Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 201, 5 June 1919 — Page 9
XHE K1CHM0ND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1919.
PAGii JS1NJS
XlR JOYRIDERS SOUGHT AFTER BY ENGLISHMEN
Trips in Clouds Becoming More Popular Than Jazz or Cricket. .. r. LONDON, Jjjne 5. England now is engaging In aeHal Joyrides. The taste cf sky flying given by special dispensation of the Air Ministry during the Easter holidays indicated that joy
rides in the clouds will be more popu
lar than jazz or cricket almost as popular as tea-
Father and mother and sister Susie
brought their two guineas ten dollars to the airdromes for the first time,
Good Friday. It was a record day for British climate, and commercial flying started without an accident. "Better than the zoo." "Really, we must do it again," read the verdicts of the people who had $10 and spent It in convincing themselves that they were born flyers.
Grandma Goes Up. At Crlcklewood grandma went up In a gigantic Handley-Page bombing machine, one that bad been fitted fox bombing Berlin and had not been altered except that the bombs were unloaded. She came down with the expressed hope that she would be able -to fly to Brighton the next week. ' The holders of two guinea tickets were the center of all eyes. They took off their coats and hats and bundled themselves in leather coats and caps, and wre snapped by photographers as though they were on their way to the execution. Two or three children went up and Bhowed an enthusiasm for the sport. One passenger hastened from his plane to Inquire of the officials if there was any reduction for a "season
ticket." The manager explained commercial air travel hadn't reached that stage. The rector of a Devonshire parish made the trip and described it for a London paper. Two hundred were carried from this one airdrome the first day. ASHE AT OXFORD
Whitewater, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. George Culey and fam
ily. Misses Anna and Carrie Burgess,
motored to Saratoga, Ind., Sunday., .
Mr. and Mrs. Will Brooks and son.
Mr. and Mrs. John Elliott, both ol Jacksonburg, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Townsend .and family and Mrs. Town-
send and Tson, all of Fountain City, spent Friday with Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Austin and family..... A birthday dinner was given for Harold Blose Sunday. Dinner was served at noon. Those present were: Vernon Warner, Rex Blose, v Bennie Burt, Willard Blose, Ben Weller, Russell Neiwoehner and Donald Jennings Mr. and Mrs. Carrie White and Pauline and Carious White were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Thomas, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Cal Eastman, Mr. and Mrs. Foster Eastman and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Ross of Hollansburg Fri
day.. . Donald Mutchner attended
the races at Indianapolis last Saturday... ..Mr. and Mrs. Osre Blose spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. John K. Thomas Mr. and
Mrs Foster Eastman and family of Richmond spent the week end with
Mr. and Mrs. Cal Eastman. Miss Grace Barton ol near Richmond, spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Barton and son Max.. ...Mr. and Mrs. John Coppock and daughter Mildred spent Wednesday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Coppock of Richmond and Mr. and Mrs. Luther Coppock of AlburQuerque New Mexico..... Mr. and Mrs. Fred Eastman an dfamily of Richmond spent Saturday and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Len Little and family... Mr. and Mrs. Grover White and family of Richmond and Mr. and Mrs. Herman Thomas and son Dan spent Friday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Corrie White Children's day exercises will be held next Sunday evening at the Methodist
church.. . . .Mr. and Mrs. John Coppock and daughter Mildred spent Sunday in Centerville. . .Mr. and Mrs. Osro Blose
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nossett Sunday evening.. .Elmer Newton of Richmond, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Barton... Mr.
and Mrs. Len Green, Mrs. Green of Hollanaburg and John Addleman were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Blose Sunday. Mrs. Ethel Woods and daughter, Maryam, and Mrs. Lizzie Guest of Richmond, were guests in the afternoon.
Lieut-Commander Ross Is
Spending Leave In Richmond Lieutenant-Commander Charles - C.
Ross, son of Mrs. Alice Ross, 18 North Tenth street, has arrived here for a weeks leave. He is a graduate of the class of 1908 of the United States naval academy at Annapolis and has re
cently been engineer on the "Wyoming." Previous to that time he was in command of the "Drayton" for a few months. Although in foreign waters, Lieutenant-Commander Ross saw no actual warfare.
New Paris,. 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert. Brown of Rich
mond, spent Saturday and Sunday
with relatives Misses Lou and Linnie Middaugh, of Dayton, spent Memorial day here.. .Albert Northrop went to New Madison Saturday for a
two weeks' visit with his aunt, Mrs. George Harter Miss Carrie Whittaker, who Is employed as teacher in the O. S. and S. O. Home at Xenia,
spent the. week end at home..:.. Mrs.
Mary Leffwich, of Indianapolis, spent
the week-end with relatives.... .Miss
Dorothy Havens of -Tippecanoe City is the guest of her aunt, Miss Anna Wefler Mr. and Mrs. John King,
of New Madison, were Sunday guests4
of Mr. ana Mrs. James King Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Baumgardner spent Sunday with Richmond relatives Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hawley and daughter were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hawley on Sunday Mr., and Mrs. Earl Mauch, of Dayton, spent Friday with relatives here. .... Mrs. Viola Watt, son Willie and daughter Maude, were here Memorial day .Miss Mabel Lawder became the bride of -Acil
Kennedy of Detroit, Michigan on Friday.... Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lehman
and Mrs. Mary Burns of Richmond
spent Friday with relatives.. .Mr. and Mrs. Louis Westfall spent Friday
here Miss Dorothy Fudge and Roy Brubaker of Gratis, were guests of Miss Evelyn Northrop on Sunday afternon.. . . .Benjamin Weller, of Richmond, spent Friday with Floyd Caldwell..... Mrs. Harry Baumgardner Is
spending a few. days with her sister, iC--r Cfcnr. Witt Annear
Mrs.- John Noalces. . . . Mr. and, Mrs. ------ --r
Charles Aker and family, of Fort McKlnley, spent Friday with relatives here..,.. Mr. and Mrs.O. W Sherer and Mr. and Mrs.- Paul Jordan ind son of Richmond, were Sunday guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Cora McWhinney and daughter Helen. .... Mr. and Mrs. Carl Noria entertained on Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Ethner Reid, Mr. and Mrs. Howard McWhinney and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smelter and daughters, Edith and Lillian..... Master Robert Welfer underwent an operation for the removal of tonsils and adenoids at Richmond Saturday.. . . .Mr. and Mrs. Liar Wlthrow and Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Hanus, of Arcanum, spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Northrop and Mrs. Elizabeth Kin. Mrs. Mary Leftwich spent Monday with Mrs. Anna Bttrtch. Miss Irene Timmons went to Dayton Sunday, where she will be employed for the summer.. . . . Miss Zelma
Nunnamaker spent the week-end with Miss Lestra Murray Fred Burtch who Is employed at Richmond, spent
the week-en dat home Frank Hawley, of Miami College, Bpent the
week-end with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William Mills Children's day exercises will be given, at the
Methodist church on Sunday, June 8, at the time for the regular evening services.
OXFORD, O., June 5. Robert S. Ashe, of Richmond, Ind., was in the village yesterday. In conference with President W. W. Boyd, of Western college, on the subject of furnishing electric current to the college. It Is said that Mr. Ashe has secured the right of way along the south corporation line for the erection of his transmission lines.
Two things than all others are more pitiful. One is the desperation with which a bald man clings to the last few remnants of his hair and the other the determination with which a woman goes about to erase the first wrinkle.
STRIKE 13 THREATENED
SPRINGFIELD, 111., June 5 A strike call for June 16 Is being sent out from headquarters of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers here, Charles P. Ford, secretary, announced today. If the demands already submitted to Postmaster General Burleson are not complied with by that date 60,000 men and 60,000 operators will cease work, he said.
VOLCANO KILLS 5,100
At Washington Next Week
, An entertainment entirely original and new to the amusement world is coming to the Washington theatre Sunday afternoon, for an engagement
positively limited to four days. It is a combination of onavof the greatest! pictures yet produced and the appear-! ance of a bevy of beauties celebrated wherever there is a motion picture machine and a. screen upon which to flash its projections. The picture is Mack Sennetfs latest feature production, "Yankee Doodle in Berlin," said to be a finer achievement than Sennett's recent triumph, "Mickey," and the bevy of beautiful girls is from the Mack Sennett, Los Angeles, studios. They are the original Sennett Bathing Girls in their first appearance on any stage. The story of "Yankee Doodle in Berlin" is unique. The scheme of the plot is utterly original, and its pur
pose is two-fold. It was created to amuse and to inspire patriotism. It
is not a war play though its scenes are laid in Berlin and its hero, a fighting, fearless intrepid Yankee lad. Ridicule, satire and burlesque are thrown around the deflated figure of the creature who sought to subjugate the world. The despicable character
of the head of the house of Hohenzollern Is proven- in tscenes of authentic quality, yet dashed with the spice of wit. A large, cast Is seen in the principal characterizations and a'splendid organization of supernumeries gives
animation to the big ensemble scenes, t
Among those participating in the
leading roles of this Sennett master work are: Bothwell Browne, Ford
Sterling. Marie Prevost, Ben Turpin, Bert Roach, Eva Thatcher, and an all-star Sennett cast.
Perhaps no man ever paid life insurance premium without wondering what foolish thing hi widow would do with the money. ,
SWISS MISSION LARGE
By Associated Press) BERNE. June 5. The Swiss mission which is to leave for the United States at, the end of August for a study of economic conditions in America,' will number 500 members. It will be under the patronage of the Swiss government. '
liiuvuui
Keiiensrreiuveiy Instantaneous ior
Burning Puffing
Sweaty ot Callouses
Special Plasters in Each Package 'Stubborn Corns
25
'xite Akcuu 0aipui, uk uu&i uwiu
Alkali in Shampoos Bad For Washing Hair
(By Associated Press)
THE HAGUE, June 5 The governor
general of the Kediri district of Java bright, fluffy, wavy and easy to handle,
reports that 5,100 persons were killed t Besides, it loosens and takes out every
Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali, which is very Injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle. The best thins to use is "Mulsified cocoanut oil shampoo, for this is pure and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap , and beats anything else all to pieces. You. can get this at any drug store, and a few ounces will last the whole family for months. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in, about a teaspoonful is all that is required. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out
easily. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and is soft, fresh looking,
in the eruption
Kalut.
of the volcano of
particle of dust, dirt and dandruff.
Adv.
REDUCE WEIGHT EASILY No more, worry about your over-stoutness. Take Oil of Kortein. follow the simple, health-improving Korein 7 System and it is positively guaranteed you will lose 10 td 60 pounds whatever amount of superfluous fat you need to be rid of or this self treatment will cost you nothing. We offer $100.00 Cash Guarantee I Measure and weigh yourself now; watch the delight ful steadv reduction. Become healthier, younger in
appearance, more active and attractive; gain real beauty. This method is also guaranteed to be perfectly harmless. Oil of Korein is not a laxative; contains no thyroid but is a vegetalized oil containing genuine focus vesio uiosus, an ingredient obtained from certain seaweeds. Men and women are astonished at the reduction after all else had failed. Recommended by physicians.
021
A prominent Philadelphia!, George Reynolds, Wa. ton Avenue, lost 20 lbs. the first month and continued using Oil of Korein, massaging himself daily, until he reduced 64 lbs. Mrs. J. B. Hansen, Piattsville, reduced 20 lbs. in less than 2 months. Mrs. L. C. Patrick, Niland, wanted to reduce 8 lbs. and did so in two weeks. An Albany business man, F. G. Drew, lost 56 lbs. in 3 months. Many say "fat seems to melt away", or "measurements decrease like magic", etc Legions of voluntary testimonials.
Don't carry the tedious burden of unhealthy fat. Become slender and attractive by this superior easy method. Amaze yourself and friends. Increase your efficiency' Oil of Korein comes in capsules, easy to take. Buy a small box at any busy pharmacy; or the druggist will get it for you- Or, write us and we will mail you a box in
plain wrapper, which you may pay for wnen it comes to yon. Begin reducing now t New Bok "Reduce Weigh Happily" gives helprtJ information. Will be mailed free on request. Cut this advertisement out ond keep it. Do not kwe thia cksaca of a lifetime to imorov vonrgelf marvelously. Address;
KOREIN CO NB-747 Sta.F , New York
wyy TSSSS ta?" Sar.
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1
Thousands of comfort- from every resort, camp able resorts along clear, and lake into this vast and cold lakes in the Great nearby "wilderneis."
NorthWoods invite you. The home of the mighty "musky" -the big gamy bass the trout, the pike and pickerel. Forest trails radiate
Summer Excursion Fares
Ask the local ticket agent to help plan your trip or apply to the nearest Consolidated Ticket Office or address nearest Travel Bureau, U. S. R. R. Administration, 646 Transportation Building, Chicago j 143 Liberty Street, New York Cityj 602 Healcy Building, Atlanta, Ga.
UmD-SlAJTS-RAIlJB-A
Hotel, cottage, boardine house or camp accommodations of every kind are available. Ask for booklet "Thejterthtrn Lakes" (Wisconsin, Minnesota, Upper Michigan, Iowa, Illinois).
11
2Z
(Coal IFsicef
WHAT WILL A GOAL ' NEXTWINTE
FAM
R M
INE IN RICH
EAN TO YOU
M
OND
It's Up to You Mr. Coal Consumer, Whether or Not You'll Have Enough Coal to Keep You and Your Family Warm Next Winter.
Mbip2 tHi3 Sltoaf Sorn
o
I
9
To avoid a coal shortage next winter production dorlng ttie comin
he increased, considerably. Analysis of coal Drodiiction records si
indicates that coal will be far from plentiful next '.winter,, if production fall.
iupner must
Nov. 1, last
continues to
There must be production at the mines. During the period from Nov. 1 , 1 9 1 8 to March 15, 1919, the loss in production has been more than 35,000,000 tons, compared with the same period during the year before, a period in which shortage prevailed. The output from the mines during the eighteen weeks from Nov. 1 , 1918, to March 8, 1919, including both anthracite and bituminous coal, was 62,000,000 tons less than the next preceding 18 weeks. These statistics speak a serious message and unless the coal consumers wake up and act quickly it will be too late. Prices of anthracite have advanced 1 0 cents a ton on May 1 st. They will advance 1 0 cents a ton the first of each month thereafter up to and including September, after that date there will be no coal at any price, unless you, Mr. Consumer, get busy. Think and then act at once. ,
Anchor Fuel Company 700 Sheridan St Phone 3117 Mather Bros. Company 1008 North F St Phones 1178-1179
Richmond Coal Company West 2nd and Chestnut Sts. Phone 3165 The Klehfoth-Nievt)ehner Co. North A and 2nd Sts. Phone 2194
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