Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 58, 18 January 1918 — Page 10
PAGE TEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. FRIDAY, JAN. 18, 1918.
EATON STORES TO CLOSE AT 5 EACH AFTERNOON
Council Passes Order Curtailing Activities of Busi- . ness. !
EATON, O., Jan. 18 Beginning next
Monday. January 21. business bouses
to Katon will be closed at 5 o'clock each afternoon and not reopen until the next morning at 7 o'clock If the dictates of a resolution passed by
council are complied with all because
of tbe necessity of saving fuel and electricity. As worded, tbe resolution does not exempt any particular line of business but a modification of the regulations Is expected In some instances. Council urges that all abide by the request In order that council may not be forced to adept drastic ordinances to bring" about desired results. Sunday business is to be "cut out" entirely. Instead of closing at 5 o'clock Saturday afternoons. It is requested that business houses cease operations not later than 9 o'clock. Along with the resolution on closing, council adopted a resolution providing for appointment of a coal distribution manager. Marshal Willard Armstrong was selected for the job, at a salary of $15 per month, exclusive of his salary as marshal. Rules governing coal distribution will be drawn by Mayor Harry Rl6inger, the county fuel committee and the local coal dealers. The rules will be drafted Immediately and placed. in operation. Any and all coal received from this time will come under the new distribution regulations.
HAYWARD MAY GO
Paul Hayward. an assistant to Acting Secretary Schwan mty go to Chicago soon. He has received an ofCor from the West Side Y. M. C. A. in Cnlrago, where Secretary Schwan was formerly, employed as physical director.
TELEGRAPH ER8 TO MEET
The Telegraphy class will meet eac1.! Monday and Wednesday evening at 7:13 o'clock at the Commercial club rooms, according to an announcement made by Principal Carman, Friday. A number of the members of the class will enter the service and are anxious to complete the work.
The Forum
(All articles for this column must not exceed 300 words. Contributor must sign their, names, although the name will be withheld by the management at the request of the writer. . Article baring no name attached will be thrown -into the waste basket.)
Editor Palladium r "Do your bit" 13 certainly fast becoming a very familiar slogan with all of us. "Do your bit." , What does that, simple phrase mean? Sift it down and eift it down and I think we find it means work, war work. "Doing your bit" is a work in which there is room for every loyal American citizen to participate. The -epace for work is not so limited as to be any danger of anyone being cvowted out. This is one thing which we are aot denied. Plenty of work and plenty of 'fields in which to work. The Red . Cross, the conserving of food, fuel, and In fact, the conserving of so many things which for eo long we have had in, abundance. We have so long been accustomed to plenty of everything, that now to be suddenly deprived of
This Man Can
verging
Eat E
MORNING SERVICES ONLY
Services will be held at the St. Mary's Catholic church Sunday mom
Ing at 6. 8 and 10 o'clock. There wMl be no afternoon services on Sunde.y. The Wednesday evening service vill
also be postponed.
DROPSY TREATED FREE
By Or. Miles, the Great Specialist. Who Sends a $3.75 Trial Treatment Free
Many Report Cured After Others Fail-d
At first no disease Is apparently more harmless than dropsy; a little swelling of the eysllds, hands, feet, ankles or abdomen. Finally there la great shortness of breath, cough, faint spells, sometimes nausea and vomiting, even "bursting of the limbs and a lingering and wretched death If the dropsy Is not removed. Dr. Miles has been known as a leading specialist in these diseases for 30 years. His liberal offer of a $3.75 Treatment free to all sufferers, Is certainly worthy of serious consideration. You may never have such an opportunity again. The Grand Dropsy Treatment consists of four dropsy remedies In one, also Tonic Tablets and Pura-Laxa for removing the water. This treatment Is specialy prescribed for each patient and is three times as successful as that of most physicians. It usually relieves the first day, and removes swelling in six days in most cases. Delay is dangerous. Send for Remarkable Cures In Your State. All afflicted readers may have book.
Examination Chart Opinion, Advice,! and a two-pound trial treatment free. ! Write at once. Describe your case. ! Address, Dr. Franklin Miles, DepL DA., 128 to 13S Franklin St, Elkhart, Ind. Adv.
Has Gained Three Pounds
Since Tanlac Put Stomach Back in Shape.
"For months my stomach was so
out of order that I dreaded to eat
said William Harrison, salesman em
ployed by the Merty-Cadle Sales company, 44S-450 Capitol avenue, this city. "I always had6uch a burning feeling in my stomach after eating and I dreaded it," Mr. Harrison continued. "My stomach would get soured after eating, too, and a sour taste would come up in my mouth. It didn't make much difference what I ate, either. I always had-the burning feeling in my stomach and the sour taste in my mouth afterward. "I was getting thin and run down when I decided to try Tanlac. Well, sir, it seemed that Tanlac started helping me right away and since taking three' bottles I don't have any trouble with my stomach at all. I can eat anything I want now without bad after effects and in the last three weeks I've gained three pounds. I think Tanlac is fine for the stomach and I recommend it." If you are not feeling right get Tanlac today at Thistlethwaite's Drug Store or any other good drug store. (Adv.)
Our store will be open tomorrow as usual, except we close at 4 : 30 p. m.
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that- plenty is - certainly- a situation that is hard for us eo cope with. It does not mean simply doing without and thereby experiencing no inconvenienoe. But it does mean sacrifice and then sacrifice. Though it seems to me it puts us all on more of a basis of equality. . I like that phrase, "Do your bit; I like to repeat it again and again and ponder it just to see how far-reaching it really Is. To me, "doing your bit" in the food conservation line has not meant the saving of food in the home alone, but as I see it, it. means that we should cease to serve refreshments at the missionary meetings, class meetings and various other church affairs as well as club meetings and all other social functions. Not even light refreshments should be served however light, they might be, unless they were meant to take the place of the regular meal. Of course that would be a very different matter. There) should be no serving whatever at any church affair or social function unless as I said before, such serving Is to take the places of the regular meal, with the emphasis on the "regular meal." . They are doing this other places and some have already seen the need of this right here in our own city and are not now serving refreshments, but all have not yet realized that this in included in "doing your bit." Not so very long ago I noticed in the social column that there have been a new club organized. This club has been phrlstened very patriotically and the work that they are doing is also very patriotic. Just as I was beginning to think that it was a very'patr riotic club Indeed, I read that "light refreshments were served by the hostess." Why, or, why. If we wish to be really patriotic, can we not more conscientiously "do our bit" by (pardon the slang) cutting out the unnecessary eats entirely? Must we always wait for the govercment to say what we must or must rot do? Why can we not look far enough ahead to see the necessity of "doing our bit" by dispensing with the refreshments of cur own accord, instead of awaiting the probability of being requested to by the government later on? ! If we have come to the place where we can have only the necessary amount of food in order to comply with the food conservation movement," then I think this matter of serving refreshments must' be classified as an absolutely unnecessary practice and let every patriotic individual unite in "doing their bit" by agreeing to eat!
only three meals a day during the war. At a recent meeting of a missionary society of which I am a member, ij mentioned to the lady who sat next to I me that I believed I would put the!
matter of doing away with the refreshment ' idea before the society and. imagine my surprise when she told me, "I had better not do it as it had been mentioned before and several members said they would quit coming." It seemed almose unbelievable to me. Was there really anyone in that Woman's Missionary society who
was eo -unpatriotic- as -to--refus to come to the meetings if there were no refreshments? It there were such persone, they surely do not realize what "doing your bit" really means. If there are such people in any society or club, who would refuse to attend the -regular meetings for such an unpatriotic reason as this, then I would not hesitate to tedd those persons they had better stay away, at least we do not need them until they are willing to see the matter in its true light. It is not a question of whether we can afford to servo refreshments as far as money is concerned. But let me ask, if after a while there should be none whatever of certain foodstuffs could we eat our money? To every president of every club, and to every president of the different church societies all over the city and county I would say, take up the matter at your next meetings, have i open for a thorough discussion, then vote on it and see Just who the unpatriotic ones are, explain the matter fully to them and let's see if we can not adopt a systematic form of 6ome kind, such as giving the time and
money, that was previously spent, for unnecessary eating, to the Red Cross or some such worthy cause, thereby "doing our. bit" in & much more, pat
riotic way so far , as the food conservation movement' is concerned. Of course I want to make it clear that this does not include those who have already adopted some such plan as this. However, we might all adopt as our slogan along with "do your bit" Right here and now Just let me say. I eat only three meals a day. Mrs. R. M. Wiley.
Combing Won't Rid Hair of Dandruff
Glass of Hot Water Before Breakfast a Splendid Habit
Open sluices of the system each morning and wash away the poisonous, stagnant matter.
Those of us wno are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when we arise; splitting headache, stuffy frcm a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, lame back, can, instead, both look and fsel as fresh as a daisy always by washing the poisons and toxins from tbe body with phosphated hot water each morning. ' We should drink, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to flush from tbe stomach, liver, kidneys and ten yards of bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing,
sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary tract before putting more food into the stomach. The action of limestone phosphate and hot water on an empty 6tomach is wonderfully Invigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, waste and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast. A quarter pound of limestone phosphate will cost very little at the drug store, but is sufficient to make anyone who is bothered with biliousness, constipation, stomach trouble or rheumatism a real enthusiast on the subject of internal sanitation. Adv.
The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it, then you destroy It entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. Do this tonight, and by morning, most, if not all of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single" sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find, too. that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop at once, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive and never fails to do the work. Adv.
Chare's
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CIGARS
We refute to reduc thm quality or size of either the
Decision Broadleaf (Medium Mild) . OK THB Decision Invincible (Very Mild) '. Both Decision Cigx are now o!d t 6 cts. ch. Five for 30 ctm. The House of Crane Distributors Indianapolis "If it come from THE HOUSE OF CRANE it' a good cigar"
SELECTED LISTS OF BONDS Acd Investment Securities Netting 4 to 7 Dollirgs Service has the approval of Conservative Investors who Demand Safety and Rsasonable Retorn. E M Haas. Phone 2994. rearesenttrg THE R. L D0LUNGS COMPANY Indianapolis Columbus Pittsburgh Philadelphia
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The Disc!! fi
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Lemons for Complexion Juice of two lemons made into creamy lotion can be used to bleach, whiten and soften the skin. Make a quarter pint cheaply!
The beauty lotion which is becom
ing so popular throughout the country is easily prepared by anyone, and a
whole quarter ..pint of it doesn't cost any more than a small jar of the common, ordinary cold creams. Add the juice of two fresh lemon3 to three ounces of orchard white and shake well in a bottle. Strain the lem
on juice two or three times through a fine cloth so no pulp gets into the lo
tion, then it will keep fresh for months.
Regardless of what price you pay or
how highly advertised, there is nothing else really more meritorious in beautifying, softening and clearing the
skin. As a tan and blemish remover, also to remove oiliness, freckles and sallowness, lemon juice has no rival. Massage it into the face, neck, and arms once or twice each day, and just see if it doesn't bring out the rosy and hidden beauty! Lemons have always been used to bleach the skin, but pure lemon juice is too highly acid, therefore irritating. Try it: This sweetly fragrant lotion will speak for itself. Any drug store or toilet counter will supply the three ounces of orchard white at very little cost, and the grocer will supply the lemons. Adv.
On all Tires, Tubes, Accessories will continue for a few more days SPECIAL ON WEED CHAINS 37x4 Weed Chains .......$6.50 36x4 Weed Chains. . $6.25 35x41 Weed Chains $6.00 34x4 Weed Chains $5.25 33x4 Weed Chains... .$5.00 RID-O-SKID CHAINS 30x354 Rid-O-Skid Chains.' .......... .$3.35 32x31$ Rid-O-Skid Chains $3.40 28x3 Rid-O-Skid Chains $2.15 Ford Radiator and Hood Covers $1.50 ''Richmond Tire Service" Successors to Challenge Tire Co. 1135 Main St Phone 1698 "Efficient Service." "Fair Prices"
THE BRUNSWICK
Plays AI! Records Better "We want you to hear The Brunswick Phonograph! We want you to compare ft with any phonograph yon ever heard. The more you know about phonographs. the more critical you axe. the more anxious we are for you to hear The Brunswick and compare it with others.
iilPlilW' 3Sjfif This Model I , V? S180.00 1
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Stylish Shoes for Men, Women and Children
O SS. J V7
TmmttKl
BHELP CONSERVE g COAL
This Model
$180.00 Prices down to $32.50
Our Store Will Be Open As Usual Tomorrow Saturday Until 4:30 P. M.
I
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The steady and consistent growth in the demand for Feltman's Footwear can be attributed to many reasons styles th&t are the best well fitting lasts dependable materials and only the best skilled workmanship. Mahogany Calf Vamp with brown Kid top lace Boots. heel, stitched tip
These Blizzardy Days Call for Heavy Clothing
$5.00
Shortened hours means shortened prices with us. Your opportunity to buy Desirable Winter Merchandise at great savings.
Black Kid Vamp with grey cloth top lace Boots. Leather Louis heel Medium toe
S4-00
Men's Dark Brown Calf Lace Shoe Tramp Last; heavy Bole; extra good
outdoor shoe S4.00
MAIN STREET CORNER NINTH
Mahogany Calf Lace Shoe. English last; Neolin or leather sole $5.00
Misses and Children's Dark Tan Calf lace, high top Shoes; -welt sole Sizes 8 to 11 3.85 Sizes 11 to 2 4. 50 Misses's and Children's Patent Vamp .with white eve cloth top . Lace Shoes. Welt sole Sizes 8 to 11 S3.25 Sizes 11 to 2 3.75
Feltman's Shoe Store
Indiana's Largest Shoe Dealers.
7 STORES.
724 MAIN ST
m m
1
o
SAVE & Bhv THRIFT
STAMPS O
Specials for Saturday Bargain Day COATS
S8.75 .$14.75
LADIES' COATS In all shades and sizes Now Reduced to .P. ANOTHER LOT OF COATS Worth to $25 00 Now only . SUITS-
A Complete assortment of Suits All-Wool ; values that cannot be duplicated for years on account of wool situation. Priced 1 DDTPD at nearly JT JCVlViJC (Former prices in plain figures.) SPECIAL LOT OF WAISTS Worth to ?7.50; (? M QfT Only at ViD LOT OF SERGE DRESSES New spring styles; worth (J-j c 520.00 and $22.50; only 3XOUU SPECIAL DISCOUNT OF 25 ON ALL FURS Furs that will be worth from 15 to 50 more than former prices next year.
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