Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 237, 16 August 1918 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND-PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELiEOKAM. k AivAX, AUG Us lb, 1l6.
As a courtesy to her slater, Mrs. W. T. Balllnger of Los Angeles, Cal, Mrs. Edgar Hawekotte entertained Informally yesterday afternoon at her bnm on Knnfti Plftppnth utrpftt. The
ftprnnon was snent informallv and
light refreshments were served by the
no8ieB. ine kucbib were airs. auinger. Mrs. Will Brown, Miss Harry KarVmnn. Mrs. Harris Lonari. Mrs.
Hubert McClellan, Mrs. J. W. Hall,
Mrs. Ralph Kittle, Mrs. Bessie sue bun. Vln. Itnv Sehattel. Mrs. E K. Hoi
land. Mrs. E. J. Mitchell and Mrs. Tom
Robinson. During the afternoon Mrs Logan gave several whistling solos.
Mr. axA Mr. S. M. TTodein entertain
ed Informally last evening at their home on College avenue for relatives
who are here to attend the wedding or Mtufi nnth Kinsnv and William Jen
kins. Only members of the immediate
family were present.
Miss Helen Ceers has returned from Cincinnati, O., after a two weeks visit
with relatives and friends.
Mr. nd Mm. S. W. TToderln and chil
dren returned last evening from Yellow Springs, O., whore they have been camping with Mr. and Mrs. lllf of Lon
don, o.
Hftaa VlreHnl. and Mlaa Rftttv Ann
McDonald of Huntington, W. 'a., are the guests of their grandmother, Mrs. "William E. Bell of the Wayne Apart
ments.
Charles Mills returned yesterday from anesville, Wis., where he has
been visiting relatives for a week.
Miss Bernlce Laymon is visiting
Miss Mildred Wysong In Connersvllle Mra. .Tampa A. Mitchell und dan eh
ters, Martha and Catherine, have returned from a visit with friends In
Akron, O.
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Bockhoff
and son, Harry, left last evening for
Grand Rapids. Mich. Mr. Bockhoff
will be married tomorrow morning at eight o'clock to Miss Harriet Luscomb
at her home there.
Miaa Mahel KnoDf. daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Louis Knopf and Sergeant Ernest A. Bode, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Henry E. Bode, were married yes
terday afternoon at rour ociock ai the parsonage of St. Andrew's church
by Rev. F. A. Roeil. Tney were attended by Miss Ruby Crowell and Irvln Rode. The bride wore an after
noon gown of grey silk with a grey
hat and a coreage or flowers. Aner the ceremony a wedding supper was served at the home of the bride's parents on South Fifth street. The guests
included only the immediate relatives of the families. Sergeant Bode is here on a ten days' furlough from Camp
Souther at Amerlcus, ua. He ana nis wife will leave soon for Americus, where they will reside.
Mlsa Helen Hawkins entertained
last evening at her home on North Sixteenth street, as a courtesy to Elbert Hale, who is here on a furlough.
Hale is stationed on tne u. is. fa. Illinois.
The Misses Moorman will receive
informally Saturday afternoon and evening at their home, 122 South Six
teenth street, for Miss Lulu Moorman and Mrs. Martha Moorman of California, who are returning to their home next Tuesday. Friends are in
vited to call any time during the afternoon and evening.
Mian T,iiHlle And Miss Dorothv Shir
ley, Robert Graham and Dr. Eldwyn Wysong motored to College Grove last evening where they were guests
of Dr. Wysong s parents. The Willing Workers of Mlddleboro met yesterday afternoon at the school where they made refugee garments for the Red Cross. The next meeting will be next Thursday at the school
WITH THOSE IN ARMY AND NAVY
This column, containing news of Richmond and Wayne county soldiers and sailors, will appear dally In the Palladium. Contributions will be welcomed.
Charles Marlatt has returned from Cincinnati. O.. after a ahnrt vialt with
his grandson, Carl judkins, who leaves
Tor aa extended Tlsit m Fnoenix, Ariz.
Imitnr thnaa whn attended TCnln'a
dance at Cedar Springs hotel last evering were Miss Helen Murry, Miss Mary Bulla, Mls Marie O'Brien, Miss 'Lurlle Reel, Miss Helen Taryl, Miss .Bell, Miss Kane, Miss Leon Cory, 'Clarence Coyle, John Crawford, Oscar Martin, Ed Trice, Russell Beck, Oscar Marton, Marc Golden, Carl Flenning. Mr. Wolf, Mr. Kennedy and Mr. Coleman. Mlas Eunice Wettlg, accompanied by Miss Helen Hunt of Indianapolis are visiting in New York, Philadelphia and other eastern cities. The Girl Scouts of Richmond sent to the president of their organization, $33.34 which was collected in boxes placed In business houses for the benefit rit rtAlffian War Ornhans. The
girls wish to thank all person who contributed and the merchants who allowed the boxes to be left In their stores. The boxes are still In the stores and everyone Is urged to donate for the benefit of the war orphans. The next Scout meeting will be held Monday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock and all members are urged to be present. The girls will take a hike Tueseday. The Loyal Helpers met yesterday afternoon at school No. 14 and spent the time sewing for the Red Cross. The club will hold its last meeting at the school next Thursday afternoon. After that the meetings will be held at the homes of members. Mr. and Mrs. Everette Lemon and on. 'Everette. have returned from a
motor trip through the east, where they visited relatives. In a three days' speaking tour. Mrs. Fred H. McCulloch of Ft. Wayne, spoke before the Twelfth district Deraacratic convention In Ft. Wayne Wednesday, Aug. 14. the Thirteenth district meeting in South Bend Thursday, and the Tenth district meeting in Hammond Friday. In each of the cities Mrs. McCulloch urged the support of the membershl pand petition campaign now being carried on by the Woman's Franchise league by the members of the party. Mrs. McCulloch met the members of the Franchise leagues In South Bend and Hammond for conferences In regard to the campaign. Mrs. Walter Grennough of Indianapolis spoke before the Hendricks county Republican convention in Danville Wednesday, Aug. 14. Mrs. Greenough was introduced by Mrs. Joseph Ferree, Hendricks county chairman for the Franchise league.
Mrs. Earl Reaean of New York city
is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Li. i. Anthony at their home on the Jefferson apartments. Miss Mabel Kester of Dayton, O.. is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. James Fry of South Seventh street.
The Mary Hill W. C. T. U. will meet this evening with Mrs. Benjamin Wlckett at her home 230 Linden avenue.
War Mothers Form National Organization Richmond women are Included in the list of seventy-one War Mothers who ais-ned the incnrnoratlon natters
for the national charter Thursday '
elude Mrs. A. W. Roach. Mrs. R. P. Whisler, Mrs. Jennie G. Mather, Mrs. J. M. Coate and Mrs. Walter L. Dalbey, who represent Richmond as charter members of the War Mothers organization. Only mothers of sons or daughters in army or navy service of the present war are eligible for membership by articles In the incorporation papers. The principal office of the association will be in Indianapolis, it was
decided.
At the morning session several reports were read, among which was one on Ways and Means, by Mrs. A. W. Roach of this city. At the afternoon session, it was suggested that Mrs.
Alice M. French, state war motner, De made national organizer. Definite action, however, was deferred until the
Friday session.
A luncheon for the War Mothers was held Friday noon in the Riley room of the Claypool hotel, and the convention was to close with the memorial service Friday afternoon.
Fountain City has forty-two boys In
the service. Eleven of them are now serving in France. The names of
those serving overseas are: lieutenant Harry Richie. Paul Schroeder, rwnnral Rnvmnnil McNutt. Lowell
Chenoweth, Harry Penland, Clarence
Foien, Floyd Pyle, Howard tiocKei, and two brothers, Arthur and Archie Boeue. Two other Bogue boys are in
service In this country. Their father
was a civil war veteran. Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Egerton have been informed that their son, Chauncey W. Egerton, has arrived safely in France. Vernon T. Elleman in training at Jefferson Barracks, St. Louis, will have as his guest during the next week Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Elleman and Mrs. Frank Gray of this city.
conrtro Haver, who has been station
ed at the Purdue training camp, is In Richmond spending a few days with
his brother, Fred uayer. Edmund L. Hiatt has been appointed captain of engineers, and is leaving Friday evening for Camp Hum
phries, Va. Mr. Hiatt is a mining engineer; for several years he was with the Utah Copper company and for six years was chief engineer of the Ray Consolidated Copper company at Ray, Arizona. Mr. Hiatt is a son-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Nicholson, and has been
their guest for two weeks. The following men applied for enlistment in the navy Thursday: Russell Ingalls. 119 Pearl street, Richmond, Ind.; Clem August Turner, 1131 North J street; Ernest Raper Newman, R. R. No. 1. New Paris, O.; Wilbur Herman Fulle. Glen Park, Richmond, Ind.; Franklin Charles Hebbeler, 205 South Fourteenth street; Homer Stegall. Williamsburg, Ind.;
John Wesley Trice, 5u isortn sixteenth street. waiter W Voerelson 334 South Ninth
street, was sent to Indianapolis Friday morning for transfer to duty In the navy. During the week ending Thursday, Aug. 15, forty applicatons for enlistment in the navy were writtne by Navy Recruiter Kienzle. From TJ. S. S. San Francisco, Ray Smith has written his father and moth
er, Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Smith,' ofj-
517 Aortn Nineteenth street, tnat ne Is well and having a fine time. The .
battleship Is stationed In European waters, he said. The following seventeen men have made application for enlistment in the army in the last few days: Robert R. mil. Se.arla D. Ward. Claude W. Col-
jlins, Roy J. Reinheimer, Cecil R.
White, Fioya Mtowe, can h. uraay, Richard S. Raisleback, Herald Wallace, Lester V. Bell, Rolland R. Sanferd, Thomas I. King, Wilbur Mc-
Wlnney, Kusseil u. MCMinn, uaniei u.
Reid, MarBhel Ketron and Kennetn u. Swisher.
NEW MADISON BOY MISSING IN ACTION The name of Everett L, Thomas of New Madison appears In the casualty list for Aug. 13 as missing in action. Thomas Is a brother of Miss Pearl Ttinmii. of New Madison, recently ap
pointed substitute rural mail carrier. She Is the first woman to hold that
position.
Red Cross Notes
SOLDIER ADDRESSES Please send the last address of boys serving in the army and navy to the Palladium. Parents are asked to send the number of the company and the regiment and where the soldier is stationed. The names are wanted for the Palladium files. An index of the boys and their addresses is kept at the office.
To keep the boys happy, the Ameri
can Red Cross has contributed $250,-
000 to the committee on training activities In the camps. Loss of sleep, the result of air raids, Is a serious hindrance to the nurses in France, so a chateau has been found which is far enough out of Paris to be fairly immune from bombing, and here the tired nurses can go when they are off duty and get fairly good restIt is the aim of the ouvroirs, or sewing . rooms In American Red Cross headquarters throughout Italy to cut patterns of the garments with as little waste as possible. In Palermo, Italy, they have succeeded in getting
the work to such a fine point mat a raiment can he cut out with scarcely
one inch left of waste material. Why not do it in America. The Government Is still callintf for
25.000 vount women to join the United
States Student nurses reserve.
Age qualification, 19 to 35. Intelligent, responsible women are
wanted.
Enrollment may be made in the fol
lowing ways: 1. As engaging to hold themselves in readiness until April 1, 1919, to ac
cept assignments to nurses training schools in civilian hospitals. These women will be sent to hospitals as fast
as vacancies occur.
2. As desiring to become candidates for the army nursing school, recently established by authority of the war department, with branch schools
' in selected military hospitals. 3. As engaging to hold themselves in readiness until April 1, 1919, to accept assignments to either civilian training schools or army nursing schools. Those who enroll will be called when the first need arises. Since the days of Florence Nlghtln (gale the nursing profession has been
one of especial nonor. it was never bo honorable as It is today. . Answer the government's call now today.
The sailor on board TJ. S. naval ves-
eels or attached to naval bases men who are not addressed "American Ex
peditionary Forces In France may rec eivel narcels and packages from
the home folks. Signed requests do - a AW
not have to he presentea as in ioe cases of the A. E. F. eoldiers. So send your sailor a box. When allotments and allowance checks are delayed or Blow In delivery
the borne service section of the Red
Cross Is expected to make loans to tne soldiers' dependents, with the understanding that the Red Cross will be repaid as soon as they receive their K
checks from the government, mere Is no guarantee that the borrowers J will turn over their checks when they '
come In, and there 1b no hold on them
It Is merely a "gentleman s agree
ment.
fnr hnva are flndlnfir it difficult to
understand English money, but they know all about War Savings Stamps and they'll not forget those who bought them.
Kills Pesky Bed Bugs P. D. Q.
Two ounces of P. D. Q. makes a
full quart of the best bug-Killer on earth. Better than a barrel of oldfashioned bug-killers. P. D. O. (Pesky Devil's Quietus),
kills like a 42-centimetre shell. It settles bedbugs, fleas, roaches, ants and chicken lice, and not only kills the live nests, but the eKirs as well.
P. D. Q. won't injure clothing, carnets. curtains. draDerles or wall paper.
Try it on the dog and see the fleas
flop. Your drueeist has It or can get It
for vou. For sale bv A. G. Luken &
I Co., and other leading druggists.
Notice to
Iroggists
PriccAdvance
For over a year now we have succeeded in maintaining our old prices, principally by virtue of a big increase in sales, which reduced our overhead cost. For our fiscal year ending July 1, 1918, our sales amounted to over a million dollars an increase of 58 over the preceding year. We had hoped to bridge the war period without a change in prices on
Vick's VapoRub
but we find that our econ
omies do not keep pace with our rising costs. It Is with sincere regret, therefore, that we are forced to announce an increase, effective August 1, which will make It necessary to retail VapoRub at 30c, 60c and $1.20 The Vick Chemical Co. Greensboro, N. C.
Isajiii
Cambridge City Board Examines 41 Draftees rAMRRinOE CITY. Ind.. Aug. 16.
Local conscription board number two was in session here Thursday. Forty-
one 1918 registrants were examined. The board will send away Thursday C. L. Tillson, of Williamsburg; OF. E. Brown and Robrt Close, of Cambridge City and A. J. Atkinson of Fountain
SALE OF PAINTINGS I will accept any reasonable price for the paintings. I have left. F. J. Girardin - McGuire Bldg. 1024 Main St. Friday and Saturday last days of sale
VIGOROUS MEN AND
WOMEN ARE IN DEMAND If your ambition has left you. your hnppiness has gone forever unless you take adyantage of Conkey Drug Co., Leo Fihe. A. G. Luken and Clem Thistlethwaite's magnificent offer to refund your money on the first box if Wendell's Ambition Pills
do not put your entire system in fine
condition and give you tne energy ami vigor you have lost. Be ambitious, be strong, be vigorous. Bring the ruddy glow of health to your
checks and the right sparKie mat aenotes perfect manhood and woman
hood to your t res. Wendell's Amotion Pills, the great nerve tonic, are tplendid for that tired feeling, nervous troubles, poor blood, headaches, neuralgia, restlessness, trembling, nervous prostration, mental depression, loss of appetite and kidney or liver complaints. You take them with this understanding that: In two days you will feel better. In a week you will feel fine, and after taking one box you will have your oldtime confidence and ambii.ion or the druggist will refund the price of the
box. Pe sure and eet a 50 cent box today
and get out of tne rut. Remember
Conkey Drug Co.. l-eo ine, a. u. Luken, Clem Thlstlethwaite and dealers everywhere are authorized to guarantee them. Adv.
WEAK, WEARY WOMEN
Learn the Cause of Daily Woes and End Them. When the back aches and throbs. When housework is torture. When night brings no rest nor sleep. When urinary disorders set in,
Women's lot is a weary one. Doan's Kidney Pills are for weak: kidneys. Have proved their worth in Rich-1
mond. ' This is one Richmond woman's testimony: Mrs. Louise M. Davis. 334 South Eleventh street, Richmond, F.ays: "I had kidney trouble for a long time and dull, nagging backaches which made life miserable. I bad headaches and blinding dizzy 6pells come over me suddenly, almost making me fall. My virinev didn't act rleht and I had
rheumatic pains in my limbs. When; I read about Doan's Kidney Pills help- j ing others, I tried them and they J benefited. me wonderfully. The aches!
and pains left my back ana tne aizzi-i
ness and other trouDies disappeared. Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Dean's Kidney Pills the same that Mrs. Davis had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
BUEELEK BMOTIHIEESS 715 MAIN ST. Special for Saturday FRESH SLICED LIVER, pound 5c CHOICE BEEF ROASTS, pound. 20c BOILING BEEF, pound 15c Fresh Hamburger, lb. . .20c Veal Roast, lb 25c Link or Bulk Sausage, lb. 20c Veal Chops, lb 30c SPAGHETTI 1 q oz Packancs 8C MACARONI J 9 OZ FacKa9cs O"
fed
715 Main Street
1
-SS Illll.l.llllSlllli I S.UB.S
Anns
t.SCI)Il.
THE FINE
Best For The
Bowels
Resinol surely did relieve that eczema! Pack up some Resinol Ointment In Ms old kit bag." Nothing is too good for him, and he will need it "over there" where exposure, vermin, contagions, and the exigencies of a soldier's life cause all sorts of skin irritation, Itching, sore feet and suffering. Rt.lnol Olntmant top Itching almost Instantly. It heal Httl W before they en become big 4iM. It luurtt tkin comfort.
Vegetine Laxative
Tablets Act upon the liver in such a manner so as - nhtnin tht maximum henefits of aDromDt
W ftuT VU
and active laxative wunoui any unpiea&am. nfror effects, and tend to restore a natural
healthy bowel movement. Gonstiaation
Is readily relieved by VFP.ETINE LAXATIVE TABLETS
f . . a - s ninrcTTfiM ami aimirB the n.rMft&rv elimination
y bj ineir acuan imrucB tu "v"
of bile which In turn act as a proper xouvo w u wwcio.
Your Druggist Will Supply You
1890 1890 Dressed Chickens Plenty of Dressed Hens and Spring Chickens. Also Chicken cut up in pieces that I will sell you by the pound or as much as you wish to purchase. GEO. C. SCHWEGMAN'S MEAT MARKET
309 S. 4th St.
Phone 2204
E
George W Homirijiilftioniis Between 10th and 11th Sts. Richmond, Ind. Will be sold to the highest bidder regardless the cost of manufacturing same. No limit. No reserved. Select any article in the stock and buy it at your own price, two bids or more constituting a sale. The stock contains some of the choicest and finest goods that the jewelry craft produces. Watches, Diamonds, Solid Gold and Gold filled Jewelery and
Sil
verware.
Sate
start ay, Aipstt 17
B3
CHAUTAUQUA SPECIAL on TUNGSTEN House Bulbs 25 Watt ..25c 40 Watt, ...27c 60 Watt .........29c Goodyear and United States Tires Auto Accessories Webb-Coleman Co. 19-21 S. 7th St. Phone 1616
Sflair
At 2:00 o'clock F9. 1VI. And continues daily until each and every article i$ sold at 2 and 7 p. m. Chairs reserved for the ladies. Valuable articles given away free during each afternoon and evening sale. GEORGE W. EOMMGIHIOUJS
THE JEWELER
Between 10th and 11th Sts.
RICHMOND, INDIANA
