Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 306, 8 October 1919 — Page 10
PAGE TEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8, 1919.
PREBLE POSTMEN TO ORGANIZE AT MEETING FRIDAY
Farm Sale Calendar
Thursday, October 9. Joseph Lamberson, 3 miles south
east of Straughn, at 10 a. m.
Jesse M. McWhinney, 2 1-2 miles
: south of Richmond and 1 mile west, on the Wolverton pike. General eale,
Dayton Postmaster is Expect- union County Big Type Breeders tA n Mal- Arlrlr:c C(A I Association, at A. P. Creek farm, five ca to iviaKe aaaress ucra i s northeast of Liberty 2 miles FelloWS to Meet. ! southwest of Kitchell. Hogs and cat
tle, at 12:30.
Vm. Warner and John Hill, administrators of the estate of the late Jesse Blose, 3 miles south of Holfansburg, at 10 a. m. W. C. Augspurger, on the Dillman farm, on Middleboro pike, one mile north of Richmond; cattle, hogs, horses, implements, furniture, etc. At 10:30. Friday, October 10. Russell G. White, one mile north of Middleboro, two miles south of White-
Postmasters and all I w"er- ,erai . eanup
o. . ncKermg, oue nine ui
EATON. O., Oct. 8. Following a
temporary organization effected some j time ago, it is expected the Preble Countv Postal EmDloves' association I
will effect a permanent organization in j
a meeting Friday night in Eaton in tha public assembly room in the courthouse. It is also expected a constitution and a set of bylaws for the organization will have been completed and will be
adopted in the meeting, which opens ,
at 7:30 o'clock
postal employes in the county are eligible to membership in the association. It 1b expected Postmaster May, of Dayton, will be present at the meeting and deliver an address. Chaffin to Speak. Grand Master Chaffin will be the principal speaker at a district Odd Fellows meeting in Eaton the afternoon and evening of Oct. 16, in I. O. O. F. hall. The afternoon session will be open to the public and a program of exercises will include an address of welcome by Mayor Harry L. Risinger. which will be responded to by Ed R. Clark of New Paris; address by Grand Master Chaffin, discussion, question box, general remarks and music by Benham's quartet. Local Daughters of Rebekah will eerve supper at 6 o'clock, this to be followed by conferring of the ini'iatory degree by Eden lodge, of Gratis, and the First degree by the lodge from West Manchester. Red Cross to Hear Farrand. Dr. Livingston Farrand, chairman of the American Red Cross central committee, is scheduled for an address in a meeting of the Preble County Red Cross rhaj-fer, to be held Friday evening in Eaton. The meeting will ihscuss the question of sending a delegate or delegates to a meeting in Cleveland, Oct. 22, in the interest of the Lake Division Red Cross. It is expected arrangements will be made for the anual membership drive in the county, which will begin Nov. 3 and close Nov. 11. Campaign for "Dry" Funds. County-wide drive for fund3 to finance the coming dry campaign in Preble county will be made Friday, Caccording to Rev. C. S. Masterson, of Campbellstown, manager of the county dry federation. A chairman in each town, township, and precinct will be in charge of the drive in his l elective territory, the manager states. Dainwood Brought Back Chief of Police Willard Armstrong returned Tuesday from Franklin, Tenn., bringing with him John Dainwood, southerner, who it is alleged, stole an automobile from John Henne, local farmer, but which late was recovered in Tennessee. Dainwood is in the county jail. Evangelist to Come Elder W. F. Klrkpatr'.ck and wife, and Miss Kathrrine Gross, all of Chicago, will be the principal figures in a scries of evangelistic services to be inaugurated Thursday evening at Mission Hall. Interurban Men Reinstated. Conductor Ed. Weyl and Motorman Ora Albaugh, West Alexandria, dismissed from service on the DaytonHichmocd division of the Ohio Electric railway lor an alleged infraction of rules, have been reinstataed. It is -aid the management declines to reinstate Conductor C. D. Owen3 and Motorman Ernest Heck, who were let out at the same time. Charles C. I'ollett. local man, who recently re-enterod the employ of the traction as conductor, has quit be
cause his physical condition could not
stand the work. He was injured in an automobile accident and was in a latni'.y will remove to Richmond.
Straughn, and three miles east of Lewisville on the National road, at Stop 112, at 10 o'clock. Saturday, October 11. C. A. Leverton, 2 1-2 miles south of Hiser's station, on the traction line, and 4 miles east of Milton, on the W. W. Wissler farm, full blood Chester White Hogs, at 10:30. Monday, October 13. William Wilcoxen, nine miles north east of Richmond, Duroc hogs, at 1 o'clock. Bert Souders and H. C. Knode. one mile north of Hagerstown, midway between Richmond and Newcastle on the Knode farm, live stock, implements, etc., on Monday and Tuesday, October 13th and 14th. Wednesday, October 15 M. W. Miles, 2V2 miles south of Campbellstown, on W'yatt road, at 10 o'clock. Thursday, October 16. Wililam McEntire, mles south of New Madison, O., all live stock, implements, feed, etc., a general clean-up sale, at 10 o'clock. Friday, Oct. 17, R. M. Miller, three miles north of Abington, on the Richmond and Abington pike, at 10 o'clock. Monday, October 20. Ed Carniin, one mile west of New Paris and five miles northeast of Richmond, on the Smyrna road at the state line. Holstein cattle, hogs and general sale; at 10:30 o'clock. Thursday, October 23. Bruce Pullen. 26 miles west of Liberty, on the Liberty-Connersville Short Line pike. H mile south of Pea Ridge school; at 10:30. Wilson and Kinsey, one mile 60uth of Greensfork on the Washington road, exclusive Big Type Poland China hog sale. Lunch at 11:30. Sale at 12:30.
Government Turns Down Bids for Town of Nitro
WASHINGTON. Oct. 8. All bids for the town of Nitro. W. Va.. site of a war-time munitions plant, have been rejected by the War Department. Three bids were submitted, the highest, $5,800,000, by Harris Bros. & Co., New York. The others were, $4,312,500 by the New Jersey Machinery Exchange, Newark; Theodore Friedsberg and John Eickeley, Jr. & Co.. Pittsburg, joint bidders, and $2,508,750 by the Dupont Chemical Company. The city cost the government $70,000,000.
LABOR'S DEMANDS CAUSE HIGH FARES, SAYS TROLLEY MAN
ATLANTIC CITY. N. J., Oct. 8. Blame for the increase in street railway fares throughout the country was laid at the door of the wage earners and not to the demands of capital, by J. H. Pardee, president of the American Electric Railway association in his address Tuesday to the association here. Necessity for providing revenues to meet the increased demand of the workers and not the desire of the railways to increase their returns, has caused the general raising of fares, Pardee declared. Cost is the main question in the railway industry today, he Faid, and the cost of labor is the predominant factor in that cost. Because public utilities no longer attract the investing public, the association president asserted, it is no longer possible to absorb the increased cost of operation by reducing the share that capital receives from the earnings of the enterprise. Therefore, he contended, that in the matter of decreased service or increased wages the question was in reality between the car rider and the wage earner. Arbitration Needed. And to meet the demands of labor Mr. Pardee said there was only one method arbitration. So firmly planted has this method become in industrial life that in his opinion no other v. ill be followed for years to come.
Some standards, Mr. Pardee argued, must be created by which wage scales tor a definite character of service can be determined. As the matter rests today he said arbitration is carried on between a corporation on one side and a body on the other which can not be held to account for the maintenance of its agreements. The public must realize, Pardee asserted, that the question of wages between capital and labor is of vital interest to every one and is not confined to the two classes.
BOOKINGS FOR FOREIGN TRAVEL BREAKS RECORD
Grand Rapids (Mich.) has its first
policewoman in the person of Mrs. I
Catherine D. Gillette.
In Russia an unmarried woman re
mains under the control of her parents
until utrr utraui.
NEW YORK. Oct. 8. WTith the raising of the wartime ban on transatlantic travel effective Oct. 1, according to announcement of the State Depart ment, steamship officials foresee record-breaking bookings for outgoing steamships. For several months the ciemand for reservations have been unprecedented in history, with the result that business men and travelers of the wealthier class have had to be content with 6teerage accommodations. Officials of a large touring company which has waged a campaign to interest Americans in water-war European travel announced today that they have been "swamped with demands for accommodations" and that those now
When Children are Sickly
are onsupaiea, terenan, Cry out in their Bleep, Take cold easily, Have Headaches, Stomach or Bowel trouble, Try MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN
t re Pleaaant tako fcnd a certain relief. They act on the Stomach, Liver aud Bowels and tend to correct iutestinal disorders. 10,000 testimonials from mothers an 1 friends of little ones telling of relief. No mother should be without a box of Mother Gray's Swet Powders for use when needed. Ask to-day. At Druggists. The nr-ed of them often comes at inconvenient hours. Used by Mothers for over thirty years. i Do No! Accept Any SobsClute for M3TBOI CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS.
making applications will have to wait months before securing passage.
In Paris there are of "dog"' barbers.
a great number
A tiny yellow bird a most curious nest.
In India make
Eighty-peven per cent of all autos are in the United States.
i
ASPIRIN -A Talk!
Take Aspirin only as told by "Bayer"
t t z
4, 4. it, AAAAit iti ji it j M tin inn 1 1 1 1 iiri in t i t i tititu iZ
The name "Bayer" identifies the true, world-famous Aspirin prescribed by physicians for over eighteen years. The name ' Bayer" means genuine Aspirin provac safe by millions of people. In each unbroken package of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" you are told how to safely take this genuine Aspirin for Colds, Head
ache, Toothache, Earache, Neural- J gia, Lumbago, Rheumatism, Neuritis and for Pain. Always say "Bayer" when buy- J ing Aspirin. Then look for the safety "Bayer Cross" on the package and on the tablets. Handy tin boxes of twrlre tablets cost but a few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages.
Aspirin it trade mark of Bayer Manufacture Monoaceticacidester of SalicylicacM
OUR POLICIES SATISFY PARTICULAR INVESTORS
uouings securities ray ivc. lax uempt in inaiana Carefully Investigated and Supervised. Phone 2994 or 2150 E. M. Haas, Representative, Richmond, Indiana. Over i01 Main THE R. I DOLLINGS COMPANY Indianapolis Columbus Pittsburgh Philadelphia
REPORT OF BOLSHEVIKI ROUT IS CONFIRMED
(By Asporiated Tress) STOCKHOLM, Oct. S. An intercepted Russian Bolshevik wireless message from Moscow confirms the report that the IJolsheviki have been forced to abandon Uie town of Dvinsk, between old Rus.-,ia and Poland, says a telegram received here from Reval. The red troops evacuated the place alter they had been defeated in violent fighting. Berlin advices relayed through Copenhagen. October t', stated that Polish forces had carried the fortifications of Dvinsk, alter two days of hard lighting and had all the city with the exception oi a portion south of the Dvina river in their possession.
SEARCHING FOR INDIANA DOCTOR
Newcastle Woman Claims She Found Him at The Inter-State Institute. Many people are interested in the search for the doctor who has created i such a stir in ihese parts by giving i out medicine that did so much good j for the sick and afflicted. I
The following from a woman who Fin
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Gasoline production in the United States has increased from o5.onu.oo0 to 70,000,000 barrels a year since 1914.
NO MORE CATARRH
This
Simple Home Treatment Stood the Test of Time
Has
Every fall and winter, for more than twenty years, thousands of people have made it a daily practice to breathe the air of Hyomei and so keep themselves free from Catarrh. Coughs. Colds, Bronchitis, Sore Throat and .Influenza. This is certain and you should try it. If you will breathe Hyomei daily, as directed, it will free you and keep you free from all these troubles or it won't cost you a cent. Conkey Drug Company and A. O. Luken & Companw or any reliable druggist can supply you with the Complete Hyomei Outfit, including a hard rubber pocket 'whaler. The inhaler will last a life time and extra bottles of the liquid Hyomei cost but a few cents. A few drops of oil in the inhaler will last for days and its pure, soothing, antiseptic, healing air, breathed deep in the air rassages of your nose and throat, should keep you free from coughs, colds, influenza and catarrh all winter long. Pleasant te use, takes but a few minutes daily and is frnarante-ed to satisfy or money back. Adv.
claims she has found the great
cialist, who has the Inter-State treat
ment. She says: Newcastle, Ind., Aug
To the Inter-State Doctors: I and my husband are so vividly impressed with the advisability of people being examined by such specialists as you have proven yourself to be, before ever f-ubmitting to an operation that we want to publish our views, hoping it will be a guide to some other suffering victims. Operations have become such a fad and craze that even the medical profession have been making it. a part of the game, and we can speak of it from our own very recent experience. My husband is engaged in building the mausoleum here and not acquainted with any doctors. I took sick with a hemorrhage and female trouble had been running on for two weeks and I was suffering constantly and growing very weak. We called a doctor and he said I would have to go to the hospital and be operated on. My husband felt like he wanted some other doctor's opinion, so we had this doctor bring counsel with him. The two came in and did nothing but talk in another room. Both agreed I must be operated on and that at once; and asked my husband to arrange about the fee: and not caring to throw money away, we hesitated. The next day we were induced to send to your office for Dr. Culver. He came and gave nip a thorough examination, told me there was no necessity for any kind of an operation. He prescribed for me that evening, and in just two days I was 100 per cent better, and visited him at your office and have been on my feet ever since. Hadn't been on my feet for two weeks before that, and it was such a radical change, and so at variance with the faddists, who are always wanting to operate, that I felt it my privilege as well as my duty to let the public know about your great ability along this line, and I would say to every woman: Don't be butchered up until you consult the Interstate Doctors. Dr. Culver visited me but once, on June 14. Mrs. H. E. Woltman. 1106 Southern Avenue. Doctor Culver, the head physician, will be in the Richmond office all day Friday from 9 a. m. to 8 p. m.. Over Starr Piano Co.. Corner Tenth and Main streets. Adv.
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Annual Sale of
One Week, October 9th to 16th An annual event that means Big Savings for our customers. This season not only a sale of Blankets and Comforts but also on Beds, Mattresses, Springs and Bedding of all kinds. These prices are greatly below the present market and you will do well to take advantage of these savings.
This Is the Right Time To Buy Blankets
Blankets $3.00 medium size Double Blankets, grey, white, pink or blue borders. (2?" HTQ Sale, per pair tpJLl7
$4.00 large size heavy Fleeced Blankets, 64x80 in.. Sale, pair
Extra large Blankets, good anddQ A Q heavy; sold at $4.50. Our priceyO41:0
$5.00 extra heavy Pleeced Blankets, large size
I
$2.48
$3.98
H ome Made Comforts
All of our Comforts are Home-made. We carry nothing else. Every one is made of good new white cotton, covered with Cretonnes, Silkalene, Foulard and Fleeced goods. Made by women who know how. At these prices you cannot make them for the price we are asking.
$5.00 value Home-made Comfort?, light or dark colors. Sale
$2.98
$1.25 blue or pink Crib Blankets, Sale
$2.00 heavy large size Baby Blankets, Sale
Silk Bound Woolnap Baby Blankets, $2.50 grade ; Sale .
98 c
$1.39 $1.98
$6.00 Comforts, excellent coverings, Home
made and. all large size. Sale
$3.98
$7.50 Best Silkaline, Foulard covered Home-made Comforts. Special
or
Fleeced
$4,98
Cotton Yarns for Knotting Comforts. Sale, per ball
10c
20 Saved on Beds $12.00 Metal Beds, 2-in. posts, QQ
Sale. :pt.0
$12.98
$9.98
white, brass or oxidized. Sak
$16 Beds, 2-in. posts, 1-in. fillers, excellent value. Sale
$12.50 Crib Beds, in white or Vernis Martin. Sale
Outing Flannels Heaviest 40c Outing Flannels, OQlight or dark. Sale, yard jLlXjK, Heavy 35c Outing, light or dark. 0 Sale, yard tlL One lot light fancy Outings, sold 1 at 25c. Sale, yard i-VFC 20c Bleached Outing Flannel. 1ASale, yard 1UC
Blankets $6.50 heavy Woolnap large size Blankets, Fancy Plaids, all colors. (J A AO Sale PVO 50c White Crib Blankets, '7r Sale, 39c each or, pair I OC $7.00 Nashua Woolnap extra large size, Fancy Plaid Blankets, (T AQ Sale, pair tD.TbO $12.00 Wool Blankets, large Ir7 QQ size. Special cO
WW
v" r 1
$15.00 Plaid Wool Blankets, all colors. Sale
4 Ht't fr
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$4.00 White Blankets, large size. Sale, pair
Be wise Buy your Blankets now,
$9.98 $2.75
Mattresses $10.00 Combination Mattress, Grj CQ full size. Sale P i .iO Best $15 Semi-felt Mattress, A a good soft Mattress. Sale. . JLU.OU
Mattresses for Crib Beds, $5.00 grade. Sale
$3.98
Feather Pillows, largest assortment in the city 51-19 to $3.00
Don't Forget the Dates Oct. 9th to 16th
One Big Week of Blanket Bargains
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