50 Hand Turn Strao Slippers, Sale price (j2 2Q MEN'S WHITE SHOES $7 White Buck Shoes, (Jr r A Sale-price .......... $00J $5 White and Black (JJf OK' Sport Oxfords tp't.ieJ $3.00 White Canvas J- QT Oxfords at .' .... tj5-LJ $1.50 White Canvas &-t QK Oxfords at ipJLmOO

-?

SISTERHOOD and VMrs.' v G.1; AT, Reitstetner and Maurice Mentendick of Richmond, were visitors at - the Edwards f studio Sunday " afternoon. . Mr. .. and ', Mrs. Frank Peircev6pent Sunday with -Mr. and Mrs. Allen" Oler.' . ' ' . Recital Was Pleasing.; ',: The recital given by Miss Mary Ballenger, and pupils Saturday afternoon at the M. E. church was exceptionally fine.. .. .George " Canady, the' house mover, - has - a" badly .-mashed foot. While working around a building bis foot was caught . by, a sharp block which 'smashed a toe off. : - ', ".' THIN PEOPLE CAN INCREASE WEIGHT Thin men and women who would like to increase their weight with 110 or 15 pounds of healthy "stay there" fat - should - try - eating a little ; Sargol with, their meals for a while, and note results. Here is a good test worth trying. First weigh' yourself and measure yourself. Then take .Sargol one "tablet", every meal for two weeks. Then weigh -and measure again. .It Isn't a question of how you -look or feel' or what your friends say and think. The scales "and the tape measure will' tell their- own : story, and many thin ' men and women we believe can easily add from five to' eight pounds in the 'first fourteen days by following this simple direction. And best of all, the new flesh stays put. : J - Sargol does not of itself make fat., but mixing with your food, it aims to turn- the fats, sugars' and starches' of what you have eaten, into rich,' ripe fat producing nourishment for the tissues ani blood prepare it in an easily assimilated form which the blood can readily accept. Much of this nourishment now passes from your body as waste.1 But Sargol works to stop the waste and do it quickly and to make the fat producing contents of the very same meals you are eating low develop pounds and pounds of healthy flesh between your skin and bones. Sargol is safe, pleasant, efficient and inexpensive. Clem Thistlethwaite 4 stores and other leading druggists in this vicinity sell it in large boxes forty tablets to a package on a guarantee of weight increase or money back as found in each large box. Adv. o 1 G 1