Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 283, 14 October 1916 — Page 35
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, OCT. 14,
TUFTS PROMISES REAL STRUGGLE FOR STATE U.
INDIANAPOLIS, Oct 14. That the Tufts football team -which plays the Indiana University team here on October 28, will prove do mean opponent was demonstrated decisively by the clubbing given the Harvard team by Tufts in last Saturday's game. Although this was Harvard's third game of the season as opposed to Tuft's first, still Coach Whelan's veteran eleven completely outclassed the highly touted Harvard team, and gave the Cambridge warriors the little end of a 7-3 score. Freak shifts, bewildering
rorwara passes, and much open work on the part of the Tufts team put Harvard on the defense early in the proceedings and kept her so. Indiana football fans are much elat
ed over the result of the game, for
the one here on Oct. 28, will now assume unusual intersectional impor
tance. , The increased interest has already been manifested by the exceptionally large sale of tickets at the alumni headquarters, 1016 Merchants
Bank building.
Tufts is one of the leading educational institutions of the east. In ad
dition to the degrees from the college of liberal arts it grants degrees in engineering, medicine and theology. Its attendance last year was 1,539, and its faculty outnumbers that of Indiana by fifty or sixty instructors.
BAN IS ON HUGGING
NEW YORK, Oct. 14. Don't kiss Gwendolyn good-bye. - Don't throw your arms around Mamie and hug her just because you've both passed Trigonometry, Z-ll. Don't even wander around the halls with your arm around your best (girl of course) friend's waist These are the new rules at Wadlelgh high school for girls. Infantile paralysis is partly to blame. The formal notice reads: "Disease is contracted through personal contact, therefore abstain from demonstrations of affection." ;
8,609 WOMEN WORK ON LONDON CARS
Camden News
Ross Fattisson was a Dayton visitor
Monday Mr. and Mrs. Emil Heerman of Cincinnati were Tuesday ' guests of Miss Margaret Harrigan
Attorney John Risinger of Eaton was
a visitor here Wednesday Mrs. George Brown, Misses Blanch Moon and Harriett Brown spent Monday in
layton Mrs. Mollie Huffman was
the Wednesday guest of Mrs. M. E. Brown of Hamilton Norris Peters was a Dayton visitor Monday Arthur Shuey of Cornell, Wis., is the Kuest of his parents, Mayor and Mrs. F. O. Shuey Mrs. Elva Johnson is enjoying a visit with her son .Harry Johnson, and family at Knox, Indiana. ....Mrs. W. A. Danner spent Monday in Cincinnati Mrs. Chelsea Polock was hostess to the Philomathian club Tuesday evening at her home on North Main street. A delightful program was given and a great deal of interest was manifested in the opening meeting. Miss Eva Beasley will entertain the club in two weeks. .
John Udart, while paving a street In Rutland, Vt, with vitrified brick, laid 22,000 bricks, weighing 101 tons, in eleven and one-half hours.
LONDON, Oct 14. Peter Fisher, president of the Municipal Tramways Association, announced today there are now 8,609 women employed on street cars of his company in London. Of these 8,433 are conductors and 176 drivers. Thirty-eight per cent of the company's employes at the beginning
of the war have now joined the military or naval forces. The company has paid dependents of those defending the nation (4,200,000.
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ELOISE REID. Eloise Reid Is being hailed as a screen actress of great potentialities in emotional work. Who is she? Why she has a prominent part in support 5f Douglas Fairbanks in an immediately forthcoming Triangle-Fine Arts play that has not yet been named. Miss Reid comes from Denver, Col., where she lately graduated from the Mvlc high school and entered the ranks 3f the silent stage. She is blonde, and stands about five feet five inches. Her 3ebut under the Triangle banner is to be a real event. These lines are In the nature of a prophecy.
Ayou, a Cayuse Indian, is dead at 120, in Pendleton, Ore.
DEAD" BABY LIVES;
"LIVE" ONE BURIED BY QUEER MISTAKE
YONRERS, N. Y., Oct. 14. While o:t3 mother is rejoicing here today over the possession, alive and well, of the baby she thought she buried two weeks ago, another mother, who believed her little one recovering from dread infantile paralysis, is sorrowing over the belated news that the child succumbed to the disease and has been many days in the grave. It came about through a mistake in identity at the Contagious Disease Hospital here. Both babies ' were eighteen months old, of Russian parentage and looked much alike. They were received about the same time, suffering from the same disease. The rules of the hospital forbade their parents to visit the little patients. Two weeks ago Mrs. John Valkoff was Informed that her baby had died.
She was only allowed to see tne aeaa body through a piece of glass. Her intense grief also helped to prevent her noticing the child she was burying was not her own.
Then came a most astonishing telephone message to the stricken mother. Would she come down to the hospital right away and see if a child there was hers? Mrs. Michael Napis was insisting the baby just recovered from paralysis and supposed to be hers by the hospital authorities was a stranger. Mrs. Valfoff hurried to the hospital and cried with joy when the convalescent baby shouted "mother" on seeing her. Meanwhile Mrs. Napis was leaving for the cemetery to view the grave of her infant, the grief of the other mother transferred to her.
NEW POTASH FIELDS ATTRACT AMERICANS
HAVANA. Cuba. Oct. 14. Something like the old-fashioned American gold rush has occurred in Cuba since it was noised about that ten thousand acres of land 100 miles east of here have a rich percentage of solube potash.
Americans have been prominent among' the "get-rich-quick" questersj who have hurried to the district in
question, seeking to buy, lease, or In some other way acquire an interest in the new "Eldorado".
The Cuban Department of Agricul--ture found a sample picked up at ran-1 dom on the tract to assay 12 peri cent soluble potash. An assay made
in the United States of a sample isj
said to have shown 24 per cent, and another 40 per cent. The salt found is oxide of potassium, while the chemical obtained from the famous German mineB is chloride of potash.
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CENTERVILLE
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NEW PARIS
obeithwsister.N JoMnox.KI.ittr W. W. Thcmpson and wife removed to their country place after several months' residence in New Paris. Mr. Thompson is employed in drMng one of the school hacks Mrs. Elsie Kempel-Sellers is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Pearl Robeson at New Castle. . . I Mr. and Mrs. John Weber have gone to Abington to visit with Mr. Weber's Jarents for a few days Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Shinkle and family, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hawley have been called to West Elkton, Ohio, by the death of Edward Da vies. .. .Miss Ethel Davis has gone to Centerville to spend the week end with her sister, Mrs. W. E. EliaBon.
WOMEN LEAVE TO VISIT SISTER IN NEBRASKA
EATON, O., Oct. 14. Miss Nellie Nelson, of this city, accompanied by Mrs. Hawley Wehrley, near Eldorado, and MisB Annie Hegeman, of Dayton, have gone to Arnold, Nebraska, to pass a month at the home of Dr. and Mrs. F. A. Burnham. Mrs. Burnham, formerly Miss Olevia Nelson, is a sister of Miss Nelson and Mrs. Wehrley.
Mrs. Thomas Clevenger left for her new home in Hartford City Thursday
morning. ...... Mr. and Mrs. William j Kempton visited, friends in Richmond, Wednesday The young people's; classes of the Friends Sunday school
went to Tremps Tuesday evening on the interurban and from there formed a hay wagon party to the home of Howard Harris where they were entertained for the evening Misses Dora Jeffrey and Letha Hardesty,
Messrs George Renolds, Luther and Wallace Renolds motored from Fountain City and were the guests of Missj
Norene Means Tuesday Mr. and Mrs. William Rodenberg are visiting friends at Indianapolis this week which is Mr. Rodenberg's vacation week. .... Howard Cook, wife and on, Mr. and Mrs. Walter McConaha, Vivian and Bernlce Myers were entertained to dinner Sunday by Taylor McConaha and wife Misses Bernice and Florence Beck gave a kitchen shower Thursday evening for Mrs. , Leon Allison, nee Martha Adams. The bride received a large number of cooking utensils and other articles useful in the kitchen, which were hidden in various places over the bouse and Mrs. Allison was requested to find them. After an evening of well planned entertainment a dainty luncheon was served by the Misses Beck. Those present were Margaret Brennon, Mary Wilson, Nova Shadle, Wyota Cook, Ruth Darnell, Ruby Castator, Ruby Hanley, Esther Morgan, Marjorie Hurst, Josephine Barton. Geneva Hunt, Mary Adams, Mildred Driffel, Mabel Taylor, Esther George, Mrs. Leon Allison, Thelma Wilson and Charlene Beck.
The weeping willow came originally from the banks of the River Euphrates.
Gorgeous Display of Late Fall and Early Winter Models in New Trimmed Hats For Festival Week
BEAUTIFUL DRESS, STREET AND AFTERNOON HATS AT PRICES THAT ARE MOST REASONABLE
NOLDER
HATS" CONTAIN ALL THE STYLE AND QUALITY POSSIBLE IN HIGH GRADE MILLINERY
For Festival Week we have gathered an especially fine display of all the very newest and most popular styles in the late fall and early winter Hats, and sincerely wish you to call while visiting in Richmond to see this splendid display. , Festival Week Millinery Specials One lot of beautifully Trimmed HatsM Pft onrl Oft offered during Festival week at pOOU U.I1U J)O.UU
You Get Better Values Here
39 North Eighth Street
PALLADIUM WANT ADS BRING RESULTS TRY THEtl
TO OUJIR IFAIRJMEK IFIRSIEIOS
Bo
11 w
Tl TKVO
By
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Because
It is Convenient It is Perfectly Safe It is Strictly Confidential
YOU RZCEIVE A CHECK FOR EVERYTHING YOU SELL SIMPLY ENDORSE CHECK, PAY TO ORDER OF
Union National
Bank
And Mail to Us. We Acknowledge by Return Mail and Send You Pass Book and Check Book. These Two Books Will Show Every Financial Transaction on the Farm for the Entire Year.
CAPITAL
No Other Bookkeeping Is Necessary. SURPLUS
RESOURCES
$150,000.00
$158,917.43
$1,265,000.00
Officers GEO. L. CATES, President E. H. CATES, Vice President M. C. HENLEY, Vice President H. J. HANES, Cashier H. J. KOEHRING, Ass t Cashier.
We Do a General Banking Business
We
"ay
370
on Savings and
Time
Deposits
Directors E.G.HIBBERD C. A. McGUIRE GEO. R. HART M. C. HENLEY W. D. LOEHR E.H. CATES GEO. L. CATES H. J. HANES E.W. McGUIRE
Safe Deposit Boxes for Your Valuable Papers at $2.50 Per Year and Up
2
"The Bank With the Chime Clock"
Richmond, Indiana
