Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 315, 15 November 1917 — Page 8

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V PAGE EIGHT THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, NOV. 15, 1917.

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GASES CLOSED AFTER MEN GO IN ARMY CAMPS Richmond Army Board Pre

paring Data Concerning All Registrants. Reopening of the cases of selected men la army camp will not be allowed hereafter, according to bulletin received by tjie Richmond army board from Provost Marshal General Crowder. Under a recent raHng sent out by the prove t marshal In order to reopen a case after a man has been passed np by local and district boards, It "will be necessary to start proceedings

within five days after the decision of

the board Is made. This ruling was made by the board

to relieve the restraint put upon the selective service system by the heavy number of cases that have been asked to be reopened, and to hasten the closing of the first draft, that future drafts may be started. Under orders received last week, members of. the Richmond army board

are working night and day to prepare complete data concerning all of the

registrants within the Jurisdiction of

the board. This data will probably be used, according to the belief of some members of the board, to place before

congress, when it convenes in December, the results of the first efforts un

der the selective service law, and that congress may make corrections in the law. All of the remaining registrants within the jurisdiction of the local board have been divided into thirty classes, according to their dependency, occupation and so forth, and a complete report of these classes win be made to the provost marshal

- No copies of the new questionnaire for the registered men have been received by the Richmond army board tmd no orders concerning the distribution and filling out of these questionnaires have come to the board. This work will probably be started as soon as the present work of compiling data is finished by the local boards.

Richmond's Finest Photoplay Palace to Be Opened Saturday

With magnlfieeat stage setting, the fanfare of the orchestra and the Sash .of the thousand of irrideseent lights, a new palace ef pleasure will be born

on Saturday When lae Murray ineaire

opens for the fall theatrical season. Ttia management limt arranged fOT

the presentation of Triangle and Para- .. - . . .. j iu

mount pnotopiays exclusively, ana w tired business man who drops in for brief teoreation, the musical enthusi

ast intent upon enjoying tne seiecuons

played by tne orcnestra, me ianmj mmni out for an altsrnoou or even-

Ine's mtartairrmrL the motion pic

ture tans making thru regular visit,

will all nna someuung 01 special mtnwii In thin nmrfltit and most repre

sentative temple of the silent drama.

Experiences tnat are common to an people, north or south, east or west, tiA omnalnff ArilavlAit that crrprrv man

or woman will recognize as his or her

own lndmauai experiences, are snown

will be offered together with a Bray Pictograph. The setting for the pletures will bo Grecian in architecture and is considered one at the most wonderful sets ever designed. It contains a beautiful Boenio spectacle and presents many difficult lighting possibilities. The six large pillars supporting the pagoda roof are turned wood artistically painted. The solidity of these pillars gives the effect of realism so hard to obtain in scenery.

A ten-piece orchestra, under the direction of Clarence Runge,-will be seated on the stage behind the front

ballustrade, without interfering with the projection of the picture. Many

set rows are combined with the big

cyclorama, eo painted that a rising

moon, cloud and star effect lend to the charm of the setting. Miss eJanne Whitney, soprano soloist will render selections from Ham-

Telegraphy Class Here Best in State

The Richmond telegraphy class for war service which is one of the largest classes In the night school. Is further advanced than any class in a city of its size in Indiana, according to Prolessor PettUohn of the extension division of Indiana University. Superintendent Giles was in consultation with Prof. Pettijohn Wednesday when he was at Indiana University relative to securing a history . teacher to fill the place left vacant by : the resignation of Cecil Grayson. No person has been secured to fill the vacancy.

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ITALY STILL HOLDS PIAVE

Indications In today's official news

from the Italian front -are that the Italian line Is still holding on the Plave and on the critical Trentino front while the straightening out process is being continued along the salient between the upper Piave. and the Bugana valley on- the edge of the Trentino district. - Berlin's statement reports no change along the lower Piave, where the Italian reports have shown repeated attempts by the Atatro-Ger-man forces to pierce the river Pine and compel its abandonment and the consequent loss of Venice by the Italians.

It has been pointed out that every day thid line is held, counts heavily in Italy'e favor as the Anglo-French contingent In Italy will soon be on the fighting line.

City Statistics

1 joint service in connection with the Ansterman funeral. Serial in St An

drew s cemetery.

FACTORY GIRLS REFUSE TO SIGN

Deaths and Fvnersla. BARNES Mies Cidnia Barnes died Tuesday morning at the home of Mr. Kiimer In Centervffle. Funeral services will be held Friday morning at 10:30 at First Baptist Church of Richmond. The Francis Willard W. C. T. U. will attend in a body. Burial in Elkborn cemetery. BALFE Mrs. Mary Balfe, 75 years old, lied Wednesday night at her home, 200 North Seventeenth street, of a complication of diseases. She Is survived by her husband, James Balfe, and several children. The funeral will be held Saturday morning at 9 o'clock from St. Mary's church. Rev. W. J. Cronin will be in charge. Friends may call at any time. Burial in St. Mary's cemetery. , AUSTERMAN The funeral of Clifford Austerman 'will be held Friday morning at 9 o'clock from St. Andrew's

church. Burial in St Andrew's ceme

tery. Friends may call at any time.

SPRINGER The body of Mrs. Mary

Springer who died In Cincinnati, Tues

day arrived in Richmond Wednesday at 12: SO o'clock and was taken to the home of her aunt, Mrs. Joseph Voelker, 806 South Sixth street, where friends

may call at any time. She was a

former resident of Richmond and a member of the Order of Forresters and St. Ann's society. The funeral will be held Friday morning at 9 o'clock from

St. Andrew's church and will be a

In Marguerite Clark's latest Paramount 1 picture "Bab'B Burglar," which is the featured attraction for the opening of the Murray theatre on Saturday next, and will be continued again on Sunday. The youth with the budding mustache who gets desperately ill on smoking his first. cigar, the boardingschool girl who spends her year's allowance in a month, the father who understands his girl's frequent outbursts and stands by her through thick and thin, all these and many more are found in Mary Robert Rinehart's clever story of the youthful "sub-deb," which recently appeared in the Saturday Evening Post. In addition to the above feature a Burton Holmes Travelog, showing manners and customs in Canton and Shanghai,

mersteins latest New York musical comedy success "You're in Love" and Andreas Dlppel's comic opera "The Lilac Domino." It Is the Intention of W. H. HIckey, under whose personal direction the Murray theater will be conducted, to offer a complete change of program on Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, after the opening week. One of the innovations will be the

reservation of seats for both evening performances, and same can be obtained one week in advance. The box office will be open from ten a. m., until ten p. m. and the scale of prices will be matinee five, ten and fifteen cents, evening ten, fifteen and twenty, lodges twenty-fivo cents. .There will be no

extra charge for th& war tax

Miss M. E. B. Culbertson, chairman of the woman's division of the Wayne County Council of Dofense, is encouraged over the number of signed pledge cards In the food conserviioa. movement which were turned into Mrs. H. L. Monarch, secretary of the publicity committee, Thursday. Public school children of Richmond have returned 1,489 cards while in the Wayne county schools 1,198 cards had

been signed by November 7, when the

last report was made. Mrs. H. L. Monarch expects to be able to make a complete report by Friday.

Through the patriotism of the man

agement of the American Seeding machine company all the women employed at the factory signed the cards.

Only a few cards wore signed at the

Atlas Underwear factory. This was a

surprise to the committee as the com

pany is making garments for the gov

ernment. Any person who has not been asked to sign a card may call

phone 3620 and pledge cards and post ers for the windows will be sent.

Miss Culbertson has just returned from Indianapolis where she attended

a demonstration of the Hoover kitchen

AT NIGHT SCHOOL

An interesting feature of the Night

school Wednesday evening was the lec

ture by Mrs. M. F. Johnston on the Birge and Alexander Harrison pictures hanging In the Art gallery. In addition to the lecture given in connection with the Arts and Travels

course the Mustic Study club gave a program. v v Miss Blanch Luken gave a violin number accompanied by Miss Mary Porter. A piano duet was played by Misees Alta McPberson and Margaret Gentle. Miss Marjorle Beck played a piano solo. A number arranged for two pianos was given by Misses MarJorie Beck, Alta McPherson, Margaret Gentle and Elizabeth Hasemeier. Sixty guests enjoyed the program. Wednesday evening, November 20, another lecture on the exhibit will be given in-connection with the Arts and Travels course:

Court Records

Effie M. Mull filed suit for dtrerce in Wayne circuit Thursday merates against Marion Mull, charging cruel and inhuman treatment. The plaltiff also asks for the custody of three children and $25 a month for their soport...;. " - -

BRIEFS

WANTED Boy. Permanen

position. Boston Store. 15rlt

Bluebird Photoplays, tno Introduce FRANKLYN FARNUM And dainty

BROWNIE VERNON In the- Rollicking comedy "The Clean-Up" by Waldemar Young The story of a reform movement that struck a "snag" when ci pld commanded the opposition host. LYRIC THEATRE . November 16th

S3

Mow T IPnweimll

imdlfidiflfis

To see your way clear to help the Y. M. C. A. and other worthy causes, have your glasses fitted by EDMUNDS OPTOMETRIST 10 North Ninth. Phone 2765

Appendicitis is primarily doe to the poisons formed by decaying food in the bowels. It is a disease caused bv improper and insufficient bowel elimination. Many people tiave only a small passage in the center of the bowels, while the sides are clogged with old. stale, fermenting matter. They may have a bowel movement every day but it is not a complete movement and the old stale matter stays in the system to ferment and cause trouble. Besides appendicitis such unclean bowels cause headaches, stomach trouble and 90 percent of all other sickness. The old foul matter sticking to the sides of

tne Dowels otlen stays in-for months, poisoning the body and causing that listless, tired feeling known as 'auto

intoxication. HOW TO AVOID TROUBLE The way to avoid sickness and to keep feeling full of ambition is to watch your bowels. Just as you keep the outside of your body clean, vou should also KEEP THE INSIDE CLEAN. It is even more important to keop the bowels clean than it is to keep your body washed, because the millions of pores in the thirty feet of bowels quickly absorb poisons generated by decaying food left carelessly in the bowels. Don't allow the old, fermenting filthy stuff to stay in your bowels for weeks, but GET IT OUT and keep it out. Remember, filthy bowels are the cause of most sickness no stomach, liver of any other organ can do its work with a foul cesspool Bending

out gases and poisons. Even if your' bowels move slightly each day, that is not enoueh. There must be an occasional THOROUGH, complete cleansing to rid your system of all accumulated, decaying matter. HOW TO CI.EAJT BOWELS 4CTCK The MOST COMPLETE bowel cleanser known is a mixture of buckthorn bark, glycerine and ten other ingredients, put up in ready prepared form under the trade name of Adler-i-ka. This mixture is bo powerful a bowel cleanser that it ALWAYS does its work properly and thoroughly. It removes

fowl and poisonous matter which other cathartic or laxative mixtures are unable to dislodge. It does a COMPLETE Job and it work QUICKLY and without the least discomfort or trouble. It is so gentle that one forgets he has taken it until the THOROUGH evacuation starts. It is astonishing the great amount of foul, poisonous matter a SINGLE SPOONFUL of Adler-i-ka draws from the alimentary canal matter you would never have thought was in your system. Try it right after a natural bowel movement and notice how much MORE foul matter will be brought out which was poisoning your system. In slight disorders such as occasional constipation, sour stomach, "gas on the stomach," or sick headache, one spoonful brings relief almost INSTANTLY. Adler-1-ka is the MOST THOROUGH bowel cleanser and antisepticizer ever offered in ready prepared form. It is a constant

surprise to people who have used only ordlnary bowel and stomach medicines and the various oils and waters. REPORTS FROM PHYSICIANS Dr. James Weaver. Loa. Utah: T have found nothing In mv 50 years practice to excel Adler-i-ka." Dr. W. A. Line, West Baden, Ind.r "I use Adler-i-ka in my practice and have found nothing to excel it." Dr. F. L Prettyman, Mallard. Minn.: "I use Adler-i-ka in all bowel cases and have been very successful with it. Some cases require only one dose." Druggist D. Hawks, Goshen, Ind. : "One of our leading doctors has usrd Adler-i-ka in cases of stomach trouble with wonderful success. He has not lost a patient and saved many operations.' J. E. Puckett, Gillliam. Ark.: "I had bad stomach trouble. After taking Ad-ler-l-ka feel better than for 20 year?. Haven't language to express the awfnl imparities which were eliminated from my system." Cora E. Nbblett. Sageeyah, Okla.t "Thanks to Adler-1-ka I can sleep all night now, something I could not do for years." Mrs. L. A. Austin. Ausland. Minn.: -I could not eat a thing, my stomach was so weak. Adler-i-ka made me feel better and am now able to work and gaining." Adler-1-ka Is sold only by the leading druggist In each city. Sold in Richmond only by Thistlethwaite's Drugstores. Throughout Indiana by the leading druggist In each. city.

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JJofinn Qfe (Erafl(D)ini(D)Ilai Omlto Kfw FiFinmfinttfflj

ONLY

OO DOWN

AND $1.00 A WEEK

No References Required

Anyone Is eligible to membership in the GRAFONOLA CLUB on the payment of

III

S1 Down NO NO EXTRAS OF ANY KIND

Put the wonderful Columbia-Graf onola in your home and enjoy world's greatest music while paying for it on the easy Club Plan

osilively No More Than 25 Memberships Will

Be Accepted For This Club

Brilliant, vivid and clear, yet unmistakably natural, round and "big" in its tonequality; capable of every graduation of tone-volume, the Columbia Graf onola is well named "the one incomparable musical instrument." Haven't you always wished for a Columbia Graf onola that you might hear and Enjoy "all the music of all the world" and to hear it just when you want to hear it in your Own Home? Here is your chance. Price no longer stands in the way. You can now have Broadway's newest hits while they are hits; the latest dance music especially recorded bands, ballads and comedy monologues; the world's greatest orchestras all on the easy club plan of $1 down and $1 a week.

Surely You'll Accept this Liberal Club Flan on Such Easy Terms

Come up to our music room tomorrow and hear just one Columbia Record on the Columbia Grafonola and you will have a new conception of all that this offer means to you and also a new conception and appreciation of the fidelity and naturalness with which music can be recorded and reproduced. No one thing you can own will give so much pleasure to so many people for so long a time at so little cost as a COLUMBIA GRAFONOLA bought on this Club Plan. COME EARLY Memberships will be taken quickly.

DRUG STORE

If:-: -IISII,i.; liJIt

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Buy Early

Club membership is limited to twenty-five. Postively no more than 25 Columbas will be sold on the Club Fh-

o n t iMStifl

914 MAINSTREET

Don't Cote piUJ i

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