Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 233, 14 July 1919 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND ftUN-TELEGRAM. MONDAY, JULY 14, 1919.

URGE ELEVATOR IN PREBLE; CLOSE TOBACCO MEETING

Blackford and Shearer Speak to Farmers Larger Miami Valley Association is Forecasted. EATON", O.. July 14. Little information is obtainable concerning any of the more important features of the meeting of the Miami Valley Tobacco Growers' association, held here Saturday night in the opera house, as matters closely concerning the growers and the association were discussed in a closed session, to which only members of the organization were admitted. About 75 persons were present, the bulk of them representing the membership of the Preble county growers' association, a branch of the Miami Valley organization. Jesse Sherer, president of the Preble county association, presided, and addressed the closed meeting. As a preliminary to the closed session, Frank Blackford, of Eldorado, addressed ' the meeting and launched a movement for a farmers' co-operative elevator organization in Preble county. He declared that farmers in the various localities of the county v,here grain elevators are operated buy an elevator each year, but they never get the deed for It. Important to Farmers ,.v He submitted figures to support his assertion that the co-operative elevator plan was of vital importance to the farmers, and compared local prices with New York markets, which showed, according to his statement, a difference of approximately 30 cents, with carrying charges of about 10 cents. He said he did not blame the elevator operators, if the farmer is willing to stand for it. The buying end he declared, was equally as dlsadvantafceous as the selling end. He told of purchasing from his local elevator a ton of "shorts," for which he paid $61, while the Chicago market quoted the commodity at $49. Several counties in Ohio were mentioned where the co-operative plan had been established and the result was most natisfactory to the farmers. One instance was related where an organization of farmers had bought an elevator for $11,000, and did a $267,000 business the first year. Monroe township already has a cooperative elevator organization with 41 members, Blackford stated. He said that with further growth of the organization ,an elevator would be established at Eldorado, his home, and at West Manchester. He declared the elevator situation at Eldorado was probably better than at other points in the county, as there was a bit of "soreness" between the two operating companies and that as a result prices were better. Tobacco Grower Speaks After "taking the pulse" of the meeting, it was decided to hold a meeting here Saturday evening, July 27, at which details of the co-operative plan will be fully'presented. President Sherer of the tobacco growers' organization, speaking in the open meeting, encouraged the growers to "stick to the ship" as they have been doing in the past and urged that every grower in the county and the Miami valley be gotten into the membership of the organization, if pos sible. The organization, he said, like an auger, must be made so big and strong that it will bore a great big hole a hole into the pockets of the fellows that have been getting all the money and let it run back into the pockets of the growers. Following the talks by Blackford and Sherer, it was announced that a closed session would be held, and all non-members were courteously invited to quit the meeting. Three or four persons left the hall. HAGERSTOWN MAN DIES HAGERSTOWN. July 14. George Haberland. 57 years old. died Saturday night at the home of his sister, Mrs. John Denny, north of town. The funeral will be held at the Chicago Corner church, west of Hageratown, ""fttesday at 10:30 a. m.

copies of testimonials from persons who ondorse Eoialxo. The enthusiasm lg sn-eat when a person finds, after all else lias failed. Uiat Kotalko Is nxt what Nature needed as a'd in produelaf, splendid growth of hair. Vsu mav now obtain the eeoulns

Kotalko under tlrug store, or for you. but take said to be "just aa thrn ontv tilAv

Or, If you vrish first to prove Kotalko. am1 for a Tottini box which will rami to yoa by mJj promptly in a plainly wrpicd pack. fcndm only 10 coats, a.lw or stamps. In your letter. ftatitfy yourt. You want to too falUna hair, eliminate dandruff, atrrnstiien and develop renewed rTOwth of atroia and oltk-llko Hair, or rover thar bald soot with hair. Huv KOTALKO at the Oruceui't ; ur get tho dime tcaiin box by mail NOW. r"-w ouco or twit daily watch in your mirror I 4tidres. JOHN BART BRITTAIN, BC747 , Station F, NEW YORK, N. Y.

a

i Charlie Chaplin

Charlie Ch w'Sunnys

Mothers, send the children Admission 10c

WITH THOSE IN ARMY AND NAVY

This column, containing news of Richmond and Wayne county boIdlers and sailors, will appear dally In the Palladium. Contributions will be welcomed. Wilbur Vogelsong was in Richmond Monday on a few hours' furlough from Great Lakes Station. Harold Dilks, eon of Mrs. C. S. Dilks of South Sixteenth street, arrived in Richmond, Sunday, after twelve months' service with Co. B, 22nd Engineers. Dilks reached Hoboken on the Fourth of July. He received his honorable discharge from Camp Sherman. Mrs. Charles Holtcamp of North A street has received the following letter from her brother, Corporal Ross H. Miller: "Am homeward bound! Left Russia June 15 following our release from the firing line, June 5. We stayed in France one week. Am feeling fine." Corporal Miller was in Russia 15 months with the 399th infantry and saw active service. - He was stationed for a time in both England and France. A few days before the arrival of the 309th engineers from France, on Saturday, Sergeant H. Reynolds, of Fountain City, arrived with a detached corps of that regiment after ten months service abroad. He spent Saturday in Richmond. Sergeant Elmer Herzley was aboard when the 309th engineers docked Saturday. He spent eleven months overseas, and has now gone to Camp Mills lor his honorable discharge. Sergeant Herzley is the son of William Herzley of 415 South Eleventh street. j Harry Mooreman is spending a fur- ; lough in the city with relatives. He I is stationed at Camp Sheridan. J Mrs. Joseph Brunner of 123 Vz South I Eleventh street received a telegram j Monday, from her son. Sergeant How- ; ard Brunner, stating that he has arrived in the states. He spent several J months in France with the 309th En- ; gineers and is expected home within a few days. Sergeant Charles Curtis, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Curtis has arrived at his home in Richmond following 13 months service with the Fourth regiment, A. S. M. He has received his honorable discharge. I Sergeant Verlin H. Ratliff tele- ! phoned his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wali ter Ratliff, Monday morning, that he ; had arrived in New York City and will ', be discharged in two weeks. Ratliff j was overseas for ten months with a j J personnel division. j Richmond relatives have received ! word of the safe arrival of Corporal I Harry A. Sauer of Company F, 339th infantry from the Archangel. Russia, ! front. Corporal Sauer landed in Bosj ton, Mass., and was transferred to Camp Devens. He expects to be at his home in Richmond in ten days. Major Stephen B. Markjey has arrived in the States and will go to Camp Dix for a short time before receiving his honorable discharge. Major Markley has been abroad for a number of months in charge of a large inspection area. j Miss Bessie Sprouse received a tele- ; gram Sunday trom ner Drotner, iesiie ( ! Sprouse, saying that ne naa lanaea j at Boston. Mass., and was on his way i i to Camp Devens. Sprouse left a year ; j ago the 27th of last April being one nf the four Richmond bovs to EO with : ! the 85th division, Company F, 339th 1 infantryFormer Peru President Is Forced Into Exile LIMA, Peru, July 14 Jose Pardo, who was forced from the presidency July 4 by partisans of Augusto Leguia, has left prison on his way into exile. Accompanied by his brother Juan, former head of the Chamber of Deputies, the former president went to ; Choreillos, where the brothers em barked on the steam tug Hercules to I sa.il north.

Of coarse yoa desire it. Then read of this wonderful hair elixir. KOTALKO Worry aa mora atoot your hair. Miss. Mrs. or Sir! Throw away those liquid lotlofit tlil are only drying your acalp auJ doinc na good wbataoeer. Don't ahamiioo Uta narural oil out of your valp. There's a hair elixir ibet la meeting with Increasing fa-or, for It la altogether dllTcrrnt from the scented Irmons. emulsions and wtahps. It Is Kotalko. contouwlrd from the Three Kingdoms of Nature and lnrludinc twtlre lnr-rd!ema. one of sttUrti Is the tenulae bear oil. wtucii you here heard of as marvelous in fertilizing hair. Mo matter wo at eondlMen your heir Is la do not despair. Kotalko la compounded on the principle that aided Nature In civmc tne a full Towtn of hair when I was bald (see the picture below) and It Is do.n wonders for oUien mea. waraea aad enlldrca. I could fill this whole paper with

my rramre al ths the r?rucfnst will get It nothing else that la pood, tor you will When BclS Hair Grown pour iita nf Kntalkn CD l

Sqecial Children's Matinee,

SaMMSHU WASHINGTON Charlie Chaplin "expresses himself" in the new aesthetic dances, which are quite the thing in the most artistic circles, in Sunnyside," his third million dollar picture, released by First National, which is shown at the Washington theater today and tomor

row, i he manner in which Charlie gets in with a group of beautiful and scantily draped young girls which are engaged in this sort of dance is quite Cbaplinesque. Such a thing as riding a cow is almost never attempted in the country by the boy and girl who take the cows out to pasture and bring them back at night. But Charlie attempts this when he tries to induce a cow to leave the church in which the bossy has been breaking up meeting. Landing in a ditch on his head, the little comedian goes into a state of coma where in he "sees things". While these are imaginary to him, on the screen they seem real enough, and the sight of Charlie burlesquing the serious sort of dance whicti St. Denis, and Hoffman, and other less famous give, surrounded by beautij ful young girls, bare of limbs, turI nishes a most entertaining combination. I After this little divertisement Charj lie settles down to ins rea. p.o.....i in the picture, that of saving the rvs of his rural sweetheart from being stolen by a "city dude" who appears in the community with a fine automobile. The doctor reported that old Woodruff was dying, when his staunch friend and attorney insisted upon introducing the household Dorothea. It mattered but little that she was not the child of the invalid's daughter for whom he had been calling in his delirious ramblings. For he had never seen her. But why had Woodruff's benefactor selected as nurse a gaiety girl? That was what puzzled he relatives. And after you have seen the first reel of "The Follies Girl," now being presented with beautiful Olive Tfomas at the Washington theatre, it will puzzle you, too, until the end of the last reel. Then you will realize that this madcap soubrette from the Ziegfeld Midnight Frolic was the best kind of tonic for the wealthy old invalid, even if she did create a scandal in the puritanical household. MURRAY Peggy Hyland, the William Fox star, has the place of honor on Manager Holland's program at the Murray theatre for three days, beginning today. She is to be suown a.o luu sj.w of a photoplay based on the well known novel, "Cowardice Court,' written by George Barr McCutcheon. The story is laid in the Adirondacks. Trouble over a property line, it will be recalled, is the basis of Mr. McCutcheon's story. The disputants are rich families and the war they wage is not unlike what one expects from mountain fuedists. Miss Hyland's part is that of a sister of one of the troublemakers. She takes sides againist her family, with the result that she is forced to leave home in the middl of the night while a tremendous storm Is raging. The picture is said to be essentially a love story with an undercurrent of humor. MURRETTE Cecil B. DeMille, direct-general of ASK FOR and GET IHlorDock's The Original Malted Milk For Infants and Invalids Avoid Imitations anc) Sabstitutoa Preserve Your Teeth Good teeth, more than any other one thing, mean good health. And it is so easy to keep your teeth in good condition if you will have them attended to regularly. Make it a point to come in soon and let us inspect yours. Absolutely Painless Methods Guaranteed EVERY TOOTH GUARANTEED J. A. Eudaly 715 Main Street, Richmond, Ind. Look for the Big Sign 3QDH

Famous Players-Lasky corporation, always gives his personal attention to the selection of the gowns worn by the leading women in his pictures. Before starting work on "For Better For Worse," which is shown at the Murrette today, he made a trip to New York, and visited all the fashionable modiste shops, picking out the latest creations with which to garb Gloria Swanson, who has the leading female

role in this production. Mr. DeMlIle has ( selected an excellent cast for his new Artcraft special. Elliott Dexter Is the leading man; others in the cast are Tom Forman, Gloria Swanson, Wanda Hawley, Theodore Roberts, Raymond Hatton, and Sylvia Ashton.' Bill Fall Of Laughs At Washington Theatre Today Few bills offer so many laughs to the film foot as that offered at the Washington today and Tuesday. The pictures were presented for the first time Sunday to packed houses. First, there is Charles Chaplin in his latest million dollar release, "Sunnyside." Charles is a combination farm hand and hotel clerk in a small village where the coming of a "city man" is an event that stirs the community. The picture is full of genuine comedy of the best Chaplin type, and there is Just a little of the pathos which the great comedian knows how to introduce so effectively. His adventures as a cow herd, and his misadventures in love have the Chaplin touches, and keep the audience in continuous laughter. Probably the most amusing scene is that in which Chaplin in a last despairing effort to win back his sweetheart from the city man, dresses as nearly in imitation of the dapper stranger as his poor means as "hired man" permit and goes calling with disastrous results. Olive Thomas in "The Follies Girl" is another feature of the big bill. Miss Thomas has a delightful role, and works the audience up to such a point of enthusiasm that there is spontane Beautify the Complexion IN TEN DAYS Nadinola CREAM The Uneqoaled Beantifier Ussd and Endortmd By Thousands Guaranteed to remove tan, freckles, pimples, liver-spbts, etc. ExRids pores ani tissues of impurities. Leaves the skin clear, soft, healthy. At leading toilet counters. If they haven't it, by mail, two sizes, 60c. and $1.20. NATIONAL TOILET CO.. Paris. Tsnn. Eyeglasses the kind you want Flexible, gripping, yet comfortable eyeglasses that stay where they are put, look neat and give satisfaction are the kind of glasses you want. The real virtue of glasses lies in the way they are selected, fitted, and adjusted. No part of the work is slighted in our method of handling. If you have not had the satisfaction you want we invite you to consult us without obligation. "You won't look your best un. less your eyes are well dressed." 810 Main St. HANER'S STORE

,U II: I

Attention Manufacturers We furnish money to reputable, going concerns in amounts above $100,000. All negotiations strictly confidential. Submit your proposition. Address P. O. Box 143, Indianapolis.

Hackman, Klehfoth & Co.

1000 N. F Street and South G, between 6 and 7

mm Tuesday

in "Sunnyside"

ous applause when the villainess la foiled, and the happy ending is reached. There are some amusing situations in the play, and the comedy is well presented.

AUTO COLLISION IN EATON EATON, O., July 14. Joseph Her, local man, and Dr. C. L. Smith, of West Alexandria, lately of Eaton, here Sunday at Main and Cherry streets, resulting in considerable damage to Dr. Smith's car. Her was driving east and Dr. Smith west. As Her was looking backward he steered his car into the doctor's automobile. None of the occupants was injured. Grandfather and the Children Know how Good Jersey Cora Flakes are. Ask Your Grocer JERSEY Corn Hakes Iha Qeinol Thick Cam Flakes. 4A Specials for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at THISTLETHWAITE'S SIX BUSY STORES Loganberry, Cherry and Raspberry Phosphate for making summer drinks at home, per bottle 19t 30c Odorno 24t? 30c Mum 24 1 Lb. Can Talcum Powder for 19 $1.20 Swamp Root 98? 30c Sloan's Liniment. 24? 60c Meritol Cold Cream at 49? GROCERY SPECIALS Watertown Peas, can.l5? Mity nice Peas, can. .21c Tomatoes, No. 2 cans 2 for 25 Campbell's Soups, per can 10 Crisco, per pound .... 37 Neal's Strained Tomatoes, per can 10? Shredded Wheat, 2 bx. 27 Shredded Wheat, 2 boxes for 27c Strawberry or Vanille Ice Cream, Pt. 20 Qt. 35 Scrap Tobacco, 3 for. .25? Camel Cigarettes. . . . 15c It's No Fun going down cellar for coal nobody enjoys it. But you can make the visits less frequent if you want to. Just order your coal supply here. That's the answer. The reason is that our coal goes much farther than the usual, means less shoveling and smaller coal bills. Phones 2015, 2016 3 C Afternoon

aa j

Admission 10c

Special Notice At the request of our customers to open a branch selling station we wish to notify you that we have opened one at Vigran's Variety Store, formerly Illffs. at the corner of 6th and Main streets. We w-ill continue to sell you our bread and rolls at 1025 Main Street and would be pleased to serve you at either place. Federal System of Bakeries TAKE HOME A LOAF

i

rollCZZZZllCZ3lcZ 7ll 1 1 fa I ZZ3llC3lfc 'IE Today and Tomorrow y fiLSa " a PIRST ID L9J Jb V NATIONAL fn " " ATTRACTION

His first new million dollar comedy since "SHOULDER ARMS" Six long months of waiting for this new outburst of Chaplin fun, but six months that have brought a picture well worth waiting for original, filled with surprises, typical of Chaplin you know, outbursts of laughter that just seem to break loose at the moment you're ready to sympathize with his misfortunes. Also

D

OLIVE THOMAS in "THE FOLLIES GIRL

Adults 25c

Wednesday and Thursday Zane Grey's popular

story THE BORDER LEGION

3PC

TODAY AND TOMORROW GLORIA SWANSON

"For Better For Worse" A Cecil B. DeMille's production Also GALE HENRY in Her Latest Comedy "CASH" Prices 10c and 20c

MURRAY

Now Playing New Show Today by The BILLY PURL Musical Comedy Co., entitled "AT THE DEPOT LUNCH" See Billy Purl in this play. His funniest part. New stage settings. New songs. New dances Positively the last week of this popular Company Entire change of program and picture Thursday PEGGY HYLAND in "COWARDICE COURT" Five-reel Fox production. "Better Come Early"

-- i

o Children 15c r in

01

IIICZ1IH II U illi ill

II H 1 1 ' fci P" ' if

sMsIC