Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 267, 20 September 1917 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, SEPT. 20, 1917

PAGE THREE

COMMANDERS TO GO IN TRENCHES

WASHINGTON. Sept 20. Regular and national guard general officers commanding divisional training camps are to be sent to Europe on an observation tour of the battle fronts, returning to carry on their training duties at the close of the tour. Formal announcement of this plan by the war department Is expected. Under the voluntary censorship specific movements of general officers may not be published without author!aation of the military authorities. For this reason the list of divisional commanders already selected to make the tour will be available only when the department's announcement Is made. It is assumed, however, that if possible every division commander will be given an opportunity In time to familiarize himself somewhat with actual war conditions abroad. The early stages of the mobilization and training of the national guard

and national army divisions will be left to the brigade and regimental com

manders leaving the officers of the di

visional staff to handle the larger

Questions.

The first weeks of training camp

work will be devoted largely to get

ting the men equipped and classified to the various arms of the service and

that period will be devoted wherever possible to the observation tour

abroad for general officers.

IS WAR PRISONER

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CAMPBELLSTOWN

R. E. Brandenburg has been very

ill for the past week, and isn't improv

ing very rapidly. .. .Miss Mary Rine-

hart has been employed in the school

Mr. Clarence Thompson takes George McClellan's place as he leaves Thursday morning for Chilllcothe training

camp and Miss Rinehart teaches the seventh and eighth grades ...... Miss

Joe Cramer of Richmond spent Tues

day with her niece, Mrs. Annie Armacost W. W. Campbell and wife,

Charles Armacost and wife and Rev,

Thomas of West Milton, spent Sunday

with Mr. and Mrs. DeMott J. W.

O'Hara has returned to this place aft

er a four weeks' stay in Traverse City,

Mich.... The Jackson Grange is preparing to make an exhibit at the fair. Jonas Markey donated $25 to the Red Cross of this place recently. The sowings are on Wednesday afternoons after 1:15 at the school building . Earl Campbell of Richmond, Ind., is spending a few days with his parents. ....Carl Miller's home was broken into Sunday night while they were at church and a lamp broken and $14 in money taken. Sheriff Taylor came nut from Eaton, but no arrests were madp.

PRAISE FOR FOUR

CENTER V1LLE, Ind.,' Sept. 20. Four of Centerville's young men, Julian Dunbar, Frank Henderson, Lon Jackson and Robert Lamb, have been specially praised because they did not claim exemption. Their friends plan a "send-off for the quartet Friday.

Ski

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William A. Miller, Chicago youth,

and a member of the gun crew of the Standard Oil tanker, Campana, is in

a German prison camp at Blendenberg. News that he was a prisoner

caused great joy to his parents here

who believed he perished when the Campana was submarined August 13.

Consul Winslow of Auckland says

that the censorship of moving pictures in New Zealand is becoming

more drastic.

(Advertisement.) Folly to let a Man Drink, Says Druggist Brown, of Cleveland, Who Gives a Home Remedy

A New Treatment Given Without the Consent or Knowledge of the Drinker. Cleveland, Ohio. A woman who lets a man drink is foolish, says Druggist Brown, for no man who drinks ever a little bit is safe. A woman can break the drink habit In a few weeks for half what a man spends on liquor in the same time, and the drinker need never know she did it. For the sake and safety of both stop the drink habit in its beginning. Let the first whiff of liquor on his breath be your danger signal, but even if he is rum-soaked through and through do not despair; he can.be saved and it is your duty to save him. Druggist Brown knows the awful curse of strong drink because he himself has been a victim. A loving sister rescued him from the brink of a drunkard's grave and kept her secret

fen years, then she told him how she did it. She saved him from the demon drink, rescued him from his own depraved self by means of a secret remedy, the formula of an old German chemist. To save other families from the curse of drink and to help other victims out of the murk and mire he now makes the formula public. Any druggist can help you if you long to save a loved one. Just ask your druggist for prepared tescum powders and drop a powder twice a day in tea. coffee, milk or any other drink. Liquor soon ceases to taste the same, the craving for it vanishes and, lo, one more drunkard is saved without knowing

why he lost the taste for strong drink.

One woman who used this prescription on her husband says: "It Is going

on the fourth week since he has touched a drop of anything in the form of

liquor or used tobacco of any kind He seems already like a different man

Tescum has gained a wonderful enthus

iast in me. I regard it as a Godsend. Just think, I have never seen my husband sober for more than 48 hours in years and now it is going on one month since he had his last drink." Another one gratefully writes: "I have used tescum powders on my husband and find it one of the greatest cures in this world. He hasn't taken a drink for almost five weeks and says he never will. My home does not seem like the same place and life seems worth living. I hope thousands gain what I have. This has been a good new year for me without drink In my home." Note: Prepared tescum, referred to above, should not be given except where it is desired to destroy all taste for alcoholic drinks. Women who approve of moderate drinking and believe moderate drinkers safe should give tescum only when they see, as most do in time, that the danger line is plainly near. You take no risk with Tescum as it is sold in this city under a steel-

bound money-refund guarantee by Thistlethwaites and other first class druggists. They guarantee to do the work or refund the money.

The Best of Everything to Eat Elliott's Grocery

Successor to H. G. Hadley

PHONE 2292

1035 MAIN STREET

"In Business For Your Health"

3T

5TT

35 South 11th Street

Phone 1603

Centerville Got First Roadway When President Van Bur en Was Thrown From His Carriage There

CENTERVILLE, Ind., Sept. 20. At noon Wednesday the last of the rip

rap was removed from the roadway of

the business district and the teams and machinery were removed to Cambridge City to begin the work at the

THOUGHTS TO THINK ABOUT Self-study is self advancement.

Your time belongs to your employer and he pays you for it; to waste his time, therefore, is to rob your employer. Watch and work; watch for opportunities at every turn of the road, but work as if there were no watches or watching.

How many readers of The Palladium are as well educated as you? Make your Want Ad so plain that everybody will understand. Telephone 2834 and ask for a Want Ad Taker; get her to help with your Want Ad.

eastern end there. It was only a few years ago that two veteran citizens, Isaac Jenkins, and John Good, used to tell how they worked laying down this road of four squares for the government. Jenkins hauled the stone and helped lay it. Good was also a worker. Wager then, in 1832, the date of the making of the roadway, were 25 and 35 cents per day, the purchasing power of the money being equal to $1.50 and $2 per day. The story recalled was that before the year . 1832 a government official was upset in a carriage in Centerville, and history had it that the official was President Martin Van Buren. It was stated In this connection that President Van Buren secured a government appropriation for this roadway of four squares. However, it is certain that Centerville, Ind., and Washington, D. C, according to the story told by the deceased veterans, were the only cities that had roadways built by the government in 1832.

About 70,000 church bells, destined for the emelter and ultimately for conversion into munitions of war, have been received by a big bell foundry at Apoldo, in the Prussian Province cf Hanover.

EARLY END TO STRIKE IS SEEN

WASHINGTON, Sept. 19. Labor department officials today expressed the opinion that there "is some prospect of adjustment soon" of the shipbuilders and iron workers' strike in San Francisco.

FOUNTAIN CITY, IND.

A surprise party was given on Alsie Pahin Tuesday night. Those present were Ruth Fulghum, Olive Harrison, Madeline Hannah, Geneva Wright, Lucy Williams, Elizabeth Miller. Lois Johnson and Alsie Fahien, Lawrence Harrison, Herbert Hodgin, Clyde Cates, Henry Macy, Winston Huff, Clawson Kune, Burnham, Archie Thornton, Roy Bond, Earnest Fahien and Justice Jackson Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Harrison and family, Mrs. Clayton Dougherty and daughter, Maxine and Mrs. Elizabeth Parker took supper at the home of Theo Fisher, Tuesday evening Miss Reba Showalter has started away to college. Miss Nellie Overman has returned to Bloomington to take up a college course .A farewell party was given at the home of John and Eva Rothermel southeast of town, Tuesday night in honor of Michael Norton who is to leave Friday for the army. The home was decorated in red, white and blue. Those present

were Misses Marie Weaver, May Shonkwiler, Helen Faul. Edna Weaver, Edna Suonkwiler, Helen Nelson, Mary Faul, all of Richmond; Pear Brown, Gladys Bailey, Opal Hunt, Blanch Williams, Elizabeth - Mitchell and Eva Rothermel. Messrs. Micklal Norton, Emmett Mitchell, Earnest Nicholson of Greensfork, Leonard Brown, Willard Collins, Stanley Hunt. John Hunt, Roscoe Bown and John Rothermel.

A new railway station costing $2,500,000 has recently beencompleted at Macon, Ga.

How To Judge A Woman by Her Hair j

There is real common sense in just noticing whether the hair is well kept to Judge of -woman's neatness, or good taste. If you are one of the few who try to make the most of your hair, remember that it is not advisable to wash the hair with any cleanser made

for all purposes, but always use some good preparation made expressly for shampooing. You can enjoy the very best by getting some canthrox from

your druggist, dissolve a teaspoonrui In a cup of hot water. This makes a full tup of shampoo liquid, enough so it is easy to apply it to all the hair instead of just the top of the head. Dandruff, excess oil, and dirt are dissolved and entirely disappear. Your hair will be so fluffy that it will look much heavier than it is. Its lustre and softness will also delight you, while the stimulated ecalp gains the health which insures hair growth. Adv.

WEIGH NEAR. POUND

CENTERVILLE. Ind.. Sept. 20. Some "White Meat" potatoes from tbe Mark Stevens farm, five miles sooth of town, were brought in yesterday by the owner, the average weight being near a pound, and several weighing over. The gem of the collection, now on exhibit at the Griggsby store, is a moster weighing 144 ounces.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY

01UZILIAH BALU Is Daglc far COUGHS, GRIP, CROUP, Ssihraa, Catarrh, Quick Consumption, Bronchitis, LLStho Germs. ioc,25c.50c$j

Dry Cleaning that leaves your clothes really clean. Men's Suits and Overcoats, Ladies' Coats and Dresses. $1.00

C.B.ROGERS Phone 2496. " " 7 S. 11th.

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When Red Robin Red Breast Leaves for the South Then You Know It's Time to Buy Fall Clothes nnnlls-C(D)Ms-Pp(BSS(BS

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From a Recent Pur chase fOn-nTifrn a Group of Stylish . . . Cl) ILUllllS)

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Women Who Demand Something Smart Our SERGE

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See Window ' Display

The acknowledged supremacy of Blue Serge Dresses Is manifested by the demand for them by our customers. Every one of them must give the wearer the limit of satisfaction. They equal or are better than any other dress of Its kind in Richmond. New colors: taupe, bottle gren, brown, navy, wine, also black, etc. New models quite distinctive in lines and trimmings. No more, no less, $14.95

FIRST

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