Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 138, 23 April 1917 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, APRIL 23, 191T
JACKSON TOWNSHIP FOntlS FOOD CLUDS IN SCHOOL DISTRICTS
CAMBRIDGE CITY. Ind., April 23 . Organizations having for their object an laproved food production this year, , are being formed la the . different school districts sad towns of the township. . In District No. 1, Pennville, an enthusiastic meeting was held Wednesday evening, which .was attended by fifty .or more persons. It was urged that greater attention be paid to the Increased tillage of the soil, the selection of good seed, and the can nlng, drying and evaporation of larger quantities of the various kinds of fruits and vegetables. An organization was i6rmed with Michael Gehrlng as president. ' ' The citizens of District No. 2 held a similar meeting Thursday evening, at which the same topics were discussed, and organization formed with Webster Rummel, president; Thomas Kepler, secretary; John Rhodes, treasurer. Arrangements for meetings this week were made; In District No. 3 Wednesday evening. In District No. 1, Friday evening. A general meeting of the citizens from the towns will be held In the
town hall, Cambridge City, Tuesday
evening.
SQUEAKS
Praia the editor's swivel chair
' With the opening of the American
baseball season, it - seems that the
Kaiser's team has adopted the hit and
; run style of play.
When yen want to My that a man Is
not right mentally why say. "He has a screw loose." Be modern say, "His
- brain Is running on three cylinders,'
or "One cylinder seems to be missing
: occasionally."
ANUTT Is the name of a town of 75
' Inhabitants In Missouri. If aeme of our hloh school olrls ex-
pect to dress In their kitchens as they
-do in the class room, we pity their
husbands.
v The Kaiser has a new enemy. The
; Cmpty Stomachs is fast approaching
t a state of war with the imperial Ger '. man government.
: And new there eeema to be a shift
; in the attitude of the German govern
. meat, the people are being urged not
r to give in for the sake of a mouthful ' of bread, whfle a short time ago, there
was more of arrogance in the official statements and those of the press. These euffregete who persuaded the 'Indiana legislature to give them the
' vote let a joker slide through la the
' bill. Every woman who registers must state her age. Indications are that a lot of young " women win vote.
West Manchester, 0.
During a thunder storm Tuesday
night the barn belonging to Ott House- ; man was struck by a bolt of lightning ; following the comb of the roof tear- . lag the shingles from the top. Only slight damage was done the structure. ! The "Gleaners" will entertain 8at1 urday evening at the home of Mist Treva Howell. It Is an invitation affair for the boys class only.. . . .Mrs. J. W. Wehrley. Mrs. Lureftna Trump and 'Misses Leah and Ola Trump. Mrs. Ed A. Locke. Mrs. Frances Foam an and Mrs. Funaan Howell and daughter Treva, were Richmond shoppers Saturday Irene and Fred Leas .visited ' with Dayton relatives during the week-end..... T. L. Howell and wife and Olen , Howell and wife were Sunday guests of Mrs. Lurenna Trump..... .Mrs. Blaine Sells of Eldorado, spent Saturday and Sunday here with her '.father, who has been very poorly for .several months. His condition re- . mains about the same. .
"The Forgotten Wedding"
By Olive Wadsley
A SERIAL in Four Parts
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
NO OKIE FOOT EUSBBY ICG-MINT A NCW DISCOVERY STOPS SORENESS AND CORNS FALLS OFF
"I don't understand." she whispered, and the. look that dawned in her eyes was one of dread "I don't understand. Why do you why do you tell me this?" Suddenly she flung out her hands. , "It can't be true; It can't be true!" she cried. "You are. telling me the story to frighten me. You know, tomehow, that Adam had lost his memory. You knew he came to us three months ago." Her eyes were full, of tears, and she ran forward and caught hold of Rachel. "Say that it isn't true ay that It isn't true!" she cried. Rachel seized her hands; she was trembling violently. "Cecil," she said in a shaking voice, "how did you meet your husband?" ' . . "My father brought him home one night about three months ago. He was ill." Lady Torrens pushed Rachel aside. Her bonnet was crooked; her eyes were full of tears, and she was beating her cherished lorgette on the handle of her umbrella. "For God's sake, tell me, child," she said, "was the man your father brought without a memory and . was he bald?" . The commonplace, alm6st comic words were spoken with an Intensity of feeling. Cecil swayed; she spread out her hands appealingly, then fell backward. " "Oh, daml!" Lady Torrens said violently. "To faint now, of all moments! Racnel. the man Is Robert! Rachel, I am sure of it! Only, for Heaven's sake, bring the girl round; make her tell us where be Is. Be quick, be cuick!" Rachel, kneeling beside Cecil," looked up. . '.'You . don't seem . to understand," she said in a hard voice, "that the man we suppose to be Robert is married to this girl that he loyes her?" "Ah, you emotional women!" Lady Torrens cried. "You think of nothing but your feelings. Even if he does think himself in love with a little nobody like that, do you suppose he won't find out his mistake when he sees you?" The selfishness of old age made her blind to the suffering that lay before both the women who loved the same man. All she realized was that the man Robert was to be given back to her. . Rachel, gently chatng Cecil's hands, gazed through a mist of tears at the white face where the long eyelashes lay like black threads. With a fluttering sigh Cecil opened ber eyes and smiled up Into Rachel's face. "What happened?" she asked. "I have a dim memory of a nightmare, and then it all grew dark." Rachel helped her on to the sofa. As Cecil sank back she saw again the photograph. "I remember, I remember," she said pitifully. ; She caught Rachel's hands. "Sit by me. -Don't leave me. I I'u going to be so lonely," she said.
"I will tell you everything. It's only, only that everything seems so cruel just now. I was eo happy a little while ago!" ' Lady Torrens uttered an impatient exclamation. Cecil Went on desperately: "Adam did come to us three months ago, and at first I thought he was shamming that he Just didn't want to remember things. I think, really, father and I believed he had done something wrong and was biding. "Anyway, we never bothered father because he wanted the extra money Robert paid, I because I'd never had a friend. I'd never had any cne, and I liked looking after Adam. Then. ben be got up be was ill in bed about two weeks his hair bad grown again; and, though he still did not seem to want to talk about his past, be remembered all sorts of ev-
STOP LEFT OVER COUGHS. Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar Honey will stop
that , hacking cough that lingers from January. The soothing pine balsams loosen the phlegm, heals the irritated membrane, the glycerine relieves the tender tissues, you breathe easier and coughing ceases. Don't neglect a lingering cough, it is dangerous. Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey is antiseptic and pleasant to take, benefits young and
old; get it at your druggist today.
Formula on the bottle. Zac. Adv.
Just a touch or two with Ice-Mint and your corns and foot troubles are ended- It takes the soreness right out. then the corn or callous shrivels aA lift off. No matter what you. have tried or how many times yon have been disappointed hero Is g real help for you at Hit. You will never have to cut a corn sgaln or bother with bungling tape or l latum. Hard corns, soft corns or corns between the toes, Just shrivel up and lift off to easy. It's wonderful. You feel no pais or soreness when Applying Ice-mint or afterwards. It doesn't van irritate the skin. Thin now discovery made from a Jagaaaa product la cartalaly magical the way it draws out Inflammation from a pair of swollen, burning, aching feet Ice-mint imparts such a delightful cooling, soothing foaling to the feet that It just makes you sigh with rolisf. It is the real Japanese eecret for fine, healthy little feet.- It Is greatly appreciated by women who wear high heel shoes. It absolutely prevents foot odors and keepa.them 'cet and comfortable. - . .
It costs little Ann ww .give. your poor, ttrad. auSartoft swollen feet the treat' of their lives. Sold and recommended by food druggists everywhere. dr.
can't coiiipcn&it? snft so Ions as you use premium coffee you will have complaint a complaint that muddy, pale, unsatisfying coffee justifies. But use. Golden San and you change complaint to compliment. For it makes Into coffee that's strong, fragrant rich and clear. Yet its price U modest Being . artbyspeeiaJptKsi,itfachatfc less so ecoBaajcaL Packed to ' aeeledair4Jeana,Galdea8un isaoldbygroearaenly.
Ccfco THZ ' . WOOLSOM . tncs co. Toledo, Clio
ery-day things. We used to go walks together, he and I, and it was he advised me to ask you to help me." , " Your-'-your husband told I you to apply to me?". Rachel draw herself away, while within her eyes - a flame of anger burned. "Don't tell me any more I don't wish to hear any more! You can keep your lover!" she said uncontrollably. Cecil rose, too. The result woke all her passionate nature.., v..: "Thank you," she said, "for allowing me to keep that which you, at any rate, seem unable to have held!" "How dare you?" Rachel said in a shaking voice. "How dare you?" Old Lady Torrens interposed peremptorily. . "Where did you say he lived?" she asked. Cecil did not answer her. With an. inarticulate expression of annoyance Lady Torrens turned to the little buhl writing-table in the corner. She picked up the green . leather covered address-book and opened It eagerly. .; , . Then, without speaking to ' either Rachel or Cecil, she left the room. They neither of them noticed her go; the world at that moment held for both of them only eachr Other each the woman loved by one man. . - T6 be continued
On The Screen
MURRETTE "The Price She Paid," with Miss Clara Kimball Young as the star, will be the Selznick-Pictures feature at the Murrette Theatre next Friday and Saturday. This photo-drama of the life of a beautiful young society woman is from the immensely popular novel by David Graham Phillips. It outlines the problems in the life of a young woman, used to luxurious surroundings, who finds herself almost without resources.' After a disastrous marriage she determines to become an opera singer, and the difficulties she encounters form a series of scenes of unusual interest. MURRAY And now George M. Cohan, be of Yankee Doodle renown, has added another vocation to - his remarkable career. As an actor he first gained wide fame and popularized the American flag. - Then as an author his plays and songs proved the big hits on Broadway and became as popular among the natives of Keokuk as on the Great White Way. Finally as a, producer of plays be added even greater laurels t6 his previous fame and now is entering a new enterprise, something entirely different from any previous undertaking, namely the manage
ment of an immense chewing gum factor. V;J:.
In order to get the best results Mr. Cohan took over, an immense chewing gum factory several months ago and
personally assumed ine management, but for one week only, that is, just long enough to become a chewing gum manufacturer, for the benefit of the motion picture camera in connection with- his first Artcraft photoplay, "Broadway Jones," now showing at the Murray. theatre. ' - -; ',? MURRETTE Having scored auch ; a pronounced success on the. Paramount Program in "Pasquale," George Beban, the wonderful portrayer of Italian characters will be" seen in" the- Oliver Mbrosco Paramount Picture, "His Sweetheart." In this thrilling drama Mr. Beban is seen as Joe, the ice man, of a New York tenement district. His sweetheart is his "Mamma Mia" whom he has brought over from Italy, much to the consternation of Trlna. the shoemaker's . daughter. In the next basement. .
SOUTHERN FARMS RESPOND TO CAIX
WASHINGTON, April 23. Fresh from an extended tour of the south in the interest of agricultural preparedness, Carl Vrooman, assistant secretary of agriculture, returned here today enthusiastic over the outlook. He issued a statement in which he declared that all classes are patriotically responding to the government's appeal for Increased food crops and predicted that the South would do its bit.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
Getting Johnnie Off to School and husband off to business are problems that tax the nerves and strength of the housewife who runs , her own home. So easy and delightful if you know Shretod Whest Ehcsit, the readycooked, ready-to-eat whole wheat food. Children like its delicious, crisp aroma when served with hot milk.
Made at Niagara Palls. N. Y.
It's What They Say It Is at Dickinson's'
The mere re-cuttirig of the famous Kohinoor Diamond is said to have cost $40,000. I he Diamonds
you buy here are so beautifully cut that nothing more can be wished unless it be an appropriate setting. That too, we are well qualified to take care of. In addition to being the leading diamond merchant in your town, we have the largest stock of reliable jewelry in Eastern Indiana.
H 1 ' .
AT THE BIG CLOCK
O. E. Dickinson We do not sell plated or filled Rings.
Cambridge City, Ind.
i i
1 George E. Callaway, who has suffered intensely during the last two weeks from ' the ulceration of a tooth, was operated upon , Saturday morning by Dr. Marvel of Richmond, and has since shown a degree of improvement. .... Fletcher Sowers of Collinsville, Illinois, was circulating among former friends and acquaintances here, Saturday. . .Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gilmore of Muncie, were the guests of the latter's mother, Mrs- Lydia Huddleston. Sunday..... The American Red Cross Chapter at this place has now a paidup membership of forty-two. . . . .The Rebekah Aid" Society, will hold an allday anniversary meeting at the town hair Thursday.
Says Two American ; Papers Have Inside AMSTERDAM, Via London. April 23. Count Von ReventlOw returns in the Tages Zeitung to his' attack on the German official statement : that there are no German submarines in the west Atlantic. He says: "It would seem that Germany !s again building hopes on the .United States. Two well known American newspapers are said to have free access to the foreign office in Wllhelm-strasie.-Which enemy power is to be approached next?"
street. An able paper was read by Dr. Charles Kniese on "The Good Roads Problem la the States of the North west Territory." which was followed by an Interesting and extended discussion. '
What to Do far Eczema
FRIDAY NIGHT CLUB MEETS
CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind , April 23. The regular meeting of the Friday Night Club was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Doney on Main
Greasy salves and ointments should not be applied if good clear skin is wanted. From any druggist for 23c or $1.00 for extra large size, get a bottle of zemo. When applied as directed, it effectively removes eczema, quickly stops itching, and heals skin troubles, also sores, burns, wounds and chafing. It penetrates, cleanses and . soothes. Zesno is a clean, dependable and inex?ensive, penetrating antiseptic liquid, ry it, as we believe nothing yon have ever used is as effective and. satisfying. Tb E. W. Rom Co.. Cleveland. O.
U V
ft Tribute to the Lauder He argues and pleads for bis clienfs needs' He cites and recites till you're dizzy He's keen and he's clean that's Plain to be seen He's brainy, hes bright and he's busy. Through ail his long cases, tho trouble he faces He's calm and he's cool and he's quiet He says to feel fit there is nothing like IT And by IT he means WRIGLEVS-Just try it!
U V
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THE LASTS
has won its case people are for it. Largest selling gum in the world because It's liked by more folks. "AFTER EUERV MEAL."
Three of a kind
Quit Sneezing and Snuffling! Genuine aSentonel Cold Tablets break that cold in a few hours. No quinine. No habit forming drugs. 25c any druggist. The Sentanel Remedies Co Inc.
HllllllllllllllllHlllllllllllllllllillHUHHl
Esyoy Ufehsltk Get Hi of ihsst bcckcckss!
Sentanel ICidney Pills get results. 50c any druggist Guaranteed. The SceUnd Remedies Co., lac fhu,immt. OfaJO. " . . . Sasasaejaaawf mrmw . .
, nnnftonnnmnnriMMiiMnnmwiMiiH
III . i 111 ill ill 1,1 uu
ill i namEDisr
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Keep theni In mind
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We anticipated the "garden movement that is sweeping, the country and ordered an unusually large amount of garden tools. Experienced gardeners know we sell the kind of tools that are good for this summer and many summers to come, at prices not any higher than the ordinary kind. See us for Hoes, Rakes, Spades, Shears, Sprinkling Hose, Wheelbarrows, Lawn Mowers, Sprink ling Cans, 'etc.'- :;v:;f ' t.r:; Special Uae of Planet Jr. Ccltivatcrs. .
m
Corner 7th and !.!sh Sts.
