Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 239, 24 August 1916 — Page 8

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, AUG. 24, 1916

AGED WOMAN BURNED WHILE SAVING STUFF FROM BURNING HOME

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For the Woman's Eye

CENTERVILLE, Ind., Aug. 24. The home of Richard Markey, near Third and South streets was com1 pletely destroyed by Are at noon Wednesday. The entire root was In flames before the discovery was made. . Only an ordinary Are was In the cook stove at the time but It is supposed the flue was defective. Mr. and Mrs. Markey are aged people and the loss 'will be very great to them. As Mrs. Markey was endeavoring to save things from her burning home sparks fell upon her cap and dress scorching and burning It so that she was slightly burnedVery little of the furniture was saved. The fire department could " give but little assistance. The Pyrene Fire Extinguisher was used but the hose waa not of sufficient length to reach from the nearest cistern to the Markey house. An insurance of $600 was carried on the house which Is. less than, half the loss sustained. ATTEND COUNTY FAIR AT NEWCASTLE, IND. , HOLLANSBURO, Ohio, Aug. 24. Amo'Londenslager, Quay Beetley, Abner Flatter and Russell Wolfal motored to New Castle Thursday and attended the fair Dan Albright and family and Miss Nola Tillson were at Richmond shopping Saturday Miss Olga Jones has returned from Columbus, O., where she has been attending the summer term at the Ohio State University. Ha Visitors ' Miss Lorene Teegarden of Greenville spent Saturday and Sunday with Olga Jones Several relatives and friends from here attended the funeral of Mrs. Ida Pittsenbarger at Greenville Friday afternoon. . Mrs. Pittsenbarger was reared herebut for the last several years has lived in Columbus.- She underwent an operation at that place on Tuesday afternoon and died Wednesday morning. 1, 0, 0, F. IMPROVES QUARTERS AT MILTON MILTON. Ind., Aug. 24. The-premises of the I. O. O. F. hall are undergoing improvements and cleared of all weeds. Town Marshal Jesse Revelee has the work In charge Mrs. Lute Lantz and guest, Miss Julia Hittie, spent Wednesday'at Connersvllle, with Mrs. Lantz's mother, Mrs. M. E. Klnsey and attended the free fair. .'...Miss Salene Ogborn, of Dublin,' has been the guest of her brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ogborn. Go to Connersvllle. Olin DavJs, Delmar Doddridge, Ivan Parkins and Louis Johnson were at Connersvillo. Tuesday evening....! Mrs. Josie Wallace Clouds of Indiana- j polls, is spending a few days with j

relatives at aiiuon. . . . miss Mane

well is the guest of friends at Richmond, this week and attending Chautauqua Mrs. Jos. Clevenser is recovering from tonsilitls. She is in receipt of a beautiful postcard showing Leeds bridge, In the Catskill mountains, where1 her 'daughter. Miss Lily Moore, of New York j City, is spending her vacation. Miss Moore has a number of friends here, where the' spent last summer Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hale had as their guests, Tuesday, Mr. and Mrs. John Needier, of DeSota, Delaware county.

News of Bethel

By Florence Boren.

Miss Nettle Brown of Chatanooga, Tenn., Is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Newton Long, this week.... Miss W. Hyde spent a few days last week with Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Hyde of Richmond Several from here attended the farewell services of Rev. Case at Whitewater, Sunday evening. ....Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Welch spent Friday In New Madison Mr. and Mrs. Russel O'Dell and family of Spartansburg. spent Saturday with Mr. Frank Harlan Mr. and Mrs. L. L. White spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Thompson.

SUES ON MORTGAGE

EATON. O., Aug. 24 To foreclose a mortgage securing $656.65, J. H. and Hattle Stotler, administrators of the estate of the late Edward S. Stotler, have filed suit in common pleas court against Matilda and John Erbaugh. They ask 6 per cent interest from April 10 of this year. Erbaugh and his wife reside in Dayton.

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THE HIGHEST QUALITY

EGG NOODLES 36 Pi&e Recipe Book Free SfOTER MFG. CO. OMAHA. U.SA , IARCEST MACARONI FACTORY l AMERICA

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The summer dance frock of this season is an affair of as little weight as possible. Here a dainty silk net drop skirt is topped by a bouffant drape of white metal brocaded taffeta. The bodice is extremely simple with basque girdle and soft transparent sleeves edged with silver lace. The silk net shoulder scarf is a dainty accessory.

Philomath Events

By Gertrude McCa&hland.

Misses Bernice LaMott of near Doddridge Chapel and Ada LaMott of Richmond are visiting their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Weber..... Mr. and Mrs. Willard Rodenberg and sons, -. Mrs.- Roy Rodenberg and her guest, Miss Ethel Brandt, were shopping In Richmond Friday Mrs. John Clevenger and children called on Mrs. M. B. McCashland and daughters Monday afternoon.. .. .Charles Rodenberg visited this week with his cousin, Russell Shadel, near Centerville Iola and Picola Doddridge are Visiting at Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dailey's near Milton Mrs. Emma Murray and Mrs. Cora Long and daughter of Pea Ridge were thru our burg Thursday.

WEDDED THREE YEARS

BOSTON METHODISTS MEET AT GLEN PARK

BOSTON, Ind., Aug. 24. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Parks and Mr. and Mrs. Pleasant Seaney motored to Cincinnati, Sunday...,. Mr. and Mrs. Adam Eby and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Parks are spending this week at Hunter's Lake... Mr. and Mrs. Fred Overholser, Miss Blanche Austerman and ' Mark Pyle motored to Centerville and visited Mr. and Mrs. Rife Pyle. Attend Chautauqua. Misses Anna Stanley, Grace Parks; Messrs. Walter and Russell Stanley, Harry Phelps, Elmer Farnsworth and Mrs. Bertha Farnsworth motored to Richmond Monday evening and attended Chautauqua. .. .Mrs. Beatrice Laub of Toledo, O., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. James Peck.. .Walter Stanley has accepted a position with the C. ,.& O Master Raymond Sharver of Richmond is visiting his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Phenis .John Druley of Peru, visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Druley last week. Returns from Oxford. Miss Edna Stanford, has returned from Oxfordwhere she was the guest of Mila Tobey Miss Letha Phillips and Jerome Merkel were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kennedy of Peru The Methodist Sunday school picnic will be held next Saturday at Glen Miller. Everyone is invited.

Gloves, belting and other leather articles have been made from sea lions' hides in a British Columbia factory.

How to Judge a Woman by Her Hair

EATON, O., Aug. 24. Waldo T. Weist, suing Amanda H. Weist for divorce, charges ' that " she associated with dissolute and disreputable people of both sexes to such an extent that it became a disgrace to him. He avers he was compelled to leave her in October, 1915. They married in October, 1912, They are without children.

, There are always the well-known and semi-humorous methods, such as saying brunettes are quick-tempered. But there is real common sense in just noticing whether the hair is well-kept to judge a woman's neatness. If you are one of the few v.ho try to make the most of your hair, remember that it is not advisable to wash the hair with any cleanser made for all purposes, but' always use some good preparation made expressly for shampooing. You can enjoy the very best by getting some canthrox from your druggist and dissolving a teaspoonful in a cup of 'hot water when your shampoo is all ready. After Its use the hair dries rapidly with uniform color- Dandruff, excess 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 delight you, while the stimulated scalp gains the health which insures hair growth. Adv.

TUITION REMAINS SAME.

OXFORD, O., Aug. 23 It was stated today officially, that no , increase is contemplated by the school board in the . tuition of non-resident students in the grades of the public schools. This charge will remain $12 a year, as heretofore. The increase -of high

school tuition to $50 a year is to be made because the per capita cost of such Instruction is about $60 a year. This tuition is paid by the township, because it maintains no high school.

In order to extract iodine from seaweed, Russia is erecting a factory In Vladivostok.

. Dysentery In Alabama. : ."My little four year old boy had a severe attack of dysentery. . We gave him Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and believe It saved bis life,' says Wm. H. Stribling. Carbon Hill,' Ala. .Obtainable everywhere. Adv. v."' ' ' U-

Teniae Leaps to Great Fame In the Nation

Wife to Blame if Husband Drinks Says Druggist Brown of Cleveland i i Who' Tells Wife What to Do

New Treatment Given Without the Consent or Knowledge of the Drinker.

Nothing Yet Has Ever Approached the New Tonic in Merit or Popu- -larity. . A little more than two years ago, the first bottle of Tanlac, the modern medicine, which has been building up countless men and women throughout the country, was sold in a drug store in Lexington, Ky. From that sale grew a romance of the business world in which a million people now have a personal interest an interest supreme because it is based on health. Today, this remarkable preparation is being distributed by the carload. In the annals of proprietary medicines nothing has ever remotely approached Tanlac's instant and tremendous leap to popularity. The original company which put Tanlac on the market was completely swamped in six months and found itself unable to introduce Tanlac in sufficient quantity to meet the monster demand. - Overwhelmed with the colossal demand it became necessary for the original company to Increase the capacity of its laboratories, but now the thousands of people who have been waiting for Tanlac may share in the benefits of relief experienced in its influence in stomach, liver, kidney and catarrhal ailments and symptoms which arise from these disorders, such as nervousness, dyspepsia, dizziness, sleeplessness, loss of flesh, waning strength, , di stress after eating, constipation, blotchy complexion, and those offensive and annoying catarrhal effects like bad breath, dropping of mucous, watery eyes and constant colds. ! Tanlac Is now being specially introduced and explained in Richmond at Clem Thistlethwaite's drug stores. Adv.

CLEVELAND, . O. No wife has a right to blame her husband because he drinks, says Druggist Brown of Cleveland. It is her fault if she lets him drink and -bring unhappiness and poverty to her home and she has no right to complain. A woman can stop a drinking husband in a few weeks for half what he would spend' on liquoj, so why waste sympathy on a wife who refuses to do it? Druggist Brown also says the right time to stop -the drink habit is at its beginning unless you want drink to deaden the fine sensibilities of the husband you love. ' Begin with the first whiff of liquor on his breath, but do not despair if he has gone from bad to worse until he Is rum-soaked through and through. Druggist Brown knows the curse of strong drink because he himself has been a victim. , He was rescued from the brink of a drunkard's grave by a ; lo ving sister, I who, after ten years' time, revealed the

secret to him. ; She saved him from drink rescued him from his own depraved self, by giving him a secret remedy, the formula of an old German chemist. To discharge his debt to her and to help other victims ot of the murk and mire he has made the formula public. Any druggist can put it in the hands of any suffering wife, mother, sister or daughter. Just ask the druggist for 14 Tescum powders and drop a powder twice a day in tea, coffee, milk or any other drink. Soon liquor does not taste the same the craving for it' disappears and lo, one more drinker is saved and knows not when or why he lost the taste for drink. Note: Tescum, referred to above, should be used only when it is desirable to destroy all taste for alcoholic drinks of every kind. The wife who approves of drinking in moderation and believes her husband safe should give . it only when she sees, as most do in time, that the danger line is near. Since this formula has been made public Clem Thistlethwaite and other druggists have been kept busy. Adv.

Jus! One More Week

IS LEFT TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR

Your contract for laying that sidewalk, putting in the foundation of the house, etc., should be placed with us. We use the finest materials obtainable; there is no "skimping" in workmanship and ALL the work is done under the exacting supervision of experienced concrete construction men. . " , Ask us for our estimate. MATHER B. KELSEY Phone 3807- -'

The savings are truly remarkable merchandise the best, prices the lowest-r-thatfs why we urge you to profit by these economies. And then any day you come you will realize 'Value received."

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. VERY EXTRA SPECIAL DURING THE LAST DAYS OF OUR GREAT m ; USED PIANO SALE

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250 Music Roils, mostly 88-note, to close at 10c and 25c

A few 65 note Rolls at your JQ choice

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OFFERS YOU UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITIES TO PURCHASE HIGH GRADE INSTRUMENTS AT EXCEPTIONAL LOW PRICES

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The demand has been very strong and we have set aside only 1 2, which will soon be gone. We have some well known makes in fine figured mahogany and walnut cases, worth from $400 to $500- all go at great bargain prices to make room for our new September stock.

Sals Closes

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YOU WILL MAKE A MISTAKE IF YOU FAIL TO CALL AT OUR SALESROOMS DURLNG THIS SALE. THERE ARE REALLY SOME WONDERFUL VALUES HERE AND AT PRICES THAT WILL PROBABLY NEVER BE QUOTED AGAIN .

One Everett Upright, was $500, now $150. 'One Baldwin, large size, mahogany, fancy wood, was $500. One Bush & Lane, very massive in design and first class condition. One Trayser Player, Mahogany Case. One Style G Starr, Mahogany Case. One Style B, Mahogany Case.

One Richmond discontinued style.

One Remington Player, full 88 note. One Harvard, Mahogany Case. One Trayser Player, discontinued style at $350, original price $550. One Richmond, walnut case, refinished and thoroughly overhauled, like new. One slightly used Starr Grand.

We -Also. 'Offer in This Sale:

3 SQUARE PIANOS, all in good condition, each at . .........

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SIX GOOD ORGANS, all in good condition, each at ........ . .

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Main and 10th Sts.

Richmond, Ind.

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