Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 218, 25 July 1917 — Page 12

PAGE TWELVE

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1917

NEW PARIS PIONEER 1$ BURIED MONDAY

NEW PARIS. Ohio, July 25. Mrs. Mary E. Thompson, 75 years old, widow of Samuel Thompson, died last Friday at the family home on East Mala street. She had been 111 several month. She leaves two sons. Roy, of Dayton; Van. E., of New Parts; three daughters. Mrs. Josle Daugherty, New Paris, and Misses Ella and Emma who n-- hAma WnAr&l services were

held from the home Monday after

noon, with her pastor. Kev. ieorge r. -... f th christian church. In

unrtai wa made In Sprlng-

lawn cemetery...-Miss Helen Ray of

New Madison, spent pan oi modu, vti.a uain fiAwver. .Peter M.

Penes went to Eaton Tuesday to18" Charles Richards and family.. . .Fran Davis, mechanic employed at tte u.-.i.v nnm fractured his ngnt

arm Sunday night, while attempting

to crank a machine Mr. ana T....U uiru nf Rtdorado. and

Laviu n.. uva.vw, . Mrs. Susan McKee were entertained at dinner Sunday by Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Hill. . . .Cashiers M. H. Pence .and v n nir-.n nf the First National

and Farmers banks, were In Eaton Mnri.v settUna: with the County

Treasurer for the banks' collection tMmihin t.iM Mr.

and Mrs. H. T. Aker of Richmond, are spending part of tils week with local ..7 i . v, and Mrs. R. E. Mel-

ftQ,LCwyiVi - odv and son spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Esta House - tt . MindiMtcr. ...Miss Mar-

vel Mitchell of Columbus, la the guest

of Mlsa Gertrude Bice james norrlgon and daughter. Miss Mary, spent ii. a-t vtnn on business, .Al-

bert Pence, who has a position in

Pittsburgh, spent saturaay ana uujk Tii narants. Mr. and Mrs

M. H. Pence. .. .Rev. and Mrs. J. R. Wynd and two sons, have returned to their home at Hamilton. Ohio, after . .1.... visit with Mr. and Mrs.

H. C. Brandenburg.... Mrs. T. B. Miller of Greenville and daughter. Mrs. m ' tit nrTHno-nr and on. Ben ton. Of

Wheeling. W. Va.. spent Sunday with

Mrs. Caroline MCGrew wrs. -uuu Aiken and children of Richmond are Mr. Kntella Miller.... Born

.i. nvMav mnrnine to Mr. and Mrs

Joe Fisher, a daughter, who has been a i-va Toitln. HftXTV C. Hill

ud Minor Wasson left Wednesday

for Hebron. Neorasaa, w "J' . i. Waanrn Mr. and Mrs.

Charles A. Plerson left Monday for

Flat Rock. Mich., to spena some w. iM..n ti biidee-building con-

ZZ' ni.rw Miss Frances

Means of Kokomo. spent Saturday

and Sunday here enrouie io iow -i... r . .(.nrt vitrft. She accompan-

led Mr." and Mrs. John A. Jay of Ko

komo. whom she met in Sunday W. O. Lewls of Detroit.

Mich., is the guest Of his aaugnter,

Mrs. F. F. McLaugnun ana iamuj... a n r.Mrn TJetro and fam

.. . .... n.irnn en Ant Sunday wlcn

Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Ashman. .. .Miss Sarah McGrew went to Greenville. t i . nr. cvATtlnsr for a visit

with relaUves. . . .C. M. Wilcox spent

Monday in Cincinnati wiux m ter. Mrs. Ernst Clarke. . . . . .Mr. a Ad Mrs. Bud Reid spent Sunday at Rich

mond with Mr. ana Mrs. . .

..W. C. Smltn or Eiwooa. ma., .', . r csmkk Thiirftdav. . . .Mrs

ilea v. j- - . W. D. Brawley. who was removed to

Reld Hospital several wee " x j v. fr treatment. Dei ore

.1-- . .,im4a1 nneration In the

r future.... Mrs. John Arnold of

Richmond, spent Friday with her par ents. Mr. and Mrs. William Boze.... in., ir .mm. v-aeinr of Liberty, return

ed Friday to her home after a visit with her sister, Mrs. George Mann.. . Mr and Mrs. John W. Cook motored to Cincinnati Sundayand spent the hv Rev. F. F. McLaughlin adSrlsVeVan enthusiastic RedCm, meeting Thureday Jjenlng at Ware s Chapel, near West Manchester, which chapter was organized by Dr. C. w. Bne....Miss Hazel Heath returned Friday to her home In Hamilton, o., after a visit with local friends Mr. and Mrs. Roy Thompson and son ot Dayton. Misses Lou and Ltanle Middaugh knd Mr. and Mrs. J. JV Mauck and son. Pierre, were called here by the death of Mrs. Mary E. Thompson. Mr. and Mra. Charles Gwinn or Dayton, motored hereand spent the week end with Mrs. Margaret Murray and other relatives.... The New Paris chapter of the Red Cross held sewlngs last Thursday and this Tuesday afternoons in the Red Cross room in th second floor of the Masonic building Numerous garments were nn1.1 n n navlason threshed his

wheat crop Monday and Tuesday, an average yield of 27 bushels of splenju ..iiht Kinr bin record. C. G.

Carpenter. Richmond, purchased the crop at $2.10 a bushel, there being over 450 bushels.... Rev. and Mrs. J. R Wynd and sons of Hamilton. Ohio, were entertained Thursday by Rev. and Mrs. F. F. McLaughlin.... Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Kemp and daughter Oval of Bradford. Ohio, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. O. McPherson and other local relatives.... Mr. and Mra. James Horrigan spent Sunday1 with Richmond klnspeople Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Sherer and bom of Richmond, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Sherer. New York was the greatest seaport in the world in 1916. London outranked it in imports, but almost three times as many exports went from New York as from London.

1

KIKG- KHYBERRTJLE j4 Romance ofjtfch&RfhirQ Jty TfcLBOT MUNDY

MM Br Tn.

He reached the river and stood

thara Na ha wan fn no hllTTV at all.

for it stood to reason that unless Yas-

mlnl very much desired him to oe

kept alive he would have been shot

dead already. For a moment the

crowd was so interested that it forgot

to bark and snarl.

His next move was as deliberate as

he could make it. although he was

careful to avoid the least suggestion of nummerr for then the crowd

would have suspected disloyalty to

Islam, and tne Hills are. very, very

Dious. and very suspicious of all for

eign ritual).

VTa HM a thnncrhtfnl Klmnlft thine

that made every savage who watched him gasp because of its very unexpectedness. He held the head in both

hands, threw it far out into tne river and ctnnd to wftth It sink. Then.

without visible emotion of any kind,

he walked back stolidly to lace xasmlnl at the bridge end, with shoulders

n little more stubborn now man iney

ought to be, and chin a shade too hign for there never was a man who could

act quite perfectly. "Thou fool!" -Yasmlnl whispered through lips that did not move.

She betrayed a flasn or temper line

a trapped she-tiger s, but rouowea it

Instantly with her loveliest smile. Like to like, however, the crowd saw the flash of temper and took its cue from that.

Slay him!" yelled a lone voice.

that was greeted by an approving

murmur. "Slay him! advlsea tne

roof in a whisper, in one or its pnonetic tricks.

This is my darbar!" Yesmlni an

nounced in a rising, ringing voice.

Mv darbar. for I summoned it! Did

I invite any man to speak?"

There was silence, as a wnippea unwilling pack is silent. "Speak, thou. Kurram Khan!" she said. "Knowing

the custom having heard the order

to throw that trophy to them wny act otherwise? Explain!"

Nothing in the wide world could be

fairer! She left him to extricate himself from a mess of his own making! It was more than fair, for she went out of her way to offer him an

opening to jump through. And sne paid him the compliment of suggesting ho must bp clever enough to take

it, for she seemed to expect a satis

fying answer. "Tall thsm whv!" she said, smiling.

No man could have guessed by the

tone of her voice wnetner sne was ior him or against him, and the crowd, beginning again to whisper, watched to see which way the cat would Jump. He bowed low to her three times very low indeed and very slowly, for he had to think. Then he turned his back and repeated the obeisance to the crowd. Still he could think of no excuse, except Cocker's Rule No. 1 for Tight Places, and all the world knows that because Solomon said

much the same thing first: "A soft answer is better than a sword!" But Cocker adds, "Never excuse. Explain. And blame no man." "My brothers," he said, and paused, since a man must make a beginning, even when he cannot see the end. And as he spoke the answer came to him. He stood upright, and his voice harama that of a man whose advice

has been asked, and who gives it free

ly. "These be stirring times: xe

need take care, my brothers! Ye

saw this night how one man entered here on the strength of an oath and a promise. And I had proof. Ye saw!

Who am I that I should deny you a

custom? Yet think ye, my brothers: how easy would It not have been, had I thrown that head to you, for a traitor to catch It and hide It in his clothes, and make away with it! He onld havo used it to admit to these

caves why even an Englishman, my

brothers! If that had nappenea, ye would have blamed me!"

Yasmini smiled. Taking its cue

from her, the crowd murmured, scarcely assent, but rather recognition of tha hakim's adroitness. The game

was not won; there lacked a touch to

tip the scales in his favor, and Yasmini Rll nnlipd it with ready genius.

"The hakim speaxs truth:" sne

laughed. King turned about Instantly tn tatt her hut ha salaamed so low

that she" could not have seen his ex-

nrasslnn had she tried.

"If ye wish it, I will order mm tossed into Earth's Drink after those

Muhammad Anim rose, stroking his beard and rocking where he stood. "It is the law!" he growled, and

King shuddered. To be continued

American Jackies

Find New Nickname For English Tars TIVTVCV Tnlv 2K AmarlrtiTl ..bine-

Jackets on duty in European waters

tave a mcKname or tneir own ior England's sailors and soldiers. They

call them "HmeyB"; the Individual be

ing known aa a "lime." -

The American sailor men apply the

desf enatinn tn all ICnellsh fi enters

Just as the British refer to their soldiers as "Tommies."

The sailor from the United States

has his nickname for nearly every

thing he sees. : Bluejackets who had served in the Near and Far East, first started calling British sailors and soldiers "limejulcers" because of their fondnese for fruit juice and charged water. Now the designation has been shortened

down and everything British is "limey." British sailors' and soldiers'

clubs are known as "limey clubs" and

British-brewed lager beer Is commonly spoken of as "limey beer."

Thpra ar twice as many domestic

animals in the United States as there arer people. The 1916 census gives a total of more than 200,000,000 domes

tic animals m the country.

Of the 500 different processes In munition work, upon which women are

engaged In England, two-tniros naa

navar been nerformed by a woman

previous to a year ago.

RICHMOND ! TAKE YOUR

VACATION IN COLORADO.

To Get There Doesn't Take as Long,

Nor Cost as Mucn as You Think

STRAUGHN, DJD.

Rev. R. H. Gott will hold services Sunday morning and evening In Christian church here..... Mrs. Matt Ingerman and daughter, Miss Velma. of Cambridge City, spent Sunday here.. . ; Major Moore of Cambridge City,' spent Sunday here with Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Fouse..:..Mr. and Mrs. John Eaton and son Melvin, spent Sunday with his father, Ulysses Eaton In Cambridge City Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hickman spent Sunday evening with

nis parents in iewisvuie.. .. .Mr. and

Mrs. ma waddeu and Miss Ida Paul

were in Newcastle Saturday afternoon.. Orla Gauker of TndlananoliB.

epenx a snorc ume rnursaay evening; with his narants and his children Miss

Geneva and Master Kenneth Gauker.

....Mrs. i. L. Holland and son Joshua, of Woodhaven, New York City, spent from Wednesday until Friday evening with his aunts, Mesdames Mary Waddell, Lydia Gauker and Ella Gauker and families.. Joshua is a captain in the officers' quartermaster's department in Washington, D. C Miss Harriet Eaton and brother. Cheslelgh, were in Cambridge City Saturday evening.. .. .Mrs. Nellie Rice and son Clayton, of Lewisville, Ky., who spent several days with her brother, Jess Clayton and family In Newcastle, returned to her parents here Sunday.

Jess , Clayton and family . and sister, Miss Myrtle Clayton , also spent Sunday with their parents Misa Har riet Eaton spent one afternoon last week with her grandfather Eaton In Cambridge City. Mrs. John Butler of Dublin, is spending a few days with her sister, Mr. and Mrs. Will Cook. Mrs. Butler is in very poor health Harvey Petry and family spent Sunday with Mrs. Petry's parents in Dublin. Dr. Coffy and wife and Mr. and Mrs. George Walter spent Monday in Indianapolis..... Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gephart spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Huffman. SHORT MEN GET CHANCE ROME, July 25. Short men will

have a chance to fight after August under a new decree which reduces the

minimum height by four inches.' It af

fects 100,000 men whose height hith-

rto had been a bar to enlistment.

TO COMBAT STRIKE

MEXICO CITY, July 25. General Ricaut, governor of Tamaulipas, left last night for Tamplco to take com

mand of the situation resulting from the strike of 15,000 men employed In

the oil fields there.

Lemon Juice "For Freckles drial Make beauty lotion at horn for a few cents. Try It!

Squeeze the Juice of two lemons Into

a bottle - containing three omsiem or orchard white, shake well, and yo have a quarter pint of the bast freckle and tan lotion, and oomplextoii beanti tier, at very, very cmaU ooet. j Your grocer has the lemonsvaad any Srug store or toilet coroter win supply three ounees of orchard watte for a, few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion-into the face, neck, arm and hands each day and see bow; freckles and blemtses disappear and how clear, soft and white the skta becomes. Yes! It is harmless.

Kodak Films developed Free Prints 3c each. Thistlethwaite's Drug Stores.

Besides on the way you can see

a exeat, bier nart of the great, big

country our boys are going to fight

for

Then, when you get to Colorado, the "roof garden of America," your

verv blood will dance to a new thrill

inc fim of vle-or and health. No one

place of equal area is so packed with

natural wonders aa uoioraao. Nowhere else cn you lnd so wide

a variety or recreation. cin to Colorado for vour vacation

via Rock Island Lines and the famous

"Rockv Mountain Limited" daily to

Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo. Let us tell you how to get there and how inexpensively. the safe, sure j quick, overnight way. the way of comfort and satisfying service. the acknowledged favorite way of those who know most about railroad travpl

The only direct line from the east to both Denver and Colorado Springs. Other convenient, modern, all-steel trains from Chicago, St. Louis and Memphis. Let us advise you where to go, how to get there, and prove you CAN afford it. Rock Island Travel Bureau, Indianapolis, lnd., 615 Merchants Bank Bldg., J. F. Powers, D.P.A. SAFETY AND SERVICE FIRST Adv.

NATURA'

For All Forms of Catarrh, and is worth the price as a Blood Purifier only. NATURA can be obtained through all reliable druggists, but always at the following progressive dealers in and around Richmond, lnd. , Richmond, lnd. A. O. Luken A Co. Qulgley Drug Stores, Conker Drug Co. Cambridge City, lnd Dean House. Centsrvllte, lnd. C. B. Lnndy. Hagerstewn, lnd. F. M. Whitssell and F. H. Stoneclpher. Manufaetored by The Natnra Drug Co. Indianapolis, lnd.

Richmni

ond's Daylight

Special

One lot of Ladies' and Misses' Two-piece WASH DRESSES

Assorted Regular values, only

colors and sizes. $5.98 and $6.98 Thursday Morning

$g98

S98

Askforthekumfy Kool Dress as Advertised

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BOB)

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SPECIALS FC3 L&PO

Ladies' Black Kid Pomps Colonial or Plain Vamr stvle. recrular .$5.00

- l - - j ' o ' . grade; special for last 5l three days of sale.-.,VTltP

Ladies' Black Kid Pumps, turn soles,

leather or covered Louis heel ; regular $4.00 grade; last ACf three days of sale. . . . .mitFfP One lot of Ladies' Patent Strap Pumps and Lace Oxfords, values up to $5.00; special last J-J A three days of sale only rmm". HHMHHHBHMMaMHSHMSSBSSBBMBBaS Ladies' White Kid Pumps Turn soles, high or low covered heels, $4.50 grade; special &p Qff last three days of sale. PMmUO

Ladies' White Reignskin Cloth Lace Boots Louis, Cuban or Iow-concave

heel, $4 graded last I CJ 3 days of sale

Ladies Bronze Kid rump--Lolomal or plain style, $4:00 and $5.00-val-

ues

day

plain style, 3jv ana q.wvai- ; special last three &fP HfZ ys of sale .- TTtP

BUY NOW FOU LESS

3 .

Extra Special Ladies patent and black kid Colonial pumps, large buckles, $4.50 values, special last

three days of sale at

, afjcv-idi last. $2.95

Extra Special Ladies Patent and Dull Kid 4-strap Pumps, turn soles, Louis heel, $3.50 value; special last three days of sale (j

Ladies' High Shoe Special Bronze side button high shoes, wiUinaken extra good general purpose shoe;! $6.00 grade; special faty IE! last three days of sale. TttP One lot of Ladies' Velvet, Suede nd Patent Button Shoes, values up td $100, last 3 days of Sale . --t-i'-T.vs, ww -w

Buy Now and Save Money

BUY THIS WEEK

Men's Wine Cordovan Lace Oxfords English last; was $9.00; special last three days of 7 95 Men's Tan Calf and Gun Metal Lace Oxfords $4.00 values; special last three days of CJ

Specials for Men

Men's Black Gun Metal Lace Oxfords Grey buck top, $6 grade, special last three days of Jgj Men's Cordo Calf Oxford The new

dark fan leather, was $4.50

Special last three days of sale

4 i w $3.95

Special One lot of men's tan calf and black gun metal lace Oxfords, medium toe, $4.50 value; special last three days of dJQ fbC sale .9Qm&D Men's Nut Brown Calf Lace Oxford Extreme English last, plain stitch tip, was $6.00, special CSff J ff last 3 days of sale. . . . PK5tP

BUY NOW AND SAVE

Men's Brown Kid Lace OxfordStraight last, $6.50 grade; special last three days of Extra Special Men's tan calf and black gun metal lace Oxford; values up to $5.00; all small sizes; special last three days of

BUY NOW FOR LESS

Men's Gun Metal and Cordo Calf Lace Oxford English &0 style, Neolin or Leather soles, $4.50 values-Last three days

111

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pea 25 pea Eca nag nag cap linn p 1 1'JLt

1 M UllU ncn acr! nrr.i nr::i uuu nr:n

724 MAIN ST.

SIX STORES Indiana's Largest Shoe Dealers

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