Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 246, 1 September 1916 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, SEPT. 1, 1916

PAGE THREE

ISSUE PROGRAM FOR INSTITUTE BEFORE SCHOOL

Program of Institutes tor Wayne county teachers was issued today by Superintendent Williams. It follows: First institute. Sept 2, 1916; held in the high school building, Richmond, Indiana. Cambridge City, Centerville, Dublin end Hagerstown Room No. 30. Abington, Boston, Wayne Room No. 34. Center, Clay, Greene, Perry Room No. 32. Dayton, Harrison, Jackson, Jefferson, Washington Room No. 33. Franklin; New Garden, WebsterRoom No. 31. . Program. 9:30 A. M. 1. Organization. 2. Roll call. 3. Civic Biology: (Chap. 2, 3, 4, 5.) G. E. Long. Kate Stanton, Ruth , Harvey, L. E. Thompson, George W. Ranck. 10:30 A. M. Intermission. 10:45 A. M. 4. State Course of Study for the Elementary Schools and the New Books Eleanor Newman, Nellie Morrow, Catherine Pusey, Chas. Woollard, Francis Curtis. 5. School Grounds and Buildings: The building, basement, cloakroom, lighting, ventilation, use of windows, temperature, methods, heating, humidity, desks, blackboards, water supply, decoration, charts and equipment; library Elizabeth Lashley, Ora White,

Ruth Harris, Callie Tremps and

Mabel Sourbeer. 11:45 A. M. Noon Intermission. Sectional Meetings.

High School Section Room No. 30. Intermediate Section Room. No. 31.

Primary Section Room No. 34. District Section Room No. 32. 1:15 P. M. 1. Opening Exercises. 2. Roll Call. 3. Organization.

4. What Children Study, and Why, (Chap. 1, 2, 3.) George W. Schell, Cora Nolder, Ruth Hiatt, Jas. W.

Morgan.

5. Schoolroom Technique Preparation for the First Day: The First Day; Daily Program; Value of a

Good Program; Correlation and Alternation; Construct a Model

, Program; Rules of Government-

O. W. Nicely, Eleanor Root, Grace

Pitts, Ruth Tremps. 2:15 P. M.

6. Teachers of Agriculture, Room

No. 33 Walter Brumflel.

7. Beginning Teachers, Rtfom No. 32

County Superintendent. All Sections Room No. 34. 2:45 P. M. 1. General Exercises. 4 2. Plap for the Year County Superintendent. 3. Address John H. vHaines, Manager.

BURNS RECOUNTS STORY OF ONEIDA INSTITUTE

The story of the life work of a man who has devoted himself to educating and uplifting the Kentucky mountaineers furnished the theme of the lecture at the Chautauqua last night by James A Burns, who spoke on "The Conservation of Life in the Kentucky Mountains." Mr. Burns is the founder and president of Oneida institute, a school that is doing much to educate the mountaineers and to discourage feuds and murder. Straightforward and unassuming, with all the directness of manner of the mountaineer, "Burns of the Mountains" spoke simply of his experiences among his own people, and held the attention of a large audience. "The Kentucky mountaineer stock is 99.9 per cent pure, with only a mixture of one-tenth of foreign blood," said Burns. "They are, therefore, the purest Anglo-Saxon stock in the world. The original immigrants into Kentucky from Virginia and the other colonies were educated and cultured men, but the Kentuckian, shut off from the world, has gradually become illiterate and ignorant. With ignorance has come the feud, hatred between families, the evils of moonshining and other wrongs." Mr. Burns told how his father, to give his sons a chance, took them from the mountains to a locality where the facilities for education were better. When James Burns had received his

I education he felt called to go back and

work for his people.

SIX BABIES ENTER WAYNE COUNTY TEST FOR FIFTEEN PRIZES

Six babies have been registered for the Wayne County Perfect Baby contest. Since only babies who live in the county outside of Richmond are eligible to this contest and since the candidates will necessarily be distributed all over the county, a plan has been decided upon to make it earier for mothers to enter their children in the competition. During the entire contest and examination it will be necessary for the mother to take her child only a short way from home. The babies will not be called into Richmond for final examination. All that the mothers of Wayne county need to do is to write to Miss Mary Kennedy, Commercial Club rooms, Richmond, and ask that their babies be registered. Miss Kennedy will then direct the mother to some member of the Wayne county medical association who practices in a town near her home. He will examine the child and keep the record. This is all that the mother will have to do. Towards the last of October, the Perfect Baby committee of the Medical association will meet and choose the winners from the record cards. No names except those of winners will be made public. Suitable prizes will be offered. There will be at least fifteen awards made.

SGHROEDER TO SERVE REST OF SENTANGE

Julian Schroeder, the trusty who escaped from the county Jail about a month ago. may return and serve out the remaining fifteen days of his term, Sheriff Steen has been advised. Frank Conner, an attorney, called on the sheriff yesterday and asked if Schroeder could return and serve out his remaining sentence for stealing blue prints from the National Automatic Tool company without extra punishment for breaking jail. Upon being informed that he could, Conner said he thought he would be able to get the young man to return.

The British government recently bought 1,000 tons of hay in Kansas City, which it will 6hip to some scenes of hostility by way of New Orleans.

LONG TURNS FORGE OF SARCASM UPON POLITICAL PARTIES

Bits of sarcastic comment and criticism on Hughes, Wilson and the political parties, which Sylvester Long interspersed in his lecture on "The Challenge of the Hour" at the Chautauqua yesterday afternoon kept the audience in an almost constant state of

Returning, he found a feud in full sway. The community was divided

in bitter warfare, said Burns. He

called the men together to talk with them in an old 6hed. "The men came in, and lined up on either side of the shed. They completely ignored each other, and there was a tenseness in the air. I talked to them and told them that they were raising their children for the slaughter. I asked them, not because they were afraid to fight, but for the sakes of their families, to discontinue their feud, and to establish a iittle school where the children of the men who

had fought each other might learn to-; gether. For the first time in their lives those men shook each other's hands and agreed to start the school." j . Mr. Burns then told of the growth of i

this school, and of the aid that they had received from others. It costs, at Oneida institute $6 a month for tuition, board and room. The teachers agree to have no fixed salary, but to divide equally what is left when bills are met. Usually, said Mr. Burns, there is nothing left to quarrel about.

SERVICE IS DEMAND MADE UPON PEOPLE

'"The most "damning force against American progress is the simple indifference of our people," declared Sylvester Long, speaking on "The Challenge of the Hour" at the Chautauqua yesterday. "Nations are like individuals and must render service. The challenge of the hour is for principle. - "Intelligent service is the first law, Magnaimous service is the second law! The man who has never learned the secret of magnaminity has not begun to solve the problems of life. Some time there comes an hour when a service of principle is needed. Then but one thing counts. When a man grips

a great principle of life he becomes full of power." ...

LEONARD YOUNG BETTER.

Leonard Young who underwent a serious operation recently is improving rapidly. He will be moved to his home in about two weeks.

Experiments ' have shown that excellent paper can be made out of grape vines.

ELL-ANS

Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it 25c at all druggists.

GET RID OF WRINKLES

Usit Will Drive Them Away Brings Back Smooth, Clear, Youthful Complexion and Color.

"The bottle of Usit has completely cleared my face of the horrible wrinkles that were such an eyesore to my five daughters, and even my grandchildren have their say about Grandma's wrinkles. It is a Godsend to wrinkle suffering humanity." Usit, the wonderful pure nut-oil skin food (in opal bottles, not a face cream) will do as much for you, ladles whether you are grandmothers, middle aged or young mothers, or younger girls whether the wrinkles have been brought to your face by age, work, worry or exposure to wind and sun. Usit feeds the skin back to health. It is the one thing that will bring

JOHN C. BOCKMAN, CHIROPRACTOR If the spine is right the Man , is right Investigate Knollenberg's Annex, 2nd Floor Phone 1868

Folly To Let a Man Drink, Says Druggist Brown of Cleveland Who Gives a Secret Home Remedy

A New Treatment Given Without the Consent or Knowledge of the Drinker. CLEVELAND, O. A woman who lets a man drink is foolish, says Druggist Brown, for no man who drinks even a little bit is safe. A woman can break the drink habit in a . few weeks for half what a man spends on liquor in the same time, and the drinker need never know she did it. For the sake and safety of both stop the drink habit in its beginning. Let the first whiff of liquor on his breath be your danger signal, but even if he is rum-soaked through and through do not despair; he can be saved and it is your duty to save him. Druggist Brown knows the awful curse of strong drink because he himself has

j been a victim. A loving 6ister resi cued him from the brink of a drunkard's grave and kept her secret ten years,' then she told him how she did ! it. She saved him from the demon drink, rescued him from his own de

praved self by means of a secret remedy, the formula of an old German chemist. To save other families from the curse of drink and to help other victims out of the murk and mire he now makes the formula public. Any druggist can help you If you long to save a loved one. Just ask your druggist for powdered tescum and drop a powder twice a day in tea, coffee, milk or any other drink. Liquor soon ceases to taste the same, the craving for it vanishes and lo, one more drunkard is saved without knowing why he lost the taste for strong drinkNote: Powdered tescum, referred to above should not be given except where it is desirable to destroy all taste for alcoholic drinks. Women who approve of moderate drinking and believe moderate drinkers safe should give tescum only when they see, as most do in time, that the danger line is plainly , near. Since this formula has been published Clem Thistlethwaite and other druggists have filled it repeatedly. Adv.

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At Wonderful Savings Here Tomorrow As usual the Grand Leader goes forward with a wonderful advance sale of smart fall millinery and fall apparel at prices only possible at this underselling store. Come tomorrow and see how easy it is to save almost half on your new fall apparel.

lauehter. In his lecture Mr. Long ae

clared that the American nation need-'back the youthful appearance so dear

ed most fundamental principle

"I was in Helena, Mont., when Mr. Hughes passed through," he said. "He was a long way from home, and was wishing he was back. If that man don't quit his demagogery his criticism of what is, without having anything else to offer, his mudslinging at President Wilson, he will re-elect Wilson yet. When he tries to cover a Mark

Hanna shirt with a Roosevelt coat, he's got a big job." Wants Wilson Watched. Later in his address he said: "If you don't watch Wilson, and watch him close, he is going to continue to be what he has been a much better Democrat than president of the United States "We need two great parties, a progressive and conservative party. There nre alwavs two sides to a question.

Our political parties have lost the fund-

amentalsamentals. it was a sname that the Progressive party was so short lived; we needed a party like that." he continued. "But," said Mr. Long, "I am not here to talk politics. Why, bless you, I wouldn't say anything, not even against the Democratic party." REV. HILL ARRIVES

Rev. James F. Hill, the newly elected pastor of Reid Memorial church, arrived in Richmond this morning with his family. He will assume the duties of his new charge immediately. The Rev. Mr. Hill was formerly pastor of the Presbyterian church at Martin's Ferry, O.

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"LOOK, PA, HOW 'GETS-IT WORKS I" Lifts Your Corn Right Off. Never Fails. "Ever in your life see a corn come out like that? Look at the true skin underneath smooth as the palm of your hand!

to you and admired by everybody.

Rubbed into the skin before retiring, it does its magical work while you j

sary. Get a bottle today at any first-! f

class drug store for 50 cents. It is i

guaranteed to contain nothing that

will cause hair growth. The most painful cases of sunburn

are relieved instantly by Usit. For!

sale by Thistlethwaite's five stores i

and dealers everywhere. Adv.

CATTL

SHEEP and O ATS Buy Your Stockers and Feeders OF B. C. Stanley ORDER BUYER Room No. 564, Kansas City Stock Yards. References: Union County National Bank, cf Libtrty, Ind., and Drovers' National Bank, of Kansas City. Mo.

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Opening Sale of New Fall Millinery There is a pleasant surprise in store for you tomorrow at the busiest millinery store in Richmond. You would expect to pay much more for these new hats, but the Grand Leader low prices are selling them like hot cakes. Remember they are the newest of the new and will cost you just

half the price you pay elsewhere.

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APPAMTT H

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RICHMOND'S GREATEST MILLINERY STORE

$2.00 VELVET SHAPES, 98c

Tricorns, mushrooms, sailors, close fitting turbans, beautiful new modish, dis

tinctive styles that are very becoming;

choicerbver 500 hats

at

98c

$5.00 TRIMMED HATS $2.98 A new shipment Of sample Velvet Hats, smartly trimmed in a large variety of

stunning dress and tailored shapes,

priced for Saturday at

$2.98

$4 Lyons Velvet Shapes $1.98

Of genuine Lyons Silk Velvet Shapes in all new fall color tones, smart hats that need very little trimming; every

style; your choice at

S1.98

$6.00 TRIMMED MATS $3.98 A special purchase pure silk velvet and

valoire trimmed hats, beautifully trimmed with beautiful ancies, etc., your

choice Saturday at only

S3.98

Child's $2.50 Trimmed Velvet Hats at

$1.49 1

50 Felt Hats, plain 3- AQ d combination colors

Up to $8.00' Beautiful new Trimmed Hats at

$4.95

Up to $10.00 Beautiful Pattern Hats at

$5.95

Wei! Now. Look at That! Off Comet That Pesky Com aa Slick a Whistlo. The earth !s blessed with the one.

simple, painless, never-failing remedy that makes millions of corn-pestered people happy, and that's "GETS-IT. ' Apply it in 3 seconds. It dries. Some people Jab and dig at their corns with

knives and razors wrap their toes in

packages . with bandages or sticky tape, make them red and raw with salves. Nothing like this with "GETSIT." Your corn loosens you lift it off. There's nothing to press on the

corn, or hurt. Angels couldn't ask for

more. Try it tonight on any corn,

callus or wart

"GETS-It" is sold and recommended

by druggists everywhere, 25c a bottle, or sent on receipt of price by E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago, 111.

Sold in Richmond and recommended

as the world's best corn remedy by A. G. Luken. Clem Thistlethwaite and Conkey Drug Company Adv.

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Unbeatable Exterminator

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Used thm World Over - Uied by U.S.C

Thm Old Rmtimhlm That Afvmr- Fmlln is 9K a n-.. :-

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"Royal Rochester" 99 Pure kLWWM SEAMLESS Tea Kettle

Special Sale

WEST WINDOW

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Featuring New FALL CORSETS Newest $3 Corsets in silk brocaded French .cotele and batiste corsets, in many famous models; specially priced for Sat- J1 QQ urday at J) J. JuO

$2 CORSETS 98c Well made, guaran-

ieea rust-procr, of : several famous

A 1:1 WN. makes: finest nnali-

''V ty cotele in front or

i'rn'jffsW v J back lace; come in 4

and 6 hose support-

'MWi ers; fecial price QQ-

'r-tlMil for Saturday at... JOK,

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4j fj rifSjj Several makes of finest 41

triJEfll supporters, fits like a 'S&'B glove, in all sizes. Of

VlW Saturday at OVC

Best 50c Corsets 39c Best 75c Corsets 49c

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One Quart Armour's Grape

g Juice, specially priced for 29c

-j cwiuiua; at

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$5.00 WOMEN'S DRESS SKIRTS $2.98

$2.98

Of finest quality all wool serge, checks, stripes, etc.; beautifully made in the new fall styles; specially priced for Saturday at

$3.98

Up to $6.50 Womezis Dress Skirts $3.98 Of finest all wool poplins, serges, novelties, etc.;

beautifully made in dozens of pretty styles; also come in extra sizes; your choice Saturday at

UP TO $8.00 DRESS SKIRTS, $4.95

Of finest all wool poplins, men's wear serges, beau

tiful checks, stripes, etc., beauti

fully made in the newest fall mod

els. Your choice Saturday at

$4.95

UP TO $10.00 DRESS SKIRTS, $5.95 In the new, beautiful black satins, finest poplins, best quality of men's wear serges; made in the

most becoming fall models; a glance at these will show actual $10.00 models; priced for Saturday at

S5.95

Featuring New FALL BLOUSES

repe ce enme $2.98

$5 Crepe De Chine Waists at $2.98

Beautiful new fine quality crepe de chine

Waists in a variety of beautiful colors and styles; regular $4 and $5 values, in all sizes at

$3 Silk Waists $1.98 Dainty new crepe de chine, all over lace, satin stripes, etc., in all of the newest colors and 6tyles; priced

for Saturday at

$1.98

$2.00 Silk Waists, 98c

Beautiful new china and jap silk, also in a large va

riety of organdies and voiles, in beautiful stripes and plain materials in one hundred different styles;

your choice Satur- AO.

VOK

day at

W HI

New $5.00 Suit

For School Wear

Come in fancy wool novelty mixtures, in all

sizes to 17. Newest fall models; well made in the new pinch back; Saturday, your choice at

Boys' $7.50 Suits at .....$4.95 Boys' $1.00 Knickers at. . . .69c Boys' 50c Sport Blouses. . . .39c Boys' 50c Union Suits at. . . .39c Boys' 35c Union Suits at . . 19c

mixtures, iu an $2.98

BS)E

Here, You Alert Men! Sale of Dress Shirts

Choice of 1,000 Shirts of finest French percales, woven madras and pongee cloth; come in soft and laundered cuffs, all coat styles; your choice Saturday at 69c.

39c

Men's 50c Dress Suspenders

at

Mitn's 50c Work Shirts 39c Mi:n's 35c Silk Hose at 19c Men's $3.00 Dress Trousers, $1.98 Men's 10c Work or Dress Hose, 7c Men's $1.25 Overalls....' S9c

Men's $2.00 Work or Dress QQ Pants at OC Men's $1.00 Union Suits at 49c Men's 75c Night Shirts at 49c Men's 75c Dress Shirts at 49c Men's $1.50 Pajamas at 89c Men's 35c Silk Neckwear 23c

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Girls' $1.50 School Dresses 98c Of finest quality ginghams, percales, etc., beautifully made in the new fall models;, all sizes to 14, QQ your choice at oC

Girls' $1 School Dresses 49c In all sizes, beautiful light and dark patterns; special for Satur- ylQ day at ttC

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Child's New $1.50 Sweaters 98c Come in gray, maroon and navy; of good weight and well made; QQ Saturday your choice at ioC

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The polish ihaivs easiest to v$e

"the shine ih&R hardest lo lose

SHOE IPOtJSIH!

BLACK-WHITE -TM1

Keep youv shoes neat Cralfa bit EqriJ aaJpatt, Am nirhf kit I alf tie effort to ft a KUiutlaitinfakM. TWyomUia no arid and will not crack tke Utibn. THE F. F. D.UXEY CO., U4, Baffafe, N. Y.

TMIIlfiCOeNlZtO5TAWPARD-AYOID SUBSTITUTES