Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 269, 26 August 1919 — Page 4
AGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND BUN-TELEGRAM. TUESDAY, AUG. 26, 1919.
Miss Nellie Boycs, daughter of Mr. and Mra. John Boyce ot North Eighth street and William Hunt, ot Greenville, O., were married at 6 o'clock this morning at St. Mary's church. The ceremony was performed in the pres
ence ot the members or tne immediate families and a few friends, by Jtev. Walter J. Cronin. The bride was attended by Miss Edith Winters and Edward Hunt brother ot the groom acted as his attendant. The bride was gowned in a navy blue tailor gown with accessories to match. he wore a corsage of brides roses. A wedding breakfast was served at the home of the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Hunt left for Canada and will be at home in Greenville after Sept. 15. Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Hagerty have returned from a trip to Pittsburgh, Buffalo and Niagara Falls. Mr. and Mrs. John Fosler and daughters, Martha and Mary and Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Holmes have returned from a motor trip to Lake George. Mm. Nell Barnard was In charge of
the devotlonals at the meeting of the
Mary F. Thomas W. C. T. U. in tne library Monday afternoon. The regu
lar reports were given. The next meeting will he held September 9, at which time officers will be elected. Pink -nd white was the color scheme carried out in the dinner party given by Miss Regina Klinger in honor of the birthday anniversary of her nephew, Charles R. Klinger, recently discharged from service. Guests were Mr. and , Mrs. Harley Moore, Charles R. Klinger, Mathlas Klinger, John Klinger. William Klinger, Ruth Klinger, Charles A. Klinger and Regina Klinger. Mr. and Mrs. F. E. McMinn, who left Richmond August 1 for Oakland, Calif., by motor, have arrived and will spend a part of the winter with their son. Howard McMinn. Mies Lillian McMinn will attend Mills College this year and Russell McMinn will return September 1. Harry Frankel will furnjsh a part of the entertainment at the dance to be given at Jackson park this evening by Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp. Mr. and Mrs. George Crandall and family are spending the week at Niagara Falls and Buffalo, N. Y. Mrs. Gertrude Henley and daughter Electa,' have returned to their home
South Seventeenth street, arter spending the summer in California. D. H. Cummlngs and C. O. Snyder left yesterday on a motor trip through the east. Before returning they will attend the national convention of Funeral Directors at Atlantic City. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Meranda have returned to their home on North Twelfth street, frpm Saginaw, Mich.. where they visited their son. Warren. Miss Marie Metgzer and Miss Edith Metzger will return Friday to their home in Niles, Mich., after visiting
Miss Elizabeth Metzger. Mr. and Mrs. William McClelland have as their guest Mrs. Linnie Williams of New York. Mrs. Raymond Wehrley ot Ridgeville is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert McFail ot North Twenty-first street.
John Livingston of Chicago Is the
guest of his mother, Mrs. Jennie Livingston, North Eleventh street. Lloyd Rust," "Earl "Keisker, Charles Curtis and Roland Keys will spend the week-end at Indiana university. As a courtesy to Mrs. William Birck and son William, of Madison, Ind., an all-day picnic was held Sunday at Sunnybrook farm. Those in the party were Mr. and Mrs. John Zwissler, Mr. and Mrs. George Zwissler,' Mr. and Mrs. James Dillon, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wessell. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Puthoff, Miss Clara Steins, Mary Louis Dillon, Mrs. William A. Birck. James Dillon, Blanch, Dillon, Julia Zwissler and William Birck.' . Frank Schalk of Chicago will come Saturday for a few days' visit with his
Barents. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Schalk ot
North Eighteenth street. Ben Bartel has returned from a business trip to New York.
Miss Leone Buening is spending two
weeks in Camden, N. J.
Mr. and Mrs. .Jack Thome, who wre recently married will come
Thursday to be the guests of Mrs. Thome's parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. W.
Dafler, of North Fifteenth street. Mrs.
Thome was Miss Hazel uatner.
Mrs. Ida Carpenter and daughter, Jane, went to Indianapolis today for a
week's visit.
Miss Dorothy Tietz ot Springfield, a
former resident of this city, is visiting
here.
Edward Lanlng. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Isaac Laning. North Seventh street.
who has been attending Johns Hopkins university is spending two weeks here.- . .
Mr. and Mrs. Roj Fry have as thelrl
guest miss Mary L.esiy or wrocaesier. Mr., and Mrs. F. C. Nicholson of South Eighth street have as their guest their nephew, Douglas Pierce of Carthage, Ind.
. Miss Mary Swerer ot Denver, Colo., is the guest ot Mr. and Mrs. Ruther
ford B. Jones, of South Eighteenth
street.
Mr. and Mrs. James B.
visiting in Cleveland.
Porter are
Charles Qulgley has returned from
Detroit after EDending the summer
with relatives.
.Charles Dunn, of Detroit, is the
guest of his sister, Mrs. M. J. Quigley.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Aiken returned yesterday from a motor trip to Peru, Ind., where they were the guests of
Mr. and Mrs. William Hatfield.
Simms, Mrs. Anna Davis and Mrs. El
sie Munroe will leave tomorrow morn
ing for Muncie where they will attend!
the state convention of Daughters or America.
Three Popular Acts Appear.
on Murray Theater Bill
Vegetables Travel hy J
mad; make Traffic Heavy
The mail for the month of August, this year, is heavier than any time
in the history of the local postofflce, for the same month, Bald Postmaster Beck, Monday. "Much of this is due," said the postmaster, "to the vast amount of ship
ping of home grown products, such
MISS STANLEY, MISSIONARY, VISITS RICHMOND FRIENDS
X
Miss Sada F.
BAN ON ROLLER SKATES
I
TrfcOISON OAK
OXFORD, O., Aug. 26. Major , 1 JJ Wuh with weak solu
Hushes today Instructed the police to r tion of blue stone or
vears a Friend missionary in Jamaica. I enforce the ordinance against the use O lime water, dry thor-
attended the New Garden Meeting of I of coaster wagons and roller skates Friends, near Fountain City. Saturday, on the sidewalks. This action will o th 0a vtora a Raiiarri ! brinr sorrow to the hearts or a lot
IUU W CO vv- i. v. ..a 1 J a-u : - i 1 , , , , 11.
oughly, follow with light appli
cation of
that people have enough wealth to enable them to ship such commodities via the mail route.
Also this is the month when rv
"Also tms is tne month wner. rr.-v : . mlV of the mail order houses send out their CLA1E,NCF- T.T,L.I X .J,
fall catalogues.
If the vaudeville bill which opened
yesterday at The Murray for the firsthalf Is any criterion of what will be
booked this season, then local vaude
ville devotees may be assured of some'
thing extraordinarily good. This show
fairly captured a capacity house last
evening, all three acts going, over im
mensely. Gilbert and Saul two young
men with "the talking violin" and an accordeon scored the first hit. One of the boys really makes the instrument "talk" and this novelty scored tremendously. Davis and Walker, a
colored team offered songs, dances c. Meicurio, proprietor of Mercurio
and comedy talk in a manner wnicn & Sons, commission merchants, re
delighted the house. They took six p0rt8 that the sale of lemons has inbows in acknowledgement of the ap-1 creased 20 per cent this year. The plause. Tom Brown lives up to his , former drinkers have taken lemonade
of Richmond. Sunday.-
She left Sunday evening for Cartington, O., where her fatheiis very
ill. The time of Miss Stanley's de-
as melons, tomatoes, etc., and the f act ! Paure 'for Jamaica, where she has
been doing valuable work for the Friends, will depend on her father's condition, it was stated.
Demand for Fruits Grows; Lemons Lead
FRIENDS MEETINGS IN WEST
Miss Annette, M. Edmunds returned yesterday from a three weeks' visit in Bay View, Mich., and Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Walker entertained their children, grandchildren and great grandchildren Sunday afternoon at their home on North E street. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Commons, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Carman and family, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fetta and son, Mr. and Mrs. L. Davidson and son, Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Commons and son,
Mr. and Mrs. Giles Williams and son, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Commons and family, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Commons, Mr. and Mrs.- Royce Parish and family, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Stud and daughter and Mr. and' Mrs. George Carman and child.
reputation as a producer in offering
"The Seven Musical Highlanders." For distinct class and ability, this act will rate with any of a similiar nature on the Keith circuit, and the audience quickly recogized their standard quality. They dress in the conventional kilts, and offer selections upon various instruments including their native bagpipes. A number of solos, vocal and instrumental are Introduced, each being warmly received. Their closing scene the songs of the nations disclosing the Statue of Liberty in New York harbor brought rounds of applause. This bill closes Wednesday night.
The regular meeting of the ladles of the G. A. R. will be held Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, in the Post rooms at the court house.
Miss Mary Wilson of Centervllle entertained last evening for Miss Etta LaMott, whose marriage to Ernest Black will take place August 31. The dining room was prettily appointed with pink and white ribbons and garden flowers. In the center of the dining table was a large cupid holding pink ribbons, to which were tied many pretty gifts for the bride-to-be. The evening was spent socially. The guests were Miss Myrtle Ferris, Miss Ruth Miller, Miss Pauline Gildenhour of Richmond, Miss Bernice Beck, Miss Ruby Castettor, Miss Esther Morgan. Miss Thelma Wilson, Miss LaMott, and Mr. and Mrs. GedVge Hart.
Circuit Court Records v : j
Suit to recover $540 for work and service has been filed in circuit court by George and Charles Petty against George M. Sowers, According to the complaint Petty brothers were hired as agents to purchase a farm for Sowers, but after the purchase had been made, Sowers refused to pay the agent's commission for their work.
as a substitute, says Mercurio. Because of the increased demand, merchants predict a shortage of this fruit. All fruits have increased sales within the last two years, and according to Mercurio, the sale of fruits on Saturday, which is the largest selling day for the retail trade, has increased fifty per cent this year.
Adjustable casters have been patented by a Michigan inventor for talking machines.
Clarence E. Pickett, secretary to the Young Friends, will leave for Wichita Kan., Wednesday morning, to attend
te yearly Young Friends Conference there, which holds sessions from August 2 to 31. President W. O. Mendenhall, of the Friends University at Wichita, and formerly connected with Earlham' col lege in the capacity of dean and intructor in mathematics, will give a series of addresses at this conference. From Wichita, Pickett will go to Oskaloosa, la., to be in attendance at the Iowa Yearly Meeting, before returning to Richmond.
of children, but will meet with approval of a majority ot the adults.
VICR'S VAP0R1
YOUR BODYGUARD" -30. 6071.20
mm
FFO
BANISH NERVOUSNESS
Put
Her Face Beams
The Daughters of America will meet Wednesday evening In Vaughn Hall. The regular business will be considered. AH members are urged to be present.
Miss Frieda Blickwedel and Miss Lena Hassecoster are spending two weeks In Chicago and Milwaukee.
MARRIAGE LICENSES. Charles A. Hunnicutt, farmer, Cambridge Citv and Evelyn M. Hayes, teacher, Dublin. Glenn R. May. brakeman, and Ethel B. May, Richmond. Joseph G. Rothermel, farmer, Milton, and Margaret E. O'Connell, housekeeper, Milton. Ora O. Lewi?, railroader, Richmond, and Rose E. Burns, Richmond.
Oil firing under boilers is now universally used in Mesopotamia, and coal which is extremely dear, will finally be displaced everywhere.
Vigor and Ambition Into Down, Tired Out People.
Run-
with the "Wash day tm&e," instead of the Wash Day Grouch, in sheer joy and delight at the dazzling, snowy white purity of her white goods. Red Cross Bat! Blue will chase " wash-day-blue s" Succeed where others fail, and bring the smile of triumph to every housewife who really caret for pure, white, fresh clothes. 5 CENTS. AT ALL GROCERS.
If you feel tired out, out of sorts,
despondent, mentally or physically depressed, and lack the desire to accomplish things, get a K0 cent box of Wendell's Ambition Pills at A. G. Luken, Conkey Drug Company. Clem Thistlethwaite's today and take the first step toward feeling better right away. If you drink too .nuch, smoko too much, or are nervous because of overwork of any kind, Wendell's Ambition Pills will make you feel better in three days or money back fron A. G. Luken, Conkey Drug Company, Clem ThiBtlethwait on the first box purchased.
For all affections o! the nervous system, constipation, loss of appetite, lack ot confidence, trembling, kidney or liver complaints, sleeplessness, exhausted vitality or weakness ' of any kind, get a box of Wendell's Ambition Pills teday on the money back plan. Adv.
B A
v 0 -IQq&I
DR.E.B.GROSVENOR
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Scientific glass fitting City Light Bldg. 32 3. 8th
A
Coal Summer or Cold Winter?
Mrs, Ella Simms, Miss Bessie
Hair On Face SIZE? Set 1 aZuZZ-?rmm. rlVbEt highest mthrttM, -UmMuM and bw DMlrael ai.M n miHt DMlralt
FARM CLARK GOULD HARDLY DRESSJIMSELF Tanlac Ends Ten Years Rheu
matism for Farmer Clark Gains Eighteen Pounds. "There; that's the stuff that set my stomach and kidneys right and drove the rheumatism out of my arms and
legs after I had suffered torture for over ten years," said L. H. Clark, a
well known farmer of Brimfield, Illinois, as he pointed to the Tanlac dis
play in the Sutliff & Case store at Peoria, recently.
"My neighbors will tell you." he
continued, "just any time you ask them, that they never saw a man come out like I have. Why, I have gained eighteen pounds in weight and can do more work than at any time in ten years. Before I started on Tan
lac my stomach seemed to be almost completely played out. Every bite I would eat would get as sour as vine
gar and pretty soon gas would form and cause such awful cramping pains that I could hardly stand it. Then I would get so dizzy that everything seemed to be whirling around. The minute I would lie down at night and
close my eyes everything seemed to start turning over. I finally got so I
couldnt eat much of anything and I was so run down and weak that I couldn't work regular. I always man
aged to drag around and do the little work about the barn until my kidneys got out of order and I got the rheumatism, and then I was laid up for weeks at a time. I've seen the time when 1 couldn't have walked from the house to the barn to save the best horse I've got, I was just so crippled up with rheumatism. My legs were swollen up twice their natural size and I couldn't take a step with
out just suffering like 'blue blazes.' "My back was in such a bad shape with rheumatism that if I stooped over to pick up anything I would just see stars, and there were weeks at a time when I had to be perfectly quiet. I could hardly dress myself, and went down so fast that no one thought I would ever be well again. Well, I was just about ready to give up the fight when at last I ran across this Tanlac. After I commenced tak
ing the medicine I soon started gaining ground, and it wasn't long until I was well on the road to recovery. I found that it was just what I needed and I never allowed myself to miss a dose. Well, the results are that I am now perfectly sound and well and know what good health is for the first time in ten years. My kidneys don't bother me any more and I never feel a sign of rheumatism, and I sleep
so sound that the horses might kick the barn down and I don't believe I would heaV them. Yes, sir, It's Tanlac and nothing else that put me on my feet, and I appreciate it enough to tell the world what I think about it." Tanlac is sold in Richmond by Clem Thistlethwaite ; in Greensf ork by C. D. Sornine; in Cambridge City by Mr, Dean House; in Pershing by Sourbeer & Rodenberg; in Centerville by Centerville Pharmacy, and in Milton h W. L. Parkins. Adv.
Oh! What welcome news, Mrs. Housewife. That good, genuine Economy Creamery Butter is on sale again at all the leading grocery stores. After over a years waiting the manufacturers can again supply the Richmond trade. Order a pound or two on your next grocery order and you will never be satisfied with any other spread. Be sure you get the genuine, here's the trademark
Jos. F. Smedinghoff, Richmond Distributor
ANNOUNCING
the re-opening of my office after a year's absence in the service abroad.
DR. A. J. 29 So. 10th St.
WHALL0N Phone 2399
The talk of a COAL SHORTAGE is no idle jest already it has appeared in the papers. The wise man is taking the hint. He FILLS his bin now. There are not very many "tomorrows" between summer and winter -between coal and no coal between comfort and discomfort. Is there any reason for delaying? Richmond Goal Go. Phone 3165
jjiiil
200 Baskets Musk Melons These Melons are sweet as honey, 15 in a basket extra special at
25 lbs. FRANKLIN SUGAR, $2.75 Sugars are very scarce. Better buy. Per hundred lbs Sll.OO Fancy Potatoes, per peck 82c
100 Bunches oi Bananas
Nice large fruit, special f lUIfl per dozen 33 Jr j
Buy Them by the Bunch Sl.OO Indiana Jumbo Watermelons 50c and 60c 4 lbs. Fancy Cooking Apples 25c 10 bars Bob WhiteSoap. -60 boxes Matches 25 6 cans Spotless Cleanser. -25 Parawax. per pkg 17 5 bars Gloss Soap 25 Golden Sun Coffee, lb 45 These are Berhide's prices for Wednesday and Thursday only and are sure to make Old Mr. H. C. L. hunt his hole. If you want to help bury him, come to our store or phone your order now. While this stock lasts. E." R. BEMflEUDE
TO
244 South Fifth Street
FREE DELIVERY
Phone 1329
If You Want
(Good
wmmmm
Now is the time and this is the place to buy them Just in, our fall stock of Utz and Dunn high grade Ladies' Shoes, all sizes, all widths, all leather, all colors, no better shoes could be made. These shoes are full of quality and style.
heel.
$9.95
Ladies' Brown Glove Kid Lace Boot, covered Louis
heel, turn sole, another ?io.uo
value for
Ladies' Patent Kid Lace Boot, leather Louis
gray buck top, it's a wonderful $15.00 value for
(Only a few of these left)
$10.95
Ladies' Brown Calf Lace Cloth Top Shoe, Cuban heel, welt soTe, our price Growing Girls' Brown Calf Lace Shoe, low heels, for school or dress; our price....
$5.95 $4.45
Attention
MEN!
another
fm V i-Xt-M, T V JUUb V, - - 2 shipment of those Men's Brown
English Shoes, leather soles. Goodyear welt, absolutely a $7.00 shoe; our price is still
$5o00
Those solid leather, double sole and tip school shoes for boys, J0 Cf i right now they are only vOt)U
"THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES'
He H00SDER T(M
SIXTH AND MAIN ST.
frrTfTTTimrffn ttmmitf m wf init imi t timivsss
