Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 226, 3 August 1917 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1917
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EARLHAM COLLEGE TO OPEN LATER
Earlham college will not open this year until September 24, say college advertisements issued Thursday. The late opening is because of the war, and an attempt will be made to concentrate the year curriculum so that it will contain as much instruction as the longer program of former years, according to members of the faculty.
New York Soldiers Will Leave Thursday NEW YORK, Aug. 3. New York city will probably say farewell to its
thousands of national guardsmen going
to the training camp at Sprtanburg, S
C, next Thursday. This announcement
was made here today by Major Gen
eral O'Ryan, commander of the 27th division who said that plans for the parade to precede the departure of the
troopers were virtually complete.
It is estlicfaix5 that 30,000 soldiers
will march trxr one of the longest
parade routes In the city, from 110th
street down Fifth avenue to Washing
ton Square. The usual length of the
route, it was explained, had been de
cided upon in order that all friends and families of the soldiers might have
front rank positions from which to
view the parade
Every effort will be made to give the soldiers families and friends the
best places along the line of march
Three buttons or tags will be given each soldier for distribution and the
public will be requested on the day of
the parade to allow those wearing the
, buttons or tags to have the best places
, for observation along the line of
march.
BOSTON, IND.
Mrs. David Wetzel left Wednesday
morning for a visit with relatives in West Virginia. She was accompanied
as far as Cincinnati by Mr. Wetzel..
Master Robert Anderson of Fort
Wayne, is the guest of Frank Jenkin
son and family.. . . .Homer Dills, of the United States navy, is here on a ten
days furlough Jerome Merkel, a C. & O. switchman has joined the signal corps and will leave Friday morning for Omaha, Neb., where he will en
ter training camp John Druley of
Summit is here visiting his parents. Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Druley The
ladles of the Cemetery association will
give an ice cream social next Saturday
evening in the new garage building.
Everyone invited Members and friends of the Christian church will visit the Christian church at West
Manchester, O.. next Sunday. The trip
will be made in machines which will
leave the church about S o'clock Miss Esther Rife has gone to Richmond for a visit with Miss Ruth Taylor A. F. Nelson was in Indianapolis on business, Thursday.
HAGERSTOWN, IND.
Horace Hoover returned Thursday evening from Columbus, O.. where she
spent over a week with Mr. and Mrs.
Mark Allen Mrs. John Retz accom
panied her grandson Carlton Templin to Richmond Thursday and the latter
returned to his home at Portland, after
spending a few weeks here Mr. and Mrs. Hall, of Spicelund, and Mrs. Wilson of Newcastle, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Wikorr Miss Neva Bowman and Miss Mary Nicholson of Richmond, are attending the Chautau
qua The Misses Ella Harter of
Minneapolis, Minn., and Etta Harter of Chicago, who have been spending a few weeks with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Harter here left Thursday evening for a three week3 eastern trip.
STUDY COURSE CUT
PRINCETON. N. J.. Aug. 3 By the decision of the special Princeton faculty committee appointed to consider problems arising out of the war, men may now get their degrees at Princeton university in three years, instead
of four. This will be obtained by special intensive course of student
6tudy and work during part of the summer vacations. For the men who have not completed their college courses, it is the university's intention to present special engraved war certificates, setting forth that the student was in regular standing and left to enter his country's service.
THOUGHTS TO THINK ABOUT Be only what you pretend to be; bad habits are ink-blotches upon life's white pages. You have pleasure when you please another; profits are shared by you together. Be wise and always aim to bo true; forget yourself in all that you do. Words turned to harshness, inharmonious appear; none please the fancy of the ear when offensive. Your vacant room may prove the beginning of a fortune; put a Want Ad in The Palladium under ROOMS FOR RENT and keep the revenue coming. What one has done, others can do; and the little "want ad' will help you to success. Read Want Ad page in this issue. .
JWNTAIN HTYIND j The Live Wire class of the Friends' church had a picnic in a woods near Will Thornton's Sunday Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Alexander entertained Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Lester B. Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Barton and son, Byron Willis and Mr. and Mrs. T. N. Hill Charles Benson and C. Hewitt of Crescent, la., are visiting Charles Hatfield and attending to some business affairs. Mr. Benson and Mr. Huwitt will probably locate in Fountain City Miss Mary Woodard went to Indianapolis the latter part of last week Miss Olive Hunt has returned home from a week's visit with her brother at Connersville. . . Mr. and Mrs. Ora Wright, Mr. and Mr. Jacob Thompson and Elwood Williams spent one day last week in the Government Aviation grounds east of Dayton, O.. and at Soldier's Camp at Troy, O Mrs. M. P. Davis is visiting her son, Fred Davis and family at Indianapolis Miss Blanche Pegg returned to St. Vincent's hospital in Indianapolis Thursday, after spending her vacation with her parents, Thomas Pegg and family The Boy Scouts were entertained at the home of Horace, Forest and Willard Hatfield Tuesday.
UNDER NEW
Continued From Page One. months and, according to County Superintendent Williams, under the new law the expense will be more than twice that amount. In Franklin township alone, the expense for hauling school children will amount to more than $3,000 as compared with $1,520 last year. In Franklin township there were four hacks in use last year, but according to Trustee Curtis, it will be necessary to use at least eight to take care of all the children. Hauled to High School Under this act, boys and girls as well, who are living in the country and who attend the Richmond High school, will have to be hauled to and from school at the expense -of the township. There are about seventy graduates from the township schools of Wayne township that will start to the Richmond High school next fall. All of these must be haule.d and at the expense of the township. The law, however, applies only to country pupils, governed by township trustees and the county superintendent. In Richmond, where the city
school board controls the schools, this rule does not apply, in the country, a child under 12 years of age, who lives more than a mile from school, must be hauled to and from school at the expense of the taxpayers. In Richmond there are a number of pupils of Garfield school who are less than twelve - years old who live in West Richmond and Fairview and who have to go more than a mile to school but. these have to get to school the best way they can. Under this new act it will cost
twice as much to get a pupil to and from school as it does to educate him while be is there. . According to the estimates of County Superintendent Williams, the average cost of educating each pupil in the county schools, outside the cities and incorporated towns, is about $3 a month, including teachers' pay, fuel, and other supplies. In Wayne county, there are about 1,050 school children, and the expense for hauling these children to and from
their schools will be about $6 a month under the new act The trustees are wondering where
the money will come from and ers planning to put the school tax for-tha townships to the very top figure.
Keep Your Money Busy
IBah krad bom aad Mcvrttlaa
tavcatlftatcd and protactM bvlwlaHfc Service d yteldt31IZ to 7, ttftt ! E. M. HAAS, Phone 2994 Representing The R.L.DOLLINGS COMPANY INDIANAPOLIS, COLUMBUS. PHILADELPHIA-. PITTSBURGH
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OCCO COCOCOOCOOOCO COCCCOO(
Hi You! Do You Believe In Thrift and Economy? Yes! Go to the fj
AMERICAN IS CLEARED
Strength" in Summer comes to the man or woman whose daily diet consists of cereals and fruits. Meat and potatoes are a heavy load on the digestive organs. The ideal Summer diet is Shredded Wheat Biscuit, a food that is 100 per cent, whole wheat and prepared in a digestible form.. For breakfast with sliced bananas or berries, with milk or cream.
SGRAND -LEADER FDR RIG VALUES
g Economy is the First Rule of the thrifty shopper g and for the Mere Sake of Economy SHOP HERE SATURDAY g The Grand Leader has a good name for everything that means economy to the public, O and service to the community. The Grand Leader's merchandise is the best that money g plus brains can secure. Our buying power, by far greater than any other store in the
jj community, has made it possible for us to offer to the public values that seems phenomenal. We buy for less and sell for less, the mere mention of Grand Leader means money saving to the thrifty, thinking people. Shop here today, tomo rrowand all
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Made at Niagara Falls. N. Y.
MEXICO CITY. Aug. 3. Albert Murphy, an American, has been cleared of
any responsibility in connection with
the assassination of President Fran
cisco Madero and Vice-President Jose
Mario Pino Suarez on Feb. 19, 1913.
Murphy owned the automobile in which the President and Vice-President were taken from the National
Palace and shot. It was proved that
he was not present and had nothing to do with the plot.
Three hundred and sixty cities in
the United States are governed by commissions. New Orleans, Denver, St. Paul, Lowell, and Gloucester are
the largest.
DAYS OF DIZZINESS
Come to Hundreds of Richmond People.
There are days of dizziness; Spells of headache, languor, back
ache;
Sometimes rheumatic pains; Often urinary disorders. Doan's Kidney Pills are especially
for kidney ills.
Endorsed in Richmond by grateful
friends and neighbors.
Mrs. Jane Cooper, 922 N. Twelfth
St., Richmond, says: "My back has
always given me the most trouble. It ached and was stiff and sore. My kidneys were also irregular in action and sometimes I had dizzy spells and headaches. Every time I have been this way. I have procured a box of Doan's Kidney Pills at Quigley's Drug Store
and they have never failed to relieve me. I have never found another kid
ney medicine that has done me so
much good."
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that
Mrs. Cooper had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Bufaflo, N. Y. Adv.
EMBARGO IS URGED
MEXICO CITY. Aug. 3. The National Commercial Congress which convened in Mexico City about the middle of July recommended to the National Congress that the exportation from Mexico of articles of prime necessity be prohibited. The list as outlined in the resolution would include coin, wheat, flour, beans and cotton.
APPEAL IS DENIED
TOKIO. Aug. 3. The court of appeals has rejected the appeal taken by the public prosecutor in the case of Ralph Hoyt Thayer, of Utica, N. Y., who was recently fined $10 for enter
ing a fortified zone at Yokosuka with out authority.
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ou can eas;
destroy them with
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NOTICE RICHMOND -ElKSSomethlng New Something Different Official Card Holder We picture here in ex-
r I act size The Elks' Of- ' n ficial Card Holder. The
Holder is gold filled and suitable to place on a Waldemar Watch Chain. . This holder is for the official identification card, handy to carry and you run no risk of losing your card. We are exclusive agents in this city for this new holder and would be pleased to show it to you at any time, with no obligation on your part to buy. THE PRICE OF THIS HOLDER IS $3.00 The holder is suitable for Identification cards of any other lodge.
Women $4 Latest Style Street Dresses j
STREET DRESSES Women's pretty Street Dresses, one or two-piece garments made of percale, gingham.
chambray, etc. All the wanted shad es, trimmed neatly, pockets, belts, etc., special for $1.98.
S198
WOMEN'S $3.00 BEAUTIFUL
Breakfast Suits Women's pretty Breakfast Suits made of gingham, cham
bray, etc.; consists of dressing sacques, skirt and cap to match; complete
o
WOMEN'S 50c PURE Silk HosieryOQp Women's Silk Hose, all want- , 0 U ed shades including white, black, tan, gold, etc., reinforced heel and toe; all sizes special for 29c.
WOMEN'S $2.00 MUSLIN OR Sateen Petticoats Q Op Women's Muslin or Sateen J U U Petticoats all the wanted shades and beautiful patterns, cut full,
retty ruffles; all sizes; special 98c.
99c V iW
0, E. DICKINSON Watch Repairing Diamonds Mounted
Women's Up to 10 Beautiful Sport
Is or Dresses
Women's pretty Sport Suits or Dresses, made of French linene, poplin, etc., a wide selection of colors and styles, neatly trimmed, belts, pockets, full cut skirt effect, all sizes special
WOMEN'S $10.00 SILK
Taffeta Skirts
$3.85
Women's Silk Taffeta Skirts in plain colors, stripes, color combination,
etc., cut full, all sizes, neatly trimmed with shirred tops and pockets, belt, etc., special at $3.85. WOMEN'S UP TO $1 STYLISH TAFFETA
kirts
Women's pretty Taffeta Skirts, all wanted shades, cut full, pleated effect, pockets, belts, etc., many at $4.95.
$95
stripes, special
WOMEN'S UP TO $2 WASH SKIRTS 98c WOMEN'S $3.00 WASH SKIRTS $1.98 WOMEN'S $7 WOOL POPLIN SKIRTS $3.98 WOMEN'S $3.50 DRESS SKIRTS $1.98
Women's $5.00 Georgette Cirepe Waistts
Women's beautiful Georgette Crepe Waists, nearly all the colors of the rainbow to choose from; plain or trimmed, largo collar, trimmed bosoms, trimmed or plain cuff s,.lze 1046, special
Women's $4.00 Pretty Silk Waists SUJ Women's $8.00 Georgette Waists .44.65 Women's $2.00 Voile Waists JBSc Women's $2.00 Middy Blouses .-JS 8c Women's $1.00 Middy Blouses ---49c
Misses' 75c Middy Blouses w-
49c
Deadly to insects, flies, ants.
roaches, moths, bed bugs.
t fleas, chicken lice, etcetera.
Packed in sealed glass
bottles. IS on-poisonous.
. .3, 25 and 50 cents
i everywhere or M irr iff in
300 W. Lombard St. T7f)
Baltimore. Md. Writ for Pre
Pair btory Book
SUMMER TIES Beautiful New Patterns. The finest Silk Ties we ever offered at 50c and 65c LICHTENFELS Id the Westcott
Palladium Want Ads Pay.
44c
Boys' Wear
Bovs' 75c Serviceable
Wash Suits
Boys" cute Wash Suits, made of percale, etc., all styles to
choose from, fast color; sizes to 8 years, special at 49c. Boys' 50c Blouses 23c Boys' $2 Wash Suits 94c Boys' 75c Union Suits. . ,23c Boys' $1.00 Knickers. . .63c Boys' 75c Knickers 43c
Little Folks 75c Romper, 44c
75c
Underwear & Hose
WOMEN'S BEST
Union Suits Women's Knit Union Suits, lace or shell knee, beautiful taped and trim
med; all sizes, special 39c 25c White Foot Hose. . .17c 35c Silk Lble Vest. .... . 19c Women's 35c Lisle Hose . 1 7c 75c Silk Striped Hose... 39c 19c Gause Vests Uy2c Women's 19c Hose 11c
Boys' 75c Sport Shirts ... 39c 50c Knit Pants 33c
Muslin Underwear
WOMEN'S $1.50 NEW MUSLIN NIGHT GOWNSOffiL Women's Muslin Night Gowns, Slip-over 1 1 1 J 1 style, cut full, embroidered top, snow white W I I J J 1 1 made of the best material, special for.. M
Women's $1.00 Night Gowns.., , 69c Women's 75c Corset Covers . ........ . 49c Women's 75c Brassieres ............ .39c Women's $1.00 Envelope Chemise. ... . . .69c ' i
George Lucas, a Passaic, N. J., let
ter carrier, estimates he has walked 90,000 miles over his route. He was
appointed In 1S89.
Steps mJy
WaiMimgfl & (0),
4TH AND MAIN
o
PHONE 2006
Plumbing and Heating of All Kinds. Try us on some of your repair work. AH work guaranteed.
SHELLS SDaott (Gran SMeDJls
MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES and ACCESSORIES Repair Work a Specialty Give us a trial and you will come again.
"Side Lights"
25c KIDDIE CLOTH, 14c Kiddle Cloth, used for making wash suits, rompers, etc., stripe, design, etc. special a yard 14c. 75c TO $1 BED SHEETS 49c 72x90 fine quality Bed Sheets, all hemmed, ready for use, best sheeting; specis.1 49c 75c DRESSING SACQUE 49c Women's Dressing Sacques, made of light or dark color percale, stripes, etc. "Ctioio 4 do Up to $2 BED SPREADS, 98c Bed Spreads, will cover a double-tdze bed, nicely trimmed, marry patterns, choice 98c. 75c KIMONO APRONS, 49c Women's Kimono Aprons, made of light and dark striped . percale, pockets, belt, etc.; choice 49c CHILD'S $1 DRESSES, 49c Child's pretty Dresses, made of gingham, neatly trimmed; special for 49c.
MEN'S UP TO $U0 CLASSY DRESS
SHIRTS
& I
Men's classy Dress ShirtSj made of percale, madras, etc; soft or latmdred
caffs; all sizes; coat style many patterns to choose from; choice of Shirts 89c MEN'S 75c KOOL
Union Suits
Men's Union Salts, inclad-
Ing poToskaitathletic.and
Men's 75c Shirts or Drawers 43c
Men's $1 Sport Shirts 69c Men's $3 Dress Pants $1.49 Men's 50c Classy Ties 23c Men's $1.25 Union Suits. . .89c
Men's $1 Muslin Night Shirts, 53c
) I "Sidelights"
$2.00 TABLE CLOTH, 98c Two yards Bquare Table doth, all Stemmed, many designs and patterns ; choice 98c $2 CREPE KIMONOS, 98c Women's Crepe Kimonos, many styles and shades; choice special for 98c 19c PILLOW CASES, 10ioc 36x42 Pillow Cases, hemstitched or scalloped, made of good tubing; special, 10J2c. $1.00 RAG RUGS, 79c 54x27 Old Fashion Rag Rags; a wonderful creation of mixed shades; special 79c. $1.50 BED SHEETS, 87c 81x30 Bed Sheets, made of best quality sheeting, seamless, all hemmed; special 87c $2 PATTERN RUGS $1.19 54x27, beautiful pattern Rugs, fringed ends, all shades; special $1.19.
35c Curtain Marquisette a n
fill
i m i i i c
lvj Crcwionohno
Up to 50c Dress VcOss
ui u rhyn.r. Men i
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