Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 275, 5 October 1916 — Page 2
XUE RICHMOND rAL4lUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THUKSDA, UU1. d, Itfltt
Stores Captured by British MISS GRACE KING ADDRESSES WOMEN ' CENTERVILLE, Ind.r, Oct. " 5. The Ladies' Auxiliary met at the school house Tesday. Miss Grace L. King, domestic science supervisor of county schools, was present and gave a very interesting talk on co-operation of uarents with her in her work of domestic science and sewing." It was decided that the Auxiliary will serve the dinner for the Jones Pike sale Oct. 18. Miss Bertsch and her class in domestic science attended this meeting. The next meeting will be Nov. 7 at the school house. Miss Alma Garvin of Purdue, will be present and give demonstration. Sub Jest, "Eggs, Cheese and Milk as Meat Substitute."
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CAPTUR5D fiBRMAN AMMUNITION
Here Is shown some of the loot captured by the British from the Germans along the Somme. The wicker shell cases contain shells of various calibre for the guns used in the defense of the positions from which the .Germans were driven. Some of the guns were captured and the shells shot back at their one time owners.
Copyright, 1916, by the McClure It was coming winter in the deep woods soon, and while it was far from being cold Mr. Fox, who always looked ahead, began to wonder where he could find nice, soft covering for his bed. "I haven't a friend who has more than he needs himself, and as far as I know," thought Mr. Fox to himself, "no friend of mine owns a quilt, and that is what I want a nice patchwork quilt like the ones my grandmother used to make. How I wish I had saved one of those, but like a silly young fellow that I was, I didn't want the old-fashioned looking thing I thought. I should have plenty of new style coverings, and here I am this winter without anything at all. "Seems to me I have heard Grandma tell about quilting parties they used to have when she was a girl, and that you could get a quilt made by inviting all your friends and giving them a few apples. I- believe that would be the very thing for me to do. I can get some apples as easy as can be up at Mr. Man's. He never thinks to lock up the cellar where he keeps them." So Mr. Fox started out to invite his friends. It took him all day to make the rounds, for he wanted everybody far and near to come. "The more that come the bigger the quilt," thought Mr. Fox with a sly smile. So he eat down to think out a plan by which he could have the quilt given him as well as the work. By and by he Jumped up with a smile and started off on a fast trot around to all the invited guests and asked them to bring a small piece of cloth for their patchwork piece. "I have decided to have it an album quilt," he told them. "Everybody writes their name on the piece of cloth they bring, so I will be able always, in bed or out of bed, to remember my dear friends; and only my very close and dear friends are invited to this party." he explained. So on the day of the party Mr. Fox set out on his table four dishes of apples. "That should be enough for them unless they are all pigs about eating." he said. Mr. and Mrs. Squirrel came and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rabbit came and so did Mr. and Mrs. Bear. The Squirrels and the Jack Rabbits and the Bears had brought along their children, "for," said they, "our grandmothers told us all the children and the men folks always came to supper and we knew you would want to give the quilting party right, Mr. Fox; you are so particular." Mr. Fox did not feel very pleased when he heard that, but before he could say a word Mrs. Squirrel said: "All the children have brought their piece of patchwork, so you will have a nice, big quilt, Mr. Fox." This cleared Mr. Fox's brow of the frown that was beginning to show, but it quickly came again when the door opened and in came the Coon and the Possum family with all their children. "Oh. Mr. Fox, what you going to have for supper?" asked the little Possums. "Grandma says at quilting parties when she was young they had cake and pie and chicken and duck " "Your grandmother told you
wrong," said Mr. Fox. who could seel
bis pantry bare by the time the party was over if this went on. "Apples are the thing to serve at a quilting party, and you shall have all you want as long as they last." Everybody looked at the four dishes of apples on the table, and then the little Possums and the little Coons began to cry. "We don't like apples; we want chicken and pie and cake and duck and " "And if they don't get it," said Mrs. Possum, "you won't get your old quilt, Mr. Fox." "No, indeed, you wont." said Mrs. Coon. "Do you think we are going to
Newspaper Syndicate, New York, come here and work on a quilt for you and give the patchwork besides, and eat apples? Is that all you have, Mr. Fox?" Mr. Fox said it was, and that they knew very little about a quilting party if they expected any more. "We will take our pieces of patchwork and go home then," said all the guests, and out they marched, followed by their children, and as far as he could hear anything Mr. Fox heard the little Possums and the little Coons crying, "We want cake and pie, and chicken and duck and " "If they got all that it would cost more to get that quilt than it would to buy one of old Granny Frog, made of lilly pads, and that is what I shall have to do, I guess, or freeze this winter."
FALLS DOWN STAIRS
CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., Oct. 5. Mrs. Mary Richey met with a very serious accident at an early hour, Tuesday morning, when Bhe lost her footing and fell down the stairway at her home west of town, breaking the bones of the right fore-arm.
NEW YORK SINGERS ASSIST MIAMI CHOIR
OXFORD, 0., Oct. 5. Miami university's Arion Choir, with 104 student voicies, will give Verdi's Manzoni Requiem at its forthcoming concert. Prof. A. W. Martin is director of the choir. Four New York vocalists have been engaged for the solo parts: Grace Kerns, soprano; Christine Miller, contralto; John Campbell, tenor, and Robert Maitland, basso. MISSIONARY SOCIETY MEETS
PERSONAL APPEALS ISSUED BY Y. M, C. A.
Personal letters have been sent to every member of the Y. M. C. A. asking assistance in the State Membership campaign, October 9-14. All that the members are asked to do is to line the fellows up and then if they have not time to take them to the "Y" and see them signed up, they can call the office and a special committee will be sent to call on the prospect.
KEEPS LAWN PRETTY
CAMBRIDGE CITYi Ind., Oct. 5. Although Jack Frost is making ravages among the flowers, the garden of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Martz yet remains one of unusual beauty, with its ornamental peppers in red, yellow and purple and green, its fine varieties of coxcomb in many tones of red, its feathery butterfly bush, and other ornamental shrubbery.
RETURN FRON PHILADELPHIA
EATON, Ohio, Oct. 5. Mrs. Walter E. Moorehead and children returned Tuesday to their home at Philadelphia, after an extended visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Jones. Natives of the eastern slopes of the Andes in Bolivia scatter the juice of a tree on streams to render fish insensible so they can be caught in the hands.
EATON, Ohio, Oct 5. A meeting of t Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary society of St. Paul's M. E. church will be held Thursday afternoon in the church parlors. In Norway there Is being built a plant that will produce 4,000 tons of aluminum annually.
SAGE AND SULPHUR DARKENS GRAY HAIR
It's Grandmother's Recipe to Restore Color, Gloss and Thickness.
. How Catarrh Is Contracted Mothers are sometimes so thoughtless as to neglect the colds which their children contract. The Inflamma- . tion of the mucus membrane, at first acute, becomes chronic catarrh, a disease that is seldom cured and that may prove a life's burden. Many persons who have this loathsome disease will remember having had frequent colds at the time it was contracted. A
little forethought, a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy judiciously used, and all this trouble might have been
v avoided. Obtainable everywhere.
Hair that loses its color and lustre, or when it fades, turns gray, dull and lifeless, is caused by a lack of sulphur in the hair. Our grandmother 'made up a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur to keep h-r locks dark and beautiful, and thousands of women and men who value that even color, that beautiful dark shade of hair which is so attractive, use only this old-time recipe Nowadays we get this famous mixture by asking at any drug store for a 50 cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," which darkens the hair so naturally, so evenly, that nobody can possibly tell it has been applied. Besides, it takes off dandruff, stops scalp itching and falling hair. You just damped a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; but what delights the ladles with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur is that, besides beautifully darkening the hair after a few applications, it also brings back the gloss and lustre and gives it an appearance of abundance. Adv.
Food Souring On Stomach Causes Indigestion, Gas 'Tape's Diapepsin" Ends All Stomach Distress in Five Minutes.
Wonder what upset your stomach which portion of the food did the damage do you? Well, don't bother. If your stomach is in a revolt; if sour, gassy and upset, and what you just ate has fermented into etubborn lumps; head dizzy and aches; belch gases and acids and eructate undigested food; breath foul, tongue coated just take a little Pape's Diapepsin and in five minutes you. wonder what became of the indigestion and distress. Millions of men and women today know that it is needless to have a bad stomach. A little Diapepsin occasionally keeps this delicate organ regulated and they eat their favorite foods without fear. If your stomach doesn't take care of your liberal limit without rebellion; if you food is a damage instead of a help, remember the quickest, surest, most harmless relief is Pape's Diapepsin, which costs only fifty cents for a large case at drug stores. It's truly wonderful it digests food and sets things straight, so gently and easily that it is really astouishing. Please, for your sake, don't go on and on with a weak, disordered stomach; it's so unnecessary. Adv. .
NARCISSUS BULBS To Bloom in Water or Soil 25c per Dozen Lemon's Flower Shop
Auto Supplies and Vulcanizing SWINEHART TIRES We are agents for these celebrated Tires something new around here, but in great demand in larger cities. They are not a cheap or an expensive tire, but one that will give great mileage. Put them on your car and they will always be there. VULCANIZING By an expert in one of the largest and best plants in the city. All work guaranteed to outwear the rest of the tire. Give us a call. COMPLETE LINE OF TIRES AND ACCESSORIES
Mikesell Tire Exchange
PALLADIUM BLDG.
PHONE 2414
lid Friends of Tanlac Relate Tales of Help
Old friends of Tanlac, the celebrated medicine to be introduced in Richmond at the Clem Thistlethwaite drug store, Sixth and Main, by a special Tanlac representative beginning at 9 o'clock Saturday morning, revived memories, yesterday, of the premier preparation's first annual announcement in this city, held a year ago. With the announcement that the second annual demonstration is to begin in Richmond next Saturday, etories of the preparation's help for people who suffered from stomach liver and kidney trouble, catarrhal complaints, rheumatism and the like, when it was last specially introduced here and since that time, were recalled. The Interest created hv the flret an.
nouncement, made yesterday, indicates
inai me same enthusiasm shown a year ago, when it was stated that a medicine of real merit was to be introduced here, will greet Tanlac on this, its second special introduction in Richmond. Already people who gained benefits from Tanlac when it was last introduced here, or since that time, are telling their friends about the new preparation. This is where Tanlac scores. Those who have tried the new medicine are Its best friends, for they realize that Tanlac is the excellent preparation it is claimed to be, and they do not hesitate to recommend it to their friends. Tanlac's help for people who suffer from stomach, liver and kidney trouble, catarrhal complaints, rheumatism, nervousness, loss of appetite and the like, is being told each day by people all over Indiana, and in all other states. The special Tanlac representative who will meet the public of Richmond, is in the city. He will establish his headquarters at the Clem Thistlethwaite drug store, Sixth and Main, at 9 o'clock next Saturday morning and will explain Tanlac to the public daily through an indefinite period. Adv.
KOLP SCHOOL OF DANCING PREPARE FOR THE WINTER. Special Rates fpr Private Leasons during September. Beginner's Class Friday Evening, Oct. 6th In I. O. O. F. hall. 326 North 10th St. PHONE 2347.
USE COOPER'S BLEND Cofitee COOPER'S GROCERY
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Soimgs from the Heart of Merry OH Irelaimdl THE Land of the Shamrock has produced and inspired some of the best-loved "songs of the heart" that have sung their way into our affections. Chauncey Olcott, among other famous artists, has made 6ome Columbia Double-Disc Records that will touch the very heart-strings
of every son of the Emerald Isle. These records by Olcott and others are particularly fine examples:
A 1310 10-inch 75c A 1857 10 inch 75c
A 1916
10 inch 75c
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fl LOVE THE NAME OF MARY.
Chauncey Olcott, Tenor,
I WHEN HUSH EYES ARE SMILING.
Chauncey Olcott, Tenor.
MACUSHLA. Hardy Williamson, Tenor. MOTHER MACHREE. Hardy Williamson, Tenor.
f WHERE THE RIVER SHANNON FLOWS.
Broadway Quartette.
I A LITTLE BIT OF HEAVEN.
Broadway Quartette.
Whether or not you were born in Ireland, these records will have a message for you: a message of beauty and warmth and perfection, in tone, recording and reproduction. Look for the "double music-note" trade-mark you will know from these records what it means in music. New Columiia Records on sale the SOth of every month. Columbia Records in all Foreign Languages. This advertisement was dictated to the Dictaphone.
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Columbia Grafonola Price $150
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GRAFONOLAS and DOUBLE-DISC
RECORDS
FOR SALE BY CLEM THISTLETHWAITE, 914 Main St.
DO PEOPLE READ
At A A H
THEY DO. YOU ARE READING THIS ONE Your want can be supplied by stating your "want" in an advertisement in the Want Ad columns of the Palladium.
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