Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 250, 31 August 1917 — Page 12

PAGE TWELVE ,

THE RICHMOND PAjlLaiuUM Ajs'O SUN-IuLLLGKaM, rKlDAY, AUGOSX 31, ltfli

FARMERS TOLD OF SEED SELECTION

BOSTON, Ind., Aug. SI To a representative gathering of the tanners In the school building this morning, E. C. Martindale of the Indiana Pood Preservation board, spoke on the importance of proper sesed selection. He showed how farmers might go over their fields of corn before cutting, select the most promising ears, and conduct teste to solve the question of fertility. He laid great stress on wheat seed selection, and said it was the duty of every fanner to aid Uncle Sam in food conservation and production. A round table followed his speech, and questions were answered for the benefit of the farmers.

HAGERSTOWN SCHOOL TO OPEN SEPT. 10

HAGERSTOWN, Ind., Ang. 31. School will open here the tenth of September. Teachers have been engaged except those to fill the places made vacant by Mr. and Mrs. Philip Gates' resignations. The scnool building has undergone Improvements. The walls have been

tinted, the woodwork and desks have been re-varnished and windows will be placed In the hall doors. A new en

cyclopedia and $90 or $100 worth of

reference books have been bougnt.

Laboratory equipment will be added.

Those attending the chautauqua, at

Richmond from here Tuesday were, Miss Esther Porter, Mrs. W. H. Porter,

Mrs. Frank Geisler and daughter,

Carolyn Geialer. Mrs. Everett Taylor, Mrs. H. W. Keagy, Mrs. George Keagy, Mrs. Martha Bunnell, Mr. and

Mrs. Otho Williams and Miss Goldie

Replogle.

Hugh Deardorff, of Muncie, spent Saturday here with the families of Dr.'

O. M. Deardorff and William Leavell as a farewell visit before going into

training for service in the navy. He will probably go to Norkalk, Pa. Dear

dorff was graduated from the Hagers

town high school with the class of 1910 and later taught one term of school in Henry county. He has been assisting his father, Frank Deardorff

at Muncie, in surveying.

FRANCHISE LEAGUE TO CONTINUE POLL

Representatives of the Wayne- county Franchise League at Its annual conference yesterday at Glen Miller park, decided to continue the polling of women in the county. They maintained such data would be valuable as Information for the league. - Mrs. W. O. Lewis, county chairman, reported nine county leagues have been organized with a total of 99 members. In discussing the program for the coming year, it was decided to begin an educatlonel campaign on the Federal Amendment At noon the women enjoyed a luncheon in the pavillion, after which they attended the chautauqua lecture given by Mrs. Frederick Blaine Clarke of Indianapolis. About twenty league members attended the sessions.

TWO CHIEFS INSTALLED BY REDMEN'S DISTRICT DEPUTY

The impressive ceremony of installation of two chiefs to their stumps was carried out by District Deputy G. W. Baker at the council fire of Osceola Tribe, No. 15, Improved .Order of Redmen Thursday evening. The chiefs installed were Sachem L. W. Reifel, and Senior Sagamore O. O. Spillman. A patriotic round table on the good of the order followed, and f nances for the quarter were disposed of. The tribe members will take part in Monday's parade.

HOLLANSBURG, 0.

Mr. and Mrs. George Banks were Richmond visitors Monday. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Horn and son Henry, are spending a few days this week with Mrs. Horn's brother at Cincinnati, O. .... Shlrl Chenoweth and family have returned home after a few days' visit with friends at Mt. Vernon, Ohio Postmaster D. C. Williams was on the sick list Wednesday Mrs. E. H. Timmons . spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Moore and family, north of town.... Mrs. Ben Richards, Misses Ho Davis and Roma Simpsin are spending this week at Greenville with the former's brother, Mr. and Mrs. Mearl Simpson, and attending the fair Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Woods of Richmond, Indiana, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Van White and daughter Gwendolyn, Wednesday Miss Euveda Canady of Economy, Indiana, is spending the latter part of this week with Mr. and Mrs. Ray O. Wright and daughter. Mr. Quay Beetley is their evening guest. . . .Mr. J. H. Eeetley was a business visitor at Richmond Wednesday. .. .Miss Ida Cox of Lynn, who is staying with her sister, Mrs. Chtlmer Caskey, spent Tuesday with her parents and attended the Cox reunion at Winchester Wednesday... Rev. Jacob Frazter of Winchester, was a visitor in our village Monday morning Miss Idris Timmons was the guest of Cecil Wolfal and daughter, Norma, Tuesday afternoon Mrs. Feme Williams and son Dan, spent Monday and Tuesday with Dan Aldright and family of Dobson... .Geo. Anderson and family of Indianapolis, are spending a few days here with friends. ...Mrs. Dr. Harley is visiting with relatives and friends at Troy, O. and Springfield, O. this week.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY Woman Sings At Work About

The House Now

Lost Strength and Duties

Were Getting Hard Before

She Took Tanlac

MILTON, IND.

Frank Daniels and mother, Mrs. Agnes Daniels and Fred Nieman of Indianapolis, spent Saturday evening and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Will Daniels Wert Ashbaugh died at Reid Memorial hospital Thursday

morning following an operation Mrs. John Brown entertained the em'

broidery club Wednesday afternoon at

her home south of town. The club

will meet the hnext time with Mrs.

Ida Crownover The "500" club met

at the home of Mrs. Emma Beeson

Wednesday afternoon.. . .Rev. Thomas B. Kalane, B. D.. native of East Africa,

graduate of Payne Theological Semi

nary and the Southern Christian Institute, will speak at the Christian

church on Monday evening, Sept. 3. Admission free, offering will be taken.

Rev. Kalane walked 2,000 miles from

East Coast to South Africa. He has

been in America eleven years prepar

ing himself for future work in Africa. David Sands of Kansas City, spent Wednesday and Thursday with E. P.

Jones and family E. P. Jones re

turned from Huntington, Pa., on Thursday morning, where he attended the funeral services of Dr. R. Myers.

Germany Forces Prisoners Under Own Country s Fire

WASHINGTON, Aug. 31. Starved.

beaten, and subjected to many Indig

nities, prisoners of wr In Germany are being compelled to work in trench and field under the fire from the armies of

their own countries.

Reports made by Russian soldiers who have escaped from Germany and which have been transmitted to the state department say prisoners of all nationalities are being used on work Just behind the lines and within range

ot tne guns.

A small portion of bread, some thin soup, and occassionally a bit of meat of horses shot in action comprise their

rations. The prisoners have been or

ganized Into units as carefully as are

soldiers. Their work is done system

atically under ( military supervision

witn long nours and no medical attention. '

When the Russian soldiers left many of the units had lost by disease prac

tically half of their number. No new

clothing had been Issued to them and

in all 60rts of weather they are forced in vermin laden rags. Military over-

Cambridge City Unit To March in Parade

CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., Aug. 31. The militia unit have decided to take part in the Richmond parade. They will march 70 strong and will be commanded by the newly elected officers, Captain Dan Chapman, First Lieutenant, Dr. Cullen Squier, and Second Lieutenant Nelson Carson.

NATURAL GAS COMPANY MAY ENLARGE ITS PLANT

CENTERVILLE, IND. j

Byron Nixon fell off the new cement

birde east of town Thursday afternoon

and broke two bones in his right arm. ....Andrew McKinney and family attended the Greenville fair Thursday... ..Forest Kempton is home for a few days with his parents, Mr. and Mr3. William Kempton Ralph Ahl, son of Thomas Ahl had an operation for removal of tonsils and adnoids Wednesday. .. .Mr. and Mrs. George Statts of Los Angeles who have been the

guests of Mrs. Lucinda Statts for several weeks left Thursday morning for Indianapolis where they will visit relatives before returning to their home. .

Ogden Brainard, of Illinois, is the

guest of his aunt, Mrs. Cora Wilson. .. The funeral of Wert Ashbaugh will be

conducted at the Lutheran church in

Pershing Saturday. Friends will leave the house at two o'clock. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Dunbar are enjoying a trip

to several towns in Illinois and western Indiana. .. .Mrs. Mabel Wheeler and son Vernon of Connersville are visiting her sister, Mrs. Pearl Jones this week. .. .Walter Cook and wife

have returned from their visit with relatives in the southern part of the

state ana Mr. cook was oenennea in

health by the outing. .. .Garrett Wil

son is spending his vacation in the

southern part of the state.

CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., Aug. 31. The Cambridge City Natural Gas company has under advisement plans for an addition to their plant in order that it might be independent of the natural gas, and have the manufactured article when desirable. No information other than that the plant will be improved has been given out for publication.

PLACED IN ORDER

CAMBRIDGE CITY, IND., Aug. 31. As a result of notices sent out by the postmaster to rural route patrons, approaches to the letter boxes have with few exceptions been placed in order.

seers, the Russians reported, ferquent-

ly had them tied to boards and beaten until they had reached ' the point of

exhaustion. Included in the labor unit were Ger

mans as well as Russians, British,

French. Belgians and Poles. The Ger

mans were those who had participated in food riots or who were physically unfit for service in the ranks. These

men were treated very .little differently from the prisonrs of war.

GREENSFORK, IND.

Mrs. Charles Ammons gave a birthday party at the home of Mrs. Jennie Benson in. "honor of her daughter, Nellie's sixth birthday Tuesday afternoon. Games were the feature of the afternoon. The guests included Misses Elizabeth Ellis, Devona Haler, Vera Snyder, Mary Ellen Albertson, Dorothy Boyd, Vera Stackhouse, Nadlene Wise, Martha Sowers, Helen Downing, Nellie and Katherine Cummins. Mrs. Forest Murry of Decatur, is visiting her mother, Mrs." Ellen Fox..... Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Johnson of Spiceland, are visiting the former's parents this week Thost attending the chautauqua at Richmond Wednesday were: Lela Kitterman, Mrs. Harry Fagan, Mrs. Anne Nicholson, Mrs. Ed Hatfield, Mrs. Thomas Gunckle, Mrs. Luther Hatfield, Misses Hazel Hatfield, Helen Roller, Mrs. Lafe Stigelman, William Fagan Mrs. Martha Cotton is spending a few days with her sister, Mrs, John Martindale Mrs. Clara Watt of near Connersville, Mrs.' Frank Simpklns and children spent Thursday .with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Watt Mr. and Mrs. John Bond, Mr. and Mrs. William Feasel

and daughter, Martha Alice, attended

the Jessup reunion, near Greenfield, Thursday. . .Mr. Pat Breen, Miss Margaret and Irvin Breen attended the ice cream supper given by the threshing ring near Jacksonsburg Wednesday

evening at the home of Lindleys.

VETERINARY IS OFFICER

CAMBRIDGE CITY, IND., Aug. 31

One Cambridge City veterinary has

been recognized by the 'government

Dr. E. D. Modlin has been commission

ed a second lieutenant, and expects to join one of the army cantonments

shortly.

BACK TO OVERALLS

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY

J Girls! Use Lemon Juice!

1 1 Make a quarter pint of beauty cream for little co3t.

dears, softens and whitens the 6kin. Brings out the hidden roses I

By all means, girls, prepare a lemon lotion to keep your skin flexible and young looking. You will soon realize that true loveliness does not mean the powdery look or waxen colorlessness of some hot-house flower, but is typified by the velvety softness of your skin, your peach-like complexion and rosy-white hands. At the cost of a small jar of ordinary

cold cream one can perpare a full quarter pint of the most wonderful lemon

skin softener and complexion beautifier, by squeezing the juice of two

fresh lemons Into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white. Care

should be taken to strain the juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp

gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh

for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and re

move such blemishes as freckles, sal

lowness and tan, and is the ideal skin

softener and beautlfier.

Just try it! Get three ounces of

orchard white at any pharmacy or

toilet counter and two lemons from the

grocer and make up a quarter pint of

this sweetly fragrant lotion and mas

sage it daily into the face, neck, arms,

and hands, particularly rough, red

hands.

"A few weeks ago I felt so bad that

I could scarcely do the work about

the house but today I go about my duties 6inging and I give Tanlac all the credit for the change," said Mrs.

Myrtle Whiteman, of Brownsburg. Indiana, eighteen miles nprthwest of Indianapolis.

"I felt weak and tired all the time

before I took Tanlac," she continued. "I didn't sleep very well at night and got up In mornings feeling pretty worn out. "Then my stomach got ont of order. My appetite became poor and after meals I bloated and felt stuffy. Sometimes I had dizzy spells after meals, too. I was losing my strength. "I could see a big change after the first two bottles of Tanlac. I slept better at night and woke up in mornings feeling rested. I've improved so much now and feel so much better that I go about my work singing. "The dizzy spells have left me and my strength Is coming back. My appetite is much better and I find a joy in eating that I didn't know before. "I think Tanlac is a fine tonic and I'm telling all my neighbors about it and everyone else who I hear complaining of not feeling right."

Don t let your system get run down. Weakness is dangerous. If you are not, feeling .right get Tanlac and get it today. You can get Tanlac at any of Clem Thistlethwaite's drug stores. Adv. -

Don't let skin trouble

spoil your good time heals sick skins "I can't have any fan I I am such a sig-Ai with this eczema that people avoid me wherever I go. And the ticking torments me so that I don't get any peace, anyhow." Don't be discouraged 1 Even in severe, well-established cases of eczema, ringworm or similar skin-t roubles, Resinol Ointment, aided by Resinol Soap, usually relieves the itching at once and quickly clears the eruption away. Doetort prescribe the Rttinol tratmrot. A II dm jiiu (ell Resinol Ointment and Retlcol Soip

H

aura

m

The Health Builder The height of efficiency and pleasant to take which is a great blessing to the afflicted. NA-TU-RA For all forms of catarrh. It treats the cause It's nature's way. Rosie Baldwin of Martinsville, Ind., Says: I have been using your remedy Natura for a very bad case of running catarrh, which I had since a child. I had become a physical and nervous wreck; had had nervous prostration twice. I had run down in weight to 114 lbs. I had stomach trouble for five years, could not eat anything without suffering; I lived on a light diet for six months, with no results. My kidneys and bladder were badly affected and gave me great distress. I was habitually constipated, was continually taking laxatives and physics to get relief and had severe headaches. My condition was such that I was not able to work; was given up by five physicians to die of tuberculosis in six months. I have now been using Natura for two months and I am feeling like a new woman; no stomach trouble, am free from constipation, no headaches and kidneys are doing fine. My nerves are strong again. I can again sleep and rest and I now weigh 145 lbs. I have unbounded faith in Natura for the cure of all forms of catarrh. Natura can be obtained at Richmond, Ind. A. G. Luken A Co.; Qulgley Drug Stores; Conkey Drug Co.; Cambridge City, Ind, Dean House; Centerville, Ind., C. B. Lundy; Hagerstown, Ind., F. M. Whitesel and F. H. Stonecipher. PRICE $1.00. - -Manufactured by THE NATURA DRUG CO., Indianapolis, Ind.

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

Thistle-

REED'S

REED'S

"You'll Do Better at" See Page Two

9

D)

's Leading Homefurnishers

RIchmond

CENTERVILLE. Ind.. Aug. 31. From a professor to overalls and work was the example ahown yesterday by 5. E. Kempton of the Botany department of Illinois university. J He is one of the authorities ? on nature's object lessons, and on' his return here at once plunged -into work-for Uncle Sam on the farm.

TO SPEAK ON SEEDS

CAMBRIDGE CITY, IND-Aug. 31 C. E. Martindale of the Indiana Food Conservation board, win speak Friday evening on wheat and corn seed selection In front, of the Wlssler; Hardware store. Invitations have ' been sent out to alt farmers, in thl .section.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY

MAKE NEW APPROACH CENTERVTLLB, Ind; Aug. 3L Tha process of making a new approach to the addition to Maple Grove park has kept teamsters busy this week, and hundreds of loads of "dirt have been placed, together with ; store for Hprapping the bank of the creek.

Almost automatic in its operations Is a new cabinet for quickly developing X-ray-photographs for dentists' use. :

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SATORBAY UNTIL 10 P.M. Your last chance at these August Sale bargains. Furniture at bargain prices. Rugs, linoleums and everythingfor the home at prices you positively can not get laten You can pay part and have any purchaseJaid away for later delivery

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