Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 225, 2 August 1917 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1971
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PLANT LICE CAUSES HEAVY DAMAGE TO INDIANA GREENERY
INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 2. Plant lice or aphides, which have attacked most of the green things In the state this year have already caused thousands of dollars damage, and unless energetio steps are taken at once to control the pests, the damage will be hundreds of thousands of dollars more in spite of the headway against the aphides being made by parasites, according to men in the office of F. N. Wallace, state entamologist, who have been investigating conditions. Although publicity to the damage done and information as to how a fight the lice has aroused many, the fight must be continued Mr. Wallace says. Up u?il this year, the parasites have followed the plant lice and controlled theni before the damage has been great When the lice appeared first this year it was though the parasites .would do their usual work. When the aphides were found on potatoes and other vegetables, however, advice of how to spray with nicotine' sulphate, kerosene emulsion or whale oil soap was given. Later it was discovered the parasites were not at work and the agitation against the lice became greater.; If the plants are sprayer unto the aphides are reduced to the normal number their natural enemies will control them. The aphides has its friends among parasites, it has been discovered in this state. The syrphas fly, one of the deadly enemy of the plant lice, appeared. Immediately the Ichneumon fly, an enemy of the syrphas fly appeared in numbers. The two flies are so antagonistic that little headway was made against the aphlde by the syrphas fly. Other enemies of the aphides are the lady bug and aphis lion. They now are appearing in numbers but too late to prevent the damage already done!
Chautauqua Begins at Hagerstown
HAGERSTOWN, Ind.. Aug. 2. The community Chautauqua opened here Wednesday afternoon with a concert by the Imperial Russian Quartet and a lecture by Dr. L. E. Follansbee on "Genius and Gumption." Programs will be given every afternoon and evening for the next five days as follows: Thursday Afternoon Entertainment Lorens Anderson Novelty Entertainers, dramatic reading, "The Lion and the Mouse," Edward Elliott. Thursday Evening Musical prelude, Lorenz Anderson Novelty Entertainers : lecture, "Two Snakes in Eden," Stanley Krebs. Friday Afternoon Band Concert Angelo Vitale and his Band with Torcorn Bezazlan, Armenian baritone. Friday Evening Grand Double Concert Vitale's Band. Saturday Afternoon EntertainmentTheresa Sheehan Concert company. Saturday Evening Popular Prelude -Theresa Sheehan Concert company. ""' Sunday Patriotic Day, 10:30, religious services. Sunday Afternoon Musical Prelude Kendelssohn Sextette; lecture "The ' Challenge of America," Hon. Chester H. Aldricb. Sunday Evening Grand Closing Entertainment Mendelssohn Soxtette. There will be no services at the churches Sunday morning on account of the religious services In the Chautauqua tent. MAJ.-GEN. PERSHING INSPECTS AMERICAN TRAINING CAMP
KING- f o KHYBER RIFLES
Talbot Mund
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PARIS. Aug. 2. MaJ.-Gen. Pershing left Paris this afternoon for his first inspection of the American training camp. He will be gone a few days.
Rewa Gunga made no answer to that, although King waited for an answer. For about a minute there was no sound at all. except the beating of King's heart. Then he moved, to try and see the Rangar's turban above the rock. He could not see it He found a niche in the rock, set his foot in it and mounted three or four feet, until bis head was level with the top. The Rangar was gone! He listened for two or three minutes, but the silence began to make his head ache again; so he stooped to feel the floor with his hand .before deciding to go forward. There was no mistaking the finish given by the tread of countless feet. He was on a highway, and there are not often pitfalls where so many feet have been. For all that he went forward as a certain Agag once , did, and it was many minutes before he could see a curtain glowing blood-red in the light behind the two lamps, at the top of a flight of ten stone steps. It was peculiar to him and to his service that he counted the steps bef6re going nearer. When he went quite close he saw carpet down the middle of the steps, so ancient that the stone showed through in places; all the pattern, supposing it ever had any, was worn or faded away. Carpet and steps glowed red too. His own face, and the hands he held in front of him were red-hot-poker color. Yet out side the little ellipse of light the darkness looked like a thing to lean against, and the silence was so in
tense that he could hear the arteries singing by bis ears.
He saw the curtains move slightly, apparently in a little puff of wind that made the lamps waver. He was very nearly sure he heard a footfall be
yond the curtains and a tinkle as of
a tiny silver bell, or a jewel striking against another one. He kicked his slippers off, because there are no conditions under which bad manners ever are good policy. Vide history and Cocker's famous, code. Then he walked up the steps without treading on the carpet, because living scorpions have been known to be placed under carpets On purpose on occasion. And at the top, being a Secret Service man, he stooped to examine the lamps. They were bronze! cast, polished and graved. All round the circumference of each bow were figures in halfrelief, representing a woman dancing. She was the woman of the knife-hi)t, and of the lamps in the arena! She looked like Yasmini! Only she could not be Yasmini because these lamps were so ancient and so rare that he had never seen any in the least like them, although he had visited most of the museums of the East, Both lamps were alike, fdr he crossed over to make sure and took each in his hands in urn. But no two figures of the dance were alike on either. It was the same woman dancing,, but the artist had chosen twenty different poses with which to immortalise his skill, and hers. Both lamps burned sweet oil with a wick, and each had a chimney of horn, not at all unlike a modern lamp-chimney. The horn was stained red. As he set the second lamp down ho became aware of a subtle interesting smell, and memory took him back at once to Yasmini's room in the Chandnl Chowk in Delhi where he had smelled it first It was the peculiar scent he had been told was Yasmini's own a blend of scents, like a t chord of music, in which musk did not pre
dominate. He took three strides and touched
THOUGHTS TO THINK ABOUT . Profits cease to' be profitable when we spend all the saving done; the outlay surpassing his pay turns the wage earner into the vagabond. Faith finds what foresight sees but dimly; faith is the feeling of power that pulls things towards you. Sell the old furniture that is not now of any use to you; that's the thing to do. You can sell second-hand furniture through a Palladium Want Ad very quickly and at good prices. See Want Ad page.
SAYS IT IS STICKY BUT WHO WILL CARE
Cincinnati Man Tells How to Shrivel Up Corns So They Lift Out. . Ouch ! ? ! ? ! ! This , kind of rough talk will be heard less here in town if people troubled with corns will follow the simple advice of this Cincinnati authority, who claims that a few drops of a drug called freezone when applied to a tender, aching corn stops soreness at once, and soon the corn dries up and lifts out without pain. v He says freezone is a sticky substance which dries immediately and never inflames or even irritates the surrounding tissue or skin. A quarter of an ounce, which will cost 'very little at any drug store, Is said to be sufficient to remove every hard or soft corn or callus from one's feet Millions of American women will welcome this announcement since the innauguraiion of the high heels. Adv.
MIDDLEBORO, IND.
Miss Maud Norris is visiting friends at Logansport. . , .Mr. Yorke Little spent the week-end in Chicago, 111.... Clyde Thomas and family visited near College Corner Sunday. ...Mr. L. C. Boyd and son, Philip, of Indianapolis, visited Mr. A. O. Boyd and family Thursday and Friday. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sieweke and family entertained Lon Sieweke Sunday. .. .James Addleman and his Sunday school class formed a picnic party Sunday, in C. A. Addleman's woods. All reported a good time Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Reid and daughter, Halcia, called on John Reid and wife at Whitewater Sunday afternoon Miss Olive Boyd has accepted a position in the Auditor's office. .. -Sunday when coming home from church, the automobile which Mr. Walter Alexander was driving skidded in the gravel causing him to lose control, thereby running down an embankment through a board fence into a corn field. The ocoupanta were uninjured. . ..Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gunm entertained Mr. and Mrs. James Starr and daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Jefferies and family at dinner Sunday Mrs. Brown Higgs of Newcastle is visiting relatives for a few days.
NEW PARIS SCHOOLS OPEN SEPT. 10 WITH NEW CORPS
NEW PARIS, O., Aug. 2. Jefferson township centralized school open the 1917-18 term September 10, with the new superintendent Clayton R. Coblentz at its head, and an almost new corps of teachers. CoblenU was reared here and was superintendent of the schools seventeen years ago, leaving here for Campbellstown, where he has been since.
WOLVERINE FURNACES Terms to Suit Prices will advance. Order now. Bert D.Welch. 21 South 17th St Phone 27S4
"In Business For Your Health"
35 South llth Street ,
Phone 1603
the curtains, discovering now for the first time that there were two of them, divided down the middle. They were about eight feet high, and each three feet wide, of leather, and though they looked old as the "Hills" themselves the leather was supple as good cloth. They had once been decorated with figures in gold leaf, but only a little patch of yellow here and there remained to hint at faded glones. He decided to remember his manners again, and at least to make opportunity for an invitation. "Kurram Khan hai!" he announced, forgetting the echo. But the echo was the only answer. It cackled at him, cracking back and forth down the cavern to die with a groan in illimitable darkness. "Kurram- urram- urram- urram-ahn-hal! Urram-urram-urram-urram-ahn-hai ! Urramurram-urram-ab-hh-ougb-ah!" There was no 60und beyond the curtains. No answer. Only be thought the strange scent grew stronger. He decided to go forward. With his heart in his mouth he parted the curtains with both hands, startled by the sharp Jangle of metal On a rod. So he stood, with arms Outstretched staring staring staring with eyes skilled swiftly to take In details, but with a brain that tried to explain formed a hundred wild suggestions then reeled. He was face to face with the unexplainable the riddle of KhinJan Caves. To be continued
Eastern Galicia Xost
"J s . y kiM T r-J jr , v ' neantu ; lyC ' '--y iBfes; 1
O 10 20
40
.Scale op miles..' principal railroads
The western extent of the Russian advance which began on July 1 was the city of Stry, and ran from Brezezany, in the north, to below Stanislau, in the south. The furthest thrust is indicated by shaded area A. The shaded area B shows that at the end of the month the Russians had been forced to fall bck as far east as Czernowltz.
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OFFERS YOU GREAT MONEY SAVING VALUES We are pricing the stock we now have on hand, not on the basis of what it will c0st to replace it, but on a basis of what is did cost to get it. Here is a real opportunity for big savings that may not be known again in years. If you are wise you will buy now, even if you do not need the furniture until next year. Come in and see us. We will hold your order for future delivery.
SIR Ufflht
100 lb. Side leer
(0)95
REGARDLESS OF COST. All Refrigerators must go at onethird oft during Cash Raising sale
This Fibre Rocker Only
2
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Just an example of the savings on Porch Furniture.
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ELECTRIC
IRON Special
98 CZZ3
Guaranteed' Electric Iron -Why stand over a hot stove to heat your old fashioned irons. Take the dread away from ironing day. Our iron will give perfect satisfaction. You should not be without one at the above price.
REED'S
r Special Kitchen J. Cabinet with all I1Q17 T.oiftT fSav.
ling Devices J -in 1 v
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750 Is
Dining Table Special
In solid, fumed or golden oak. during cash raising sale at
93
SOLID OAK SWING
with reclining back
98
Cash Raising Sale Price
EXTRA-SPECIAL PRICES ON ALL OUTFITS DURING CASH RAISING SALE
Before You Leave See that your clothes are fresh from Wilson's. He cleans and presses them for you on short notice. You know before you send them that when Wilson cleans them they're cleaned right. Phone 1 766. WILSON, The Cleaner In The Westcott "When it's done by Wilson, it's done right.
!Om & MainC
Richmond
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Final Excursion
Tuesday, August 14, 1917 Tickets Good Returning until August 26, Inclusive via ; OHIO ELECTRIC RAILWAY To TOLEDO, D. & C. and C. & B. BOAT LINES TO BUFFALO. For full information and reservation of berths, see agent or address: J. S. WATERS, District Passenger Agent, Dayton, Ohio. W. S. WHITNEY, General Passenger Agent, Springfield, Ohio.
Comniparattiw Price Listls
Model Model Model Model Model Model Model Model Model
PRESENT PRICES 90 Roadster $ 735.00 90 Touring $ 750.00 90 Country Club S 795.00 85-4 Roadster . .$ 970.00 85-4 Touring . . .$ 985.00 85-6 Roadster . .$1080.00 85-6 Touring . . .$1095.00 88-4 Touring. . . .$1450.00 88-6 Touring . . .$1425.00
OUR SELLING PRICES Model 90 Roadster ...$ 680.00 Model 90 Touring $ 695.00 Model 90 Country Club $ 795.00 Model 85-4 Roadster. . .$ 835.00 Model 85-4 Touring ...$ 850.00 Model 85-6 Roadster.. . $ 970.00 Model 85-6 Touring $ 985.00 Model 88-4 Touring . . $1395.00 Model 88-6 Touring $1425.00
F. O. B., Toledo, Ohk
TalcottH-0 wrflaecl Comnpsuniy Main and Twelfth Sts. Phone 24 1 1. Open Evening
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AUTLUBO "THAT GOOD OIL" Made by the Moore Oil Co. A pure Penn. FILTERED Oil. (Not bleached with Sulphuric Acid.) For sale Hdw. Co., Irvln Reed & Son, E. R. O raver In 1 to 5 gaL lota. H. S. MALTBY Local Agent Phone 4772.
SUMMER TIES Beautiful New Patterns. The finest Silk Ties we ever offered at 50c and 65c LICHTENFELS In the Westcott
