Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 7, 18 November 1919 — Page 7

PAGE SEVEN BRINGING UP FATHER By McManus the above big acts Madeleine. TraTene la eeea on the screen In "Snares of Parifl." and Frank Holland elngs "Let the Best of the World Go By with illustrated elides. DOOU HA.NE TO LOOK LIKE. 1 I'M MR CFOt)M I'M J A PAINTER " WITH THAT GENTLEMAN OVER THERE - HE THAT TO !2E INTELLIGENT? TOUR Sore Throat or Mouth You should keep the throat and mouth dean and healthy. Any disease that attacks tho canal through which must pass the food tre eat, tho beverages wo dria. and tho Terr air we breathe is a smoos matter. Why neglect Sore Throat or Boxe Mouth when TONSlLINE makes it so ear for you to get relief? TONS1L1NE is specially prepared tat LOOK jo INTELHENT TV that one purpose. TONSlLINE does its full duty you can depend upon it. Keep a bottle El in the house where you can tret it auicklr when needed. 35e and 60c Hospital Size, 11.00. M Your druceist sells TONSlLINE. 14.

THE KICHMOND PALLADIUM AND bUN-'lLLEGRAM, TUESDAY, NOV. 18, 1919.

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CORN BRINGS GOOD PRICES AT SALE

Corn in the crib brought a good price at the James Jackson farm sale on Monday, 2,000 bushels going at from $1.45 to $1.51 per bushel, and was divided between numerous buyers. This may be considered an outside price, in view of market conditions, but it is understood that buyers need not move it until March 1, if that best suits their convenience, and this seemed to be an inducement to bid it up. The Jackson sale was he'd on the Henry Miller farm, 3 miles north of New Paris. Mr. Jackson recently purchased a farm a few miles north of Richmond, and held a sale to make a

I O c,ean"uP ' things he would rather sell C' than move. There were 8 head of

horses and mules in the offering, also 27 head of cattle and 37 bogs. While the crowd in attendance was not as large as could be wished there were a number of good bidders among them, and fair average prices were realized. The sale was cried by Tom Conniff and O. C. Schwing and the net was $6,100, according to Frank Taylor, cashier. Mr. Taylor was assisted by J. A. Day, who kept tho records, as field clerk. Numerous implements, harness, etc., went under the hammer and brought good competitive prices. The ladies of the New Paris Christian church served an enjoyable and much appreciated lunch. News of the Counties 1

NEW GARDEN. Ind. The Home ! tained Sunday at dinner, Mr. and Mrs. Economics Club of New Garden neign-1 Charles Deitemeyer, Miss Cora Shroedborhood will meet Thursday, Nov. 20. i r Miss Aisi Fahipn. Miss Edna Sita-

Mrs. O. N. Huff will talk on "A Sound : Mind In a Sound Body." A report of the last meeting will be given. Mr?. Henry Pitts and Mrs. L. M. Pike wiJl act as hostesses. MILTON Ind. An accommodation train has been placed on the Big Four schedu'e for workmen employed at Connersville. The train leaves here at 6:20 o'clock each morning and re-; turns at 6:4o o clock each evening, t ui NT Airs ci l Y several youn people from this community attended the "Young People's Rally" at the Richmond L B. Church, Sunday afternoon. The meeting was attended In a bodv, several machine loads going. Miss Lettie Hatfield was elected as tpcrptarv frnm this nlaee. of the orconization. Amontr those who went from hero were Ethel Shoemaker. Grace Brennan, Olive Hunt, Marie Car-, roll, Inez Swain, Lois Reynolds. Fayo J

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Myrtle Reynolds, Lc-ttie Hatfield, MarJoiie DeArmond, Atrnrs Reynolds, Goldie Gifford, Elizabeth Hoover, Mary Macy, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shultz. Mr. Carl Reynolds, Mrs. Walter Strong, Emma Showalter, Dorothy Wetzell, Erma Cooper, Mrs. Tom Brennan, Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Anderson, Olive Harrison, Ruth Fulghum, Margaret Johnsen, Louisa Hough, Horace Hatfield, Robert Thomas, Harold and Clarence Brinkley, Ralph Knoll, Claude? Alexander, Harold Barnes, Rev. Billkekner. GREENSFORK Miss Ruby Gilmer was very pleasantly surprised at her home, northwest of town Saturday evening, whn several of her young friends, come to spend the evening. Those present wero, M'sfi Blanche Davis. Ollie Bone. Clara Hill. Mildred J Hill. Lurlle Swain, Gertie Cain. Rub" Gilmer, Stewart Bone, Aaron Lindley. Daliis Stevens, Virgil Coddington, Glen Veal, Harold Bone, Walter Cain, Albert Gilmer, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Myrick, and Mr. and Mrs. John Holcomb. Ruby Gilmer gave some very interesting readings, games and music were played, refreshments of pop corn balls and apples were served. The Fecond number of the Lyceum course will be given Thursday evening, November 20, at the Christian Church on demonstrated educational art lecture entertainment. Subject is "The VIGOROUS MEN AND WOMEN ARE IN DEMAND If your ambition has left you, your Tmpplness has pone forever unless you take advantage of Conkey Drug Company, A. G. Luken and Clem Thistlethwaite's magnificent offer to lefund your money on the first box purchased if Wendell's Ambition Pills do not put your entire system In fine condition and give you the energy and vlpor you have lost. Be ambitious, be strop.?;, be vigorous. Bring the ruddy glow of health to your cheeks and the right sparkle that de notes perfect manhood and woman- j lined to your ires. i Wendell's Ambition Pills, the great nerve ionic, are tplendld for that tired feeling, nervous troubles, poor blood, headaches, neuralgia, restlessness, trembling, nervous prostration, mental depression, less of appetite and kidney or liver complaints. You take them with this understanding that: In two days you will feel better. In a week you will feel fine, and after taking one box you will have your oldtime confidence and ambition or the druggist will refund the price of the box. Be sure and get a 50 cent box today and get out of the rut. Remember Conkey Drus Company, A. G. Luken. Clem Thlstlethwaite and dealers everywhere are authorized to guarantee them. AdT.

It begins at WEST MANCHESTER Lyceum Chautauqua bureaus will present a three number lecture course here this winter at I.O.O.F. hall. On Wednesday, Dec. 3rd 1919. The Harmony Trio will give the first number, consisting of plantation melodies and popular songs of the day. Miss Pearl Cleage, whistler, and bird immitator will render numbers of selections which will be a notable feature. I On Jan. 4th, humorous and musical sketches will be given by the Liberty Duo, two very talented young ladies in a program of great variety. The third number will be given Feb. 12th by Chief Strongheart, Indian actor and lecturer. The proceeds of these entertainments will be used for the bnfit of the Junior order of Mechanics Lodge. Fountain City, Ini. Mr. and Mrs. James Hiatt, of Richmond, spent the week-end with her parents at this place Mrs. Ona Boren entertained at dinner Monday, Lydia Reynolds and Mrs. Thornton Horace Hatfield met with a painful i accident to his foot, which is thought j while playing basket ball at the K. of P. Hall Mrs. Anna Cline. of Eaton, spent the week-end with Mrs. Ona Boren Mr. and Mrs. Will Thornton and daughter Lucille, Mr. and Mr-. Archie Thornton and Mrs. Mary Spill man and baby were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Spillman at Richmond... Howard Remolds and family enterloh( Mr joIin glloh and Mr. Wililam Hoelscher Mrs. Ona Boren had as guests Saturday evening at supper, Mrs. Anna Cline, of Eaton, Miss Nellis Overman and Mrs. J. J. Overman A laree crowd attended the Evangeliitic Sunday evening services at tha Friends' Church. Rev. Billhelmer. pastor of the Methodist Church wil Meliver the sermons at the Friends' church this week Mr. and Mrs. rf. in. Alexander called on-Kpnneth Bartnn nnd famllv Snndav afternoon. The Theatres WASHINGTON, During my happy months with the A. E. F. in France, I had plenty of ; cnance to stuay me important roie j the "Bis Show." not only xu. ivim. i .-jMMMOB ' JUST SE nnoi a is ruOLHti I Poslam poothes, refreshes and heals suffering skin, with never a possibility of harm. A brief experience with Poslam will prove its value. For instance: apply a little on .gflme affected part f at night. In the morning, your own eyes find evidence of its hvaling work. ' If the trouble was slight a pimple or ' inflamed spot the chances are that it has disappeared. If a virtulent : eruptional disorder, it should be subdued, to much that you will want, Poslam to keep right on. J .Sold everywhere. For free sa.mple, write to Emergency Laboratories, 243 West 47th street, New York City. Poslam Soap is a daily treat to tender skin. Contains Poslam. Adv. j Ihogme Make Em ffejueal A hungry hogis a firowfog hog. The squeal is a sign of health and that good use is belog made of the iecd it gets. FEED RKD HOG MEAL and every fig will aqueal for more Every ltttle- pig In each Utter will grow "lie a weed". RKD HOG MEAL puts strong frames in the carcass keeps the digestive organs in good shape and makes your hogs increase rapidly in weight Call us up for a few pointers on RED HOG MEAL POWELL ELEVATOR fountain City. Phon 111 j

Potter and The Clay." 7:20 p. m.

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soldier in hundreds of cases, but as a friend and comforter of the fighting man. I have seen dogs in the front line trenches, dogs that went over the top with the men, dogs that carried messages where a man would have failed, and now I have come home to be absolutely 6hocked by the fact that Americans even hesitate about

passing a bill which would assure at least the lives of American dogs. I have always been proud of the fact that the American public was made up of "Regular Girls" and "Regular Boys." To be regular is only to be humane. We spend thousands sending missionaries to barbarians in distant lands, trying to teach them th? beauty of human kindness, and then at home our men boast of the fact that they can remove the spinal column of a dog, and still keep the dog alive a few hours. One of the few gentle things in the i world is the love of animals. Maney jealousy, greed, old age, and a hun dred other things can wreck human 1 tvi.-.nrichin hut th nM rWx tail that : once wags for you. wags on, come j what may. MURRETTE. How a modest girl with a captivating smile lureu a Aiannattan insurance company imo a worii-suoy oi iuvulorn wretches forms the basis for tho which will be seen at the Murrette Theatre, today. "A Virtuous Vamp," is the title of this attraction, which is based on Clyde Fitch's play, "The Bachelor." John Emerson and Anita Loos, the p I screen's foremost satirists, are respon sible for the adaptation and eastern critics have showered high praise on their effort. As Nellie Jones, Miss Talmadga takes the part of a girl who found it convenient to cast aside her aristocratic name of Gwendolyn Diana Beaufort Armitage, in order to gain a place in the insurance office of James Crowninshield, a bachelor who hated to mix social affairs with business. Nellie is a steady stenographer unONLY A POWERFUL MEDICINE WILL END RHEUMAT It matters not whether you have had agonizing rheumatic pains for 20 years or distressing twitches for 20 weeks, Rheuma is mighty and powerful enough to help drive rheumatic poisons iroin your body and abolish all misery or the cost, small as it is. will be cheerfully refunded. Drugglsts everywhere are authorized on a no-cure-no-pay basis. Its absolutely harmless and after taking the small dose as directed ence a day for two days you should know that at last you have obtained a remedy that will conquer rheumatism. For over ten years throughout America Rheuma has been prescribed and has released thousands from agony. It should do as much for you. It seldom fails. Adv.

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"Say It With Flowers

Lemon's Flower Shop desires to announce that Mr. Ray Lonsnecker will have the management of the store hereafter. Mr. Orange Essenmacher will coniinue in charge of the Floral work and artistic designing which insures the high standard of the past.

Lemon's Flower Shop

Flowerphone 1093

URRETTlp1 Today for Last Time 1

The sweetest vamp story ever best. Also A GOOD GALE

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til Gilda Gray, a Broadway shimmie dancer, makes application for a $50,000

policy on her shoulders. Then it be comes necessary for the winsome typist to escort the staid Mr. Crowninsliield to a jazz parlor for an investigation of this matter. It is then that Crownlnshield decides to stop being a bachelor, and thi marks the beginning of Nellie s vampicst attempts to win the only man who refuses to be captivated by her nocent" wiles. 'in- i MURRAY. It is recorded of Madlalr.e Traverse, the beautiful William Fox star, that the makes a psychological study of -each screen pert she assumes, and so evolves some interesting bit of philoso phy concerning it. When filming "Snares of Paris" she said, regarding It: "Should a beautiful and devotedly loyal wife of the foremost statesman in France, at the apex of her social power, sacrifice her position by con1(?5Sln5 10 ner nusuanu an mu.scre uon nt her girlhood? That is a serious Question and one that can't be settled on general terms. Each case must bo decided on Its merits." Miss Traverse insisted that the solution in '"Snares of Paris," at the Murray Theatre today is the right one for that case. She added: "I can imagine a wonderful woman who, as a girl, has had an experience like that of Marguerite in this photoplay confessing it later to a pettyBE PRETTY! TURN AY HAIR DAI Hi Try Grandmother's Recipe of Sage Sulphur, Old Tea Favorita and Almost everyone knows that Sacro Tea and Sluphur, properly compounded, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will get a large bottle of this famous old recipe, improved by the addition of other ingredients, at a small cost. Don't stay gray! Try it! No one can possibly t'3'.l you have darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the grayhair disappears, and after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. Adv. DR. LEE C. HOOVER Veterinarian Phone 1399 20 S. 12th St. )9 1015 Main told, See the Shimmy danced at its HENRY COMEDY

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minded husband who would turn her out of his house. I can imagine also

the generous-natured man who could forgive as his wife probably forgavo him when the married him." MURRAY VAUDEVILLE. Gales of laughter from the adults as well as the kiddies, greeted Hippo and j Napoleon and their comrades at The ! Murray, Monday evening, where they! arc headlining the bill for today and tomorrow only. Hippo is a full grown elephant, and Napoleon a grown chimpanzee who wears a dress suit and plug hat and generally deports himself as a gentleman except when he i3 busy fighting the two dogs who are constantly assailing him. The monkey makes his biggest hit when he non Solly MeCee. full ef euothiaa wea b from dawn till (be day' work us dene. On day aba explained why eh never complelned Twas timnJe aha drank Geldea Sun v aw s lUR reputation ! as Toasters of good ccHboand your grocer's reputation for selling good coffee daponds on our keep- ' ing Golden Sun up to tha standard. Peddlers havo no such motive. They are here today end gcn tomorrevr. Tfc Woolscm Spice Co, Toledo. Ohio Today and Tomorrow f2 p?W -in-

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MA Regular Girl

Mis3 Janis' first public appearance in two years. A comedy drama of the spice of life, brimming with the inimitable Janis pep and personality.

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chalantly lights a cigarette after wining and dining. This is about the j best animal act ever seen locally. Th ' Eight Vassar Girls have an elaborate ; and clnssy musical act, their most en- j joyable number being rendered upon ; saxaphones. Sam J. Harris is a tieve j monologist, who thoroughly entertains while on view. In addition to j

CAUGHT ANOTHER TERRIBLE COLD? Relieve It quickly with Dr. Dr. Bell's Pine -Tar-Honey TOP toting around a disagreeable l and dangerous cold. Lit Dr. Bella rine-lar-Honey exert its ability as a supremely beneficial help in relieving phlegm, 6tu!finess, inflammation, congestion, hoarseness, difficult breathing. Let it help you a3 it regularly helps thousands of others (or whom its balsamic and healing antiseptics never fail to promote results. Safe for the little ones, too. An economical bottle can be procured from vour druggist today. That's a wise thing to do. 30c., 60c, $1.20. For the Younfiater s Bowels Kelieve that alow-acting liver end those bphind-time bowels with gentle but positive Po-Do-Lar. Calomel U too violent. It leave uncomiortable aiter-affects. Po-Do-Lax keepa the family fit and ieeling good, free from the t'oivins-in of rfbflMo'is KnwrS. V)c. Tnigrt URRAY GREATEST ANIMAL ACT PLAYING TODAY Hippo and Napoleon Elephant and big Chimpanzee and their Canine comrades. Greatest animal act In vaudevl'le. 8 Eight Vassar Girls8 Singers, dancers, saxaphonists, violinists and pianoists. The largest and classiest exclusive girl act on the Keith circuit. SAM J. HARRIS The Sonologist in Thinking Tunes A Mack Sennett

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Watch for Marguerite Clark's Slipper

Palace

Special Today An Incomparable program 3 Splendid Subjects ALICE BRADY In a splendid 5-act Select production "At The Mercy of Men A stirring story that brings smiles and tears RUTH ROLAND In a whirlwind of thrills "THE TIGER'S TRAIL" And for a big long laugh "LONESOME LUKE" The show that pleases everybody Pipe Organ for Music Bring the family Watch for Tlhe Evil si mi He is coming THEATRE EVER SEEN IN RICHMOND NOW AND WEDNESDAY MADLAINE TRAVERSE In "Snares of Paris, five-reel Fox production FRANK HOLLAND Singing Ernest Ball's latest ballad hit: "Let The Rest of The World Go By." with illustrated slides. "Hypo" forgot to check his trunk at Indianapolis and missed the matinee yesterday, but he and Napoleon are positively playing now. "Better Come Early" Today and Tomorrow Burlesque on the old Tom show

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with Ben Turpin. Chester Conklin, Ford Sterling, Marie Prevost and "Teddy" the desperate bloodhound. See it Laught At It

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