Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 55, 14 January 1919 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM TUESDAY, JAN. 14, 1919.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM

AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published

Every Evening Except .. Sunday, by

Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Street Entered at the Pout Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Se ond Class Mail Matter.

MEMBER OP THB ASSOCIATED FRGII The Aeeoclated Preee la exclusively entitled to the use Tor republication of all news dispatcher credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local ".? Published herein. All rtghta of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. The Value of Good Health The value of good health is never appreciated more than when sickness interrupts the accustomed course of our lives, interferes with our vocations, and makes us dependent upon the ministering care of our families. The influenza epidemic has become a veritable scourge of our country. The war cost 53,000 American lives in France, according to reports from General Pershing. The census bureau reports 112,000 deaths caused by influenza in 46 cities of the United States, containing about onefifth of the population of the United States. A comparison of the death toll caused by influenza with the casualty list shows that it has been more fatal that the bullets of the Germans. Few of us pay much attention to the advice of health authorities. We are content to plod along, violating the ordinary laws of hygiene and taking more chances with our lives than does the average well trained soldier on the battlefield. The cost of illness is to be measured not only in the bereavement and sorrow of the stricken homes but also in the great monetary loss suffered by the country as a whole. Every man who is forced to quit work because of illness causes a social loss that is represented not only in the wages he loses and the doctor bills he pays but also in the hours of productive labor that are lost in his vocation. Experts assert that this loss p.nnually amounts to many million dollars in the United States. If the great war is to be productive of a new feeling of international brotherhood, one of the results of the great plague which has attended the war should be a more careful study of public 'health and the application of health rules by citizens generally. All of us have been too prone ( o look upon the advice of the medical profession j'.s being the suggestion of cranks and men with one-sided views. Perhaps the influenza epidemic 'v 111 teach us a wholesome regard ior the opinion f men who have made the problem of health and Ihc curing of diseases a life time study. - : : i i Hold on to Uncle Sam's Insurance . The Treasury Department has issued the following" appeal to the soldiers and sailors of the United States, asking them to hold on to their war insurance and to keep up payments. Wayne county sailors and soldiers ought to heed the advice of the Treasury Department, and, if necessary, with the co-operation of their relatives,

dinner S tor ie9 He had been celebrating his birthday not wisely but too well, and at 2:30 in the morning found himself reclining at full length on the pavement. After he had been dozing for a few moments a policeman came and said: "Here, you must get along home; you can't sleep here. Where d'yer live?" "Watsh that you shay?" "Where do you live and what's yer name?" repeated the policeman. No reply. "Who are you?" shouted the policeman. The bibulous one eyed him sleepily. "Look here, offisher," he said, "you Just go alpng to No. and ask if Mr. Smithsh is in. If he's out, that's me; but if he's in, I don't know who I am." The other evening the little girl In mestlon suddenly seeing one of Charleston's "finest" coming down the street, said to her mother. "Oh, mother, did you know that policemans have wives?" "What's that, dear?" queried the mother in u tone that implied to the child's ears disbelief. "Well, they have," said the little one, '"cause I saw a woman and she was a policeman's wife. I didn't know they had wives either until I saw her." "They say that Solmon was the wisest niin." "Yes," replied Mr. Dustln Stax. "Solomon had all kinds of a reputation. As the richest man he waa able to employ any publicity talent that struck his fancy." Collar 25 CENTS EACH CX.UETT.PEABODY& Ca Ac. 4CaKert

Dublin, Ind.

Preaching service at the M. E. church next Sunday morning at 10:30.At the Friends church morning and evening. Rev. Rector, pastor of the U. B. church, will begin revival services Sunday evening. C. E. at 6 o'clock.... A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Boyer last week at the home of her mother, Mrs. Louise Ogborn Floyd Beeson and family of Hagerstown 3pent Sunday with Mrs. Elizabeth White and daughter William Morris and son Henry left Monday for their home at Garnet, Kansas, after a two weeks' visit with hi3 brother, O. H. Morris and family. Mrs. Henry Bertsch and daughters and Mrs. Emma Heiney of Pershing spent Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Myers Frank Smith made a business trip to Indianapolis Monday. .. .Misses Lucile Johnson, Bernice Frlcker, Elma Henby and Mary Cain returned to Earlham Sunday evening after a two weeks' vacation here with their parents Mrs. Phoebe Michael of Milton came Monday to spend the remainder of the winter with Mrs. Mary Hagaman The W. M. A. of the Friends church met last Thursday afternoon with Mrs. O. E. Stewart MrS. M. N. Brouse of Pershing spent Tuesday afternoon here with friends. .. .The Social Hour club had their annual Holiday meeting at the home of Mrs. Frank Oler. New Years eve. Each member invited their families and the time was spent in a nice social way. Ths members exchanged presents and refreshments were served by the hostess Dr. and Mrs. Fackler and tow sons sppent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Doll at Pershing Mrs. Willard Earl was called south of Straughns Monday by the illness of her mother, Mrs. Marshall Charles Hatfield of Fountain City spent Sunday with relatives The W. H. M. S. of the M. E. church met last Thursday afternoon with Mrs. P. H. Wilson. Mrs. Isiah Flicker was program leader and a very interesting program was given Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Hertst returned home last Friday from their visit near Richmond, Va. . ..Tne Blde-awee club met Tuesday evening of thi3 week with Mrs. O. H. Morris and daughter Mm ftrnva Jackson came here from Connersville Monday and visited with Mrs. M. V. Ramsey until Tuesday. Mrs. Grace Jackson and daughter. Elate. Grover Jackson left Tuesday for their nomes ai tast prairie, . Mo Frank Clark and family of Cambridge City snent Sundav with their mints UTra Elizabeth Wallace and Mrs. Hender son. The government fisheries' nil roan savs the skin of the codfish nmuMu an excellent leather, tough ment and very durable. - .

keep up the payments. The text of the appeal is appended: Approximately four million officers and men of the army and navy are now insured with the United States government for a grand total of almost thirty-seven billion dollars. You owe it to yourself and to your family to hold on to Uncle Sam's insurance. It is the strongest, safestVand cheapest life insurance ever written. For your protection Uncle Sam has established the greatest life insurance company -in the world a company as mighty, as generous, and as democratic as the United States government itself. Just as Uncle Sam protected you and your loved ones during the war, so he stands ready to continue this protection through the days of readjustment and peace. The privilege of continuing your government insurance is a valuable right given to you as part of the compensation for your heroic and triumphant services. If you permit the insurance to lapse, you lose that right, and you will never be able to regain it. But if you keep up your present insurance by the regular payment of premiums you will be able to change it into a standard government policy without medical examination. Meantime you can keep up your present insurance at subbstantially the same low rate. The government will write ordinary life insurance, twenty-payment life, endowment maturing at age G2, and other usual forms of insurance. This will be government insurance at government rates. The United States Government through the Bureau of War Risk Insurance of the Treasury Department will safeguard you and your loved ones with the spirit and purpose of a Republic grateful to its gallant defenders. To avail yourself of this protection, you must keep up your present insurance. Carry back with you to civil life, as an aid and an asset, the continued insurance protection of the United States Government.

The New Leadership's Task From the Kansas City Star. UPON the wisdom and patriotism shown by the Republican party in selecting a leadership to replace that which it has lost must depend its future usefulness to the country and, indeed, justification for its existence. Whether as a minority or a majority party the Republicans can serve a public purpose only as they are progressive, sincere, alert guardians of the trust bequeathed to them by Colonel Roosevelt. The day when reaction could hope to uphold Itself in the country through control of party organization and leadership of the Republican or any other party is past. Such leadership might control a national committee, but no longer a national suffrage. Parties are now controlled by their voters, and the voters of the Republican party, particularly in the progressive West, will not stand for any going back from" the standards of Roosevelt to the standards of Hanna. The problem of the Republicans now is to find leaders who have caught up with the march of the party and have shown ability to keep up with it. The center of influence in the party has been shifting steadily away from its old moorings and now is established in states never noted for friendliness to the interests that once swayed Republican councils. The party can hold these states ly holding itself where Roosevelt placed it. It will surely lose them if its new leadership turns its face away from the goal he set.

"TEAR-GETTERS" Mr. George M. Cohen, than whom, etc., etc., and who is the most popular man in American theatricals, today says in an interview with a New York paper that the 6ure-fire "tear-getters" in play writing are the following: A little one in a nightie saying, "Now I lay me." A child dying on the stage. A love scene played in the moonlight. A straying woman at bay and crying out, "I am not a bad woman." A lost child returned to mother. We don't believe Mr. Cohen has mentioned the whole list, for we certainly remember that the following stage Incidents have got our tears. What could be surer-fire "tear-getters" than: Poor old man starving to death in gutter while his rich daughter drives by in a Rolls-Royce. Little baby standing on fire escape with its nightie blowing in the wind watching poor dear mother elope with a traveling man. Poor old woman standing on railroad track waving a red-checkered tablecloth to stop train which is about to hit her pet goat, which is the sum of her estate. Six-month-old Infant being hit by an automobile while crossing street with milk bottle to be filled at dairy store, breaking bottle and losing pennies. Aged man losing his uppers and cracking his lowers while trying to negotiate a piece of pickled tripe. . MUSIC WITH THE MEALS WANTED A cook for two bachelors. One who can play the piano preferred. Phone 126 Scottsdale. Arizone Republican. Denominational questions have taken third place in the churches these days, in the opinion of the Independence "Examiner." He says the first problem is to get the right kind of preacher and the second the right kind of janitor. FLU BAN AT CENTERVILLE. CENTERVILLE, Ind., Jan. 14. Owing to several new cases of Influenza reported last week, the health board deemed it wise to issue an order closing schools, churches, and all amusements, also to close stores at 6:45 each evening except Saturday, when they will remain open until 8 : 45. This order has gone into effect and it is hoped that the epidemic will thereby be speedily checked.

Lewisbarg, Ohio Harry Letter and wife were guests of Clarence Miller, and ' family of Greenville Wednesday H. C. Foster of Dayton spent Monday night at the home of his brother, R. H. Foster, and family Madge Bixler of Dayton was the guest of her father, L. G. Bixler over Sunday Mrs. Belle Trimble spent Friday in West Alexandria with her grandson, Everett Riley and wife.... The Ladies' Aid of the U. B. church will hold a market in the town hall Saturday, Jan. 11 at nine o'clock. . .Mrs. C. B. Dye went to Dayton Wednesday for several days' visit with her son, Raymond Dye, and sons ..: Elmer Rice of Brookville has rented Wynn Hoerner's property and he and wife will occupy same soon... R. M. Gay, wife and son, Charles Matthews, Waldo Grushon, Mrs. W. H. Riley and Mrs. Robert Mollett were Dayton visitors Monday A baby daughter arrived at the home of Russell Brown and wife Tuesday evening. .. .Harry Williams of Scott, O., is acting as first trick operator at the C. N. depot In place of R. E. Hapner, who has taken a sixty-day absence to rest up Mrs. D. E. Howell, who has been at the Miami valley hospital for a week, taking treatment, returned home Tuesday night Lois Banta resumed her duties again Monday in West Alexandria schools, which were closed for about three weeks on account of the "flu" Clarence Singer of Dayton was a visitor here Monday Rev. Stomberger was a Springfield visitor Tuesday Mrs. J. P. Hendrix and babe returned to their home in Belmont Monday after spending the holidays with her parents E. W. Hendrix spent Wednesday in Greenville with his son, Wilbur, and family. Members of class No. 12 of Salem Lutheran church had a farewell party for Miss Caroline Fadler on Tuesday evening. Refreshments were served. Miss Fadler and parents will move to Brookville soon. .. .Clarence James is the first of the boys who were overseas to arrive home. He arrived in Lewisburg Monday morning after being mustered out at Camp Grant Sunday L. S. Brandenburg and wife entertained her nephew. Captain Whitney of Piqua, several days during the past week Mrs. Harry Smith of Dayton, is the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Ada Rice. . . .Harry Overholser, east of town on the County Line, is home again after spending several months in Springfield Mrs. Emma Reichard, of Union City, is spending the week with her mother, Mrs. Edith Hecker. G. M. Kumler of the Duvall Coal Dock campany, is making a business trip through Michigan Mrs. Frank Wilson was called to Cincinnati on ac count of the illness of her brother and wife Clifford Locke ie recovering from an attack of influenza. ... .Joseph Sweeny and wife received word from their son Herbert that he is in the hospital at Newport News, Va. Sergeant Sweeny has been in France since September, 1917. He was in the heavy artillery in the regular arrayHe has been in the base hospital overseas for nearly four months. They also received word from their other son, Sergeant Loie Sweeny, who is stationed at Camp Sheridan, Ala., stating he would be home on a furlough Jan. 8..... Waldo Grushon was a Dayton visitor Monday. .. .Mrs. Florence Kilby of Detroit is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Russell Sweeney and husband Ed Leiber and wife spent Sunday with his parents, Fred Leiber and family. . . .Oscar Curtiner and family of Dayton were guests of relatives here the latter part of the week The Ladies.' Aid of Salem Lutheran church held their first monthly meeting on Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Amanda Gates. They elected the following officers for the year: President, Mrs. W. D. Horn; secretary, Mrs. Nellie Heeter; treasurer, Miss Florence Sweeny. PROMINENT MUSICIAN DIES EATON, O., Jan. 14. Following his death Saturday, at the home of his son-in-law, Lou M. Derby, at West Alexandria, funeral services for Prof. Louis Mund were held Tuesday morning at the Derby home, after which the body was taken to Cincinnati for interment in Spring Grove cemetery. Prof. Mund was 77 years old and the greater part of his life was passed in Cincinnati, where for years he occupied a prominent place in musical circles of the city. He was a musician of considerable ability and at one time was leader of the city's symphony orchestra. He taught piano and violin music and was regarded as a master of the art. He was a veteran of the Civil war. Surviving are his wife and daughter, Mrs. Derby. He, with his wife, had for the last several years made his home with his daughter at West Alexandria. VOU MEN WHO PAY THE FAMILY SHOE BILLS Tramping 18 miles a day, Mr. H. M. Foreman, a mail carrier of Allentown, Pa., found that shoes with ordinary soles last about one month. But he says a pair of Neolin-soled shoes gave him more than nine months of service, in which time he walked over 4,000 miles. His experience shows how you may save shoe money by providing your family with Neolin-soled shoes, which give extra wear where other shoes wear out quickest. You can get Neolin-soled shoes in any type ofslioe you want. Prices are about the same as for shoes that give only ordinary wear, sometimes they are even less. If your dealer hasn't the style you want, he can get it for you quickly. Remember, Neolin Soles are created by science to be what soles should be. They are available everywhere for re-soling as well as on new shoes. They are made by The Goodyear Tire & Rubber "Company, Akron, Ohio, who also make Wingfoot Heels guaranteed to outwear any other heels.

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Price of Feed is Still Advancing in Wayne County; Corn Prices Vary

By WILLIAM R. SANBORN. The Seed Reporting Service at Washington has found that we have an ample supply of vegetable seeds and the ban on exports of surplus seeds was lifted on January 1. No export license will now be needed for shipment to any of the allied countries. Restrictions as to imports of seed have also been modified. In allotment of cargo space preference will be given to sugar beet, hairy vetch, grass, clover, millet, lucerne, hemp and alfalfa seed. Seed corn of all varieties may be exported to Canada on permits. The culture of soy. beans is a new experiment in this vicinity, the first ever harvested for soed being sown in this section in 1918. The local supply is limited. Clover seed is also scarce, one dealer reporting only English clover for sale at this time. Fanners are warned to buy only clean and tested seed; it will cost less, be more satisfactory and produce the best crops for the least outlay per acre sown. As to seed corn, prices will vary materially, depending on local needs and conditions. Wayne county raised its premium crop last year and should be self sufficient as to needs for spring planting, but of that there is no certainty. The crop matured perfectly, as a rule. High Cost of Feeds. With reference to the present high cost and climbing tendency of all feeds, O. G. Whelan stated today that all mill feeds are now worth $5S to $60 per ton, some of them having advanced better than $20 per ton since December 21st. He claims that Wayne county farmers are lucky in being able to buy right now at lower prices than will replace present stocks, presumably because feeds on hand were contracted for before the latest advances. The fact that one can buy corn table products cheaper than he can buy hominy feed for hogs is worth especial consideration. We fall to recall a like condition. The fact that people tired of corn meal and corn flour as substitutes, and that the demand fell off instantly the ban on use of patent flour was removed, explains the situation. Millers wish to increase the sales of meal and corn flour to the advantage of the by-products, hence a stimulatingly low price on these, by comparison. Hominy feed wjll be out of market In sixty days,.,is the prediction, and it, is hard to get right now, in the face of advancing prices. Oil Meal Out of Sight. Oil meal is selling at $75 per ton, for 32 per cent and Schumaker feed at $55 in car lots, or $60 in a retail way, at this writing. What these will bring tomorrow may be another story. Hominy feed is worth about $70 per ton sacked. There are no brewers' grains to fill in with, for no breweries are in action. There is still a little germ meal to be had and doubtless some will be Imported. There are grain balers here who anticipate $2 corn in the near future but of course the man who differs with them may be right. It is all a guess. Tankage is quoted locally at $93 per ton for 50 per cent grade. Cotton seed meal, 36 to 38 per cent protein, seems to be the cheapest article in the feed list at the moment, at $67 per ton for supply on hand. Bran is worth $57 and middlings $60 per ton, locally. Prices may vary a shade either way, of course, depending on stocks dealers have on hand and when and how bought, but In the main prices quoted here will doubtless hold good. Scarcity of Milch Cows Predicted. A farmer informs the Palladium that there is no money in keeping cows at present prices of feeds and butterfat, the latter at 73 cents per pound, say. Consumers will wonder at this statement, perhaps. He says that the cost of labor and feed, the time and care required and the everlasting work a dairy herd entails, entitles a dairyman to more money for milk products. This ; will lead to a falling off in the number of cows kept and in output of mjjk, in his view. - Possibly he is right. Again, as noted in relation to probable future prices for corn, he may not be a good sruesser. DRINK MORE WATER IF KIDNEYS BOTHER Eat Less Meat and Take Salts for Backache or Bladder Trouble Neutralizes Acids. Uric acid in meat excites the kidneys, they become overworked; get sluggish, ache, and feel like lumps of lead. The urine becomes cloudy; the bladder is irritated, and you may be obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. When the kidneys clog you must help them flush off the body's urinous waste or you'll be a real sick person shortly. At first you feel a dull misery in the kidney region, you suffer form backache, sick headache, dizziness, stomach gets sour, tongue coated and you feel rheumatic twinges when the weather is bad. Eat less meat, drink lots of water; and get from any pharmacist four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts Is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity, and to neutralize the acids In the urine, so it no longer is a source of irritation; thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive, cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active. Druggists here say they sell lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe in overcoming kidney trouble while it is only trouble. Adv.

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I "When the spring time comes, gentle Annie well, who knows just what will happen, either to feed or milk markets. Argentine Corn Coming Here. Considerable corn has been imported from Argentine, at times, at that country is our only competitor for the corn markets of the world. Now that the seas are once more safe for merchantmen Argentine will naturally unload its surplus of corn and some of It will reach our eastern ports. They anticipated, or feared just that in Chicago on Monday, when corn broke over three cents from Saturday's closing, within an hour. Just how large the surplus is In Argentine, or what the coming crop will be, can only be guessed at. But our southern neighbor will ship to the highest market, and she always had corn to spare in recent years. All grades of "cash" corn is selling in Chicago at less than $1.50 at this writing, largely because we have bad favorable weather for shipping, possibly, and the expectancy of larger supplies. Greensfork, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Coffin of Splceland spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Nicholson Florence Bish Is improving after an illness of a week. Mr. and Mrs. William McLaughlin attended the funeral of the former's sistr-in-law, Mrs. Mary McLaughlin in Richmond Saturday morning Florence Friedman substituted on the mail route in William McLaughlin's place Saturday. .Mr. and Mrs. Omar Brown, 6on Edward, and Mrs. Jane Yeager left Tuesday marning for New Madison, O., for a week's visit with Mr. Brown's brother. ...Mr. and Mrs. Orville Hoover, Dorothy Overman, Joseph, and Elizabeth Ellis, Levi Cates and family, Horace Knote are the latest victims of the Flu The fifth community sale will be held February 15. Everyone come and bring some one else. Make a big crowd and sale Miss Dora York is improving after an illness... The influenza is In the families of Herbert Howard and Newton Brooks. Mrs. Patrick Breen, and John Breen shopped in Richmond Tuesday. Mrs. Mahala Ridge, who has been having double pneumonia, is a little better Mr. and Mrs. Don Overman are improving, but are still bedfast.. Walter Nicholson spent Tuesday with his brother, Lester Nicholson, east of town Word was received by Mrs. George Smith that Mrs. Wittworth. who was taken to Middletown, Ind-, stood the trip and was improving. . . Mrs. Carol Mills of Kokomo came Monday evening to spend Tuesday with her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. William Brooks Mr. and Mrs. Levi Strickler, Mrs. Elvin Benson attended the funeral of James Jackson at Richmond Tuesday Adam Howard made a business trip ti Richmond Tuesday... Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Nicholson received a letter from their son, Harold, who is stationed at Fort Clark, Texas, saying that It was very cold. It snowed and sleeted there all day New Year's day Don't forget the community sale at Greensfork, Feb. 15, under the management of Marion Myers and John Martindale Mr6. William Feasell, east of here, has influenza Mrs. Kate Chesman and Miss Fannie Chesman sprit Monday with Mr. and Mrs. John Bond Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Starbuck and daughter Irene, spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Simpkins and children, Alma Jean and Paul.

HOW WEAK, NERVOUS WOMEN QUICKLY GAIN VIGOROUS HEALTH AND STRONG NERVES 7 A DAY FOR 7 DAYS

A . Vigorous, Healthy Body, Sparkling Eyes and Health-Colored Cheeks Come in Two Weeks, Says Discoverer of Bio-feren. Worlds Grandest Health Builder Costs Nothing Unless It Gives to Women the Buoyant Health They Long For. It ! safe to say that right here ia this big city are tens of thousands of weak, nervous, run-down, depressed women who in two weeks' time could make themselves so healthy, so attractive and so keen-minded that they would compel the admiration of all their friends. The vita! health building elements that these despondent women laek are all plentifully supplied in Bio-feren. LD

TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY Good Music! iMsi- Good Tune!

Philomath, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Smith of Pendleton are the arents of a nine-pound sou, Willis Rye, Jr.. born Dec. 31. Mrs. Smith is the youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. B. McCashland of this place Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence McCashland and son, Harry McCashland and sons were Sunday visitors of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. B. McCashland Mrs. Harry Lambert and children who were on the sick list are reported better Jennie Rose is reported sick Dr. and Mrs. Bradley were Indianapolis visitors Friday enroute to Pendleton to spend the weekend with the latter's sister and family. Mr. and Mrs. Raye Smith and son... Roscoe Hendricks is spending a while with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Hendricks. Harry Weber and daughter, June, called on Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Fisher and daughter Darlie, Sunday. R. J. Roberts and family were Sunday visitors of Charles Roberts and family. ....Mrs. Raymond Kinder visited her parents near Nenvtlle Sunday... Samuel Fisher made a business trip to Connersville Monday.. .Morris Stinson was an Indianapolis visitor Monday. . . . .The surgical dressing unit held its regular meeting Thursday afternoon. In the evening they made some eand to send overseas Jacob Shank butchered Tuesday The teachers and back drivers of Brownsville entertained the new trustee and wife, Mr." and Mrs. Samuel Fisher at an oyster supper at the Clifton school house Monday evening. . . .Walter McCashland called on his parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. B. McCashland Monday. ....The Masonio and Eastern Star lodges of Brownsville will dedicate their service flag with a public entertainment at the M. E. church on January 14: Everyone is Invited. SCHOOL CLOSED AT MILTON. WEBSTER, Ind., Jan. 14. The high school at Webster is closed until Thursday on account of the illness of both teachers. Miss Cooper and Miss Guthrie. mams Keersthe stomach well, the liver active, the bowels regular, and the breath will be sweet and healthy. But let poisons accumulate in the digestive organs, the system becomes clogged, gases form in the stomach and affect the breath. Correct these conditions with Beecham's Pills. They promptly regulate the bodily functions and are a quick remedy for sour stomach and Bad Breath . Urtvrt Sato of Any MfidM in the Wort 4. If you are ambitious, crave success tn life, want to have a healthy, vigorous bdoy, clear skin and eyes that show no dullness, make up your mind to get a package of Bio-feren right away. It costs but little and you can get ad original package at any druggist saywhere. Take two tablets after each meal and one at bedtime seven a day for seven days then one after meals till all are gone. Then if you don't fee! twice as good, look twice as attractive and fee! twice as strong as before you started your money is waiting for you. It belongs to you, for the discoverer of Bio-feren doesn't want one penny of it unless it fulfills all claims. Note to Physicians: There It so ecret about the formula of Bio-feren, It Is printed on vary packag-e. Here pbate; Iron Peptonete; Ifanraneee Peniuukis, mi. u ruuiu; riwa. Kentlen; Phenolpbthaleln; Olearesln Cap icum; Kola.

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