Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 240, 18 August 1920 — Page 3
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, AUG. 18, 1920.
PAGE THREE
63D WESTERN YEARLY MEETING IS OPENED AT PLAINFIELD, IND. PLAINKIELD. Ind.. Aug. 18. The 63rd Western Yearly Meeting of Friends was officially opened here Tuesday morning. Reports were given committees were called and Instructed, and the Introduction of delegates took place. Jehu Reagan of Carmel, gave a rerort on prohibition and purity at the afternoon session. He said that 6,000 letters had been mailed to lay members of the Friends' church, asking them to support the Volstead act. E. S. Shumaker, superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League, spoke at the meeting Tuesday afternoon. Mr. Shumaker urged the necessity of preventing the repeal of the Volstead net and said that there were three things the Friends must do in order to meet the present crisis: enforce prohibition laws, defend prohibition against repeal and extend prohibition into other lands. Illinois Pastor Delivers Sermon.
The Rev. Raymond Dobie, pastor of the Vermillion Grove, 111.. Friends' Church, delivered the sermon at Tues-
3ay night's meeting. His subject was '"The Olivet Message." The Missionary training school was to open Wednesday morning, in charge of Charles Conover, field secretary of the American bdard of foreign missions. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Conover, missionaries to British East Africa, arrived and will assist in the training school. Wednesday evening Donald B. Snyder of Wabash, winner of the Intercollegiate peace prize of 1920, will Albert J. Brown, who recently returned from Germany, where he assisted in feeding the children of that country, will also speak. His subject will be "Beyond the Frontier."
The Farm and the Farmer By William R. Sanborn
v ' Roscoe Rosa, of the Williamsburg elevator, says the C. & O. has been furnishing all the cars he needed, recently. Says all but a few late fields of oats have been threshed and that wheat threshing is practically over. Little, if any stacking was done. His price on oats was 60 cents and on wheat $2.20 on Tuesday. E. C. Crider, of the flour mill at Lewisburg. said they were not shipping wheat but milling it Just now. Their price was ?2.35. This was also v, n nrsa ot thor T .o-a.- shiir or plvatnr.
Some oats are coming in at the eleva
tor but receipts have not so tar Deen very heavy, but of good quality. Paying $2.38 For Number 1. The Eikenberry elevators at Camden are paying $2.35 for 60! 2, $2.38 for No. 1 wheat, and 60 cents for oats. Wheat continues to come in and quite a few oats are being received. Hera and there we hear of elevator men who are not taking in any old corn at this time, but are reserving the space
for wheat and oats. Mr. Eikenberry says they are paying S1 for corn, that it is still coming in, nd that they shipped a car of corn n work. They are receiving all cars r-Hofi Pt this time. Tobacco Is revert -j doine; well around Camden, p"!'rn?ii not a great deal is being rr"-" in that vicinity. The weather y , been ideal for tobacco for past few C:y-. and it has had plenty of rain. Moving Pictures For Farmers. Mips X?11 George, who Is in charge of the county agent's office at Liberty, tflls us that they have bought a new moving picture machine for that office rnd that it will be used at farm meetings in the different townships. In addition to agricultural scenes of educational value other pictures of interest to make up a satisfying program, will be shown. It is likely that Union county will have a new county agent during the week. Foster Campbell, of Marion, Ohio, is the man likely to fill the position, which has been tendered him. and he is expected to be in Liberty on Wednesday, to talk it over. Pig and Calf Club Picnic. According to Miss Nell George, of Liberty, there are 95 young folks in the various pig. calf and corn clubs of Union county, and Tuesday, August 04 win v thplr outine day. That
picnic outing will be enjoyed at Glen
Miller park, Ricnmona. ine parents pnd friends of the youngsters will join in their jollification and a large crowd will invade the town by auto on Tuesday forenoon, and be made welcome. Promising Potato FieJd. Charles Atzinger. whose place adjoins the Country Club grounds on the north, has a fine field of late potatoes which the bugs have not yet invaded. He has also marketed a lot of choice !trlv notatoes this season, which no
bugs ever discovered. Mr. Atzinger h-ic shinned in five cars of fertilizer
from the stock yards at Indianapolis this year. Not Scarce. But Plenty.
There seems to be no scarcity of
anything at the farm home or rnaries fienree living on route "C" Richmond.
o mUoa south of N'ew Westville. He
Z -L-toA Ki hnes at Camnbellstown
on Monday, at $15. and has TO left. He
hps also just threshed ?J acres or oats
" hich ran about fit' nusneis to tne acre titmit hetne 1.325 bushels.
He and his son have adjoining farms nd have 60 acres of corn between "ipm which, aside from the planting.
U been handled nv tractor, airs.
BUYING RAILROAD EQUIPMENT FOR JAP GOVERNMENT
5.
J. F. Starr. J. F. Starr, consulting engineer of the Japanese army and navy, has arrived in San Francisco to purchase $25,000,000 worth of broad gage railroad equipment to be used in broadening out the railroad from Kobe to Tokio.
Scarce is proud of her (White Brah-
mas, of which she has about 175, ajiy one of which is large enough to provide chicken for a boarding house
Sunday dinner. John Hazlerigg, whose elevator at
Cambridge City was burned some
years since, reports a land office busi
ness at his elevator in New Lisbon, this season. Its capacity is 15,000 bushels and he tells us that he has
already shipped out 50,000 bushels of
wheat and oats, with fair receipts coming in right along. He says that he has had no wheat offered grading below Number 2, and that it is all above 40 and up to 60 bushels. He said five cars came in to load with oats on Monday and that he has not been shut dwn for a day for lack of cars. He will take in some old corn later, and the growing crop looks fine. New Lisbon is on the "Lake Erie" railway.
not be surprised, but he cannot say that now. When he came home in the evening he was greeted by a house full of relatives and friends. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Chamness and children, Mr. and MrB. George Deboy. ilisa Maud Deboy, Miss Gladys Cain, of Warsaw; Mr. and Mrs. Elliott and children, from Ridgeville; Mr. and Mrs. Crate Chenoweth and children of Spartansburg; Mr. Mack Helnilck, of Winchester, Mr. and Mrs.
D. C. Ozbun and three children. Several gallons of ice cream were served
to the crowd Mr. and Mrs. Forest Newman and brother, Howard Newman, of Richmond, spent Saturday night and Sunday with their parents. ....Robert Beeson, of Newcastle, was the guest of his grandmother, Mrs. Martha Beeson, and other relatives the latter part of the week Miss Nora McKlssick of Carlos, is visiting Misses Nellie and Reba Anderson, this week Mrs. Ethelyn Frye and baby, of Winchester, called on Mrs. Lora Beeson Friday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Frank Newman spent Sunday afternoon with the latter's par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Williams, of Winchester Huron Smith, of Mil-
waukee, Wis., was the guest of his
aunt, Mrs. James Newman, and family Monday Tent meeting, which
Will De held In the Frazier erove nno.
half mile south and one mile east of
Bloomingport, will begin Sunday, Aug. 22. Rev. L. E. Wibel, evangelist, singers, Mr. and Mrs. Otho Lobenstine. Mrs. Eva Glover and daughter, Mrs. Macel Jeffries and baby. Fowler, spent Monday with Mrs. Glover's mother, Mrs. Hlnshaw, near Fountain City C. A. Washier and family attended the Washier reunion near Union City Sunday Isaac Stanley, of Annadell, Tenn., is visiting his mother and other relatives here for a few days Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Beeson picnicked near Greensfork Sunday. Hagerstown, Ind. HAGERSTOWN, Ind. Mrs. Max Kitterman, of Cambridge City, is spending a few days here, while her husband is in Chicago Dr. E. Gardrer accompanied by her sister. Mrs.
J Mary Hughes, of Dayton, O, left
Monday for a ten days' stay at Bear Lake, Mich Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Niccum, of Dayton, D., were guests, Sunday, of Dr. and Mrs. D. Clapper Charles Northcott and family, were motored east of the state line, Sunday, visiting several Ohio towns Mr.
and Mrs. E. A. Dixcn attended a funeral at Economy, Sunday Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Hanscon and son, Howard, of Indianapolis, accompanied by Miss Pearl Williams, of Richmond, motored to this place from Centerville, enroute to Indianapolis, Sunday afternoon. They were guests of Mr. Hanscom's mother, Mrs. Alice Hanscom, and other relatives Rev. and Mrs. A. K. Love, arrived Saturdav
from Russiaville, where he is pastor.
or tne M. E. Church. Thpv r e-iipsts
of Mrs. Love's mother, Mrs.Julia
uonman Mrs. O. M. Deardorff spent Sunday at Mooreland with relatives. Dr. and Mrs. Charles Harter, and son, Blair, retruned Sunday from Elkhart, where they were guests of Dr. and Mrs. George Harter, for a few weeks Ms. Herman Hagerty is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Thalls....M. E. Sunday school held a picnic at Glen Miller park, Richmond, Saturday Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fleming moved last week into the residence recently vacated by Mr. end Mrs. Wm. Schmidt, and family, who moved to Alexandria Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Jones and family, returned Monday from Dayton, O., where they attended a family reunion.
Whitewater Lodge, I. 0. 0. F. Funeral Services for Brother John B. Elliott will be held Wednesday evening. Meet at hall at 7 :15. L A. Handley, Secretary.
Farm Sale Calendar
Friday, August 20 Brinkley Stock Farm. 4 miles northeast of New Paris, same distance southwest of Eldorado. Ohio. Big Type Polands, at 12:30. by R. L. Wilson. Monday, August 23 Whitewater Creamery Co.. Connersvllle, Ind., 51 head of registered Guernsey and Holsteln cattle, horses, mules and Durocs, hay, etc.
The Sugar Saver among cereal foods Grape Nuts No added sweetening needed. Tfcull like the appealing flavor of this sugar-saving food. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE f
Bloomingsport. BLOOMINGSPORT, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Edwards and daughter, Bernida, of Oblong, 111., Mr. and Mr. Norman Johnson and Mrs. Harry
Brooks were the recent guests of
George Deboy and family Mitchell Cook, George Deboy, Austin Glover, James Garret and Ora Garrett went on a fishinp trip one day recently. .. . Mrs. Levi Ozbun was the victim of a pleasant surprise Tuesday evening. Mr. Ozbun had boasted that he could
HEAR YE: HEAR YE! THIS MAN WANTS THE PUBLIC'S EAR Richmond citizen so proud of the change in his condition, desires all to know what brought it about. Declares his constipation, in
digestion, gastritis, sluggish liver and Weak kidneys
greatly helped by Dreco.
Constipation is one of tho worst r.f
modern ailments. Can you imagine a sewer pipe being stopped up for days at a time? You have probably seeu that happen and you know the consequences. Then just think of the sewer pipe in the human body getting stopped up by constipation. Think of the foul gases kept in the system and the poison being absorbed by the blood and carried to every organ of the body. Do you wonder that the breath is foul, that there is always a bad taste in the mouth; that there are splitting headaches; thai the appetite vanishes; that the weight falls away and nerves go all to pieces, the rest being broken at night? Do you wonder that the liver and kidneys become affected. Go the limit and get rid of constipation as soon as possible if you want to again enjoy good health. "I want every person suffering like myself to know that right in the city there is a medicine that will give splendid relief, just s it did for me; that medicine is Dreco," said Mr. Charles A McLain, a well known employe of the American Seeding Co., who lives at 423 N. 16th St., Richmond, Ind. "I have suffered years from constipation and never hit the right thing to overcome it till I found Dreco. ' My stomach was also deranged and failed to digest my food completely, for it fermented and caused nausea and gastritis and gave me no strength. My
liver got lazy so that I often had headaches and dizzy spells and soon my back and rieht over mv kirlneva nr-ho I
but these troubles are all gone since I took a treatment of Dreco, and I give all the credit to this medicine for my greatly improved condition; really it is a great medicine." Dreco is a vegetable compound containing no oil, acid, iron mercury nor potash but is the pure juice of twelve
neroai pianis wmcn aci on tne vital organs to restore thera to healthy
activity. All cood riruppiRta now cell rironn
and it is highly recommended in Rich.
CORRECT We wish every "made-to-order" man would come into our store just to look at our stock of NEW Fall CLOTHES For Men and Young Men He will be pleased at the faultless tailoring and excellent designs. The man clothed in a Society Brand Suit is welldressed and has the ease and confidence that this knowledge brings. The name assures you of allwool fabric, careful tailoring and correct, "snappy" 6tyle. We assure you of perfect fit
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Domesac Dep V
Just ten items from our Domestic Dep't which ought to be of interest to every thrifty buyer.
PERCALES 100 pieces of yard-wide Percales in both light and dark colors, all good styles; yd. .39? GINGHAMS 50 pieces good standard Apron Gingham, all size checks; yard 25c CHEVIOT SHIRTINGS 500 yards 29-inch in stripes and checks, a real bargain, regular 45c values; yard 35? INDIAN HEAD Fine for school blouses and middies, linen finish; yard 43c CRASH TOWELING 10 pieces 17-inch Linen Weft Crash, either bleached or unbleached; yard 23c BED TICKING 32-inch full 8-ounce Ticking, guaranteed to hold feathers; yard 69c HOPE MUSLIN 3,000 yards, perfect goods; each piece stamped Hope ; yard 32c SHEETING 5 pieces full 2J4-yard width Seamless Bleached Sheeting, Standard brand; yard 89? PILLOW TUBINGS The two most wanted widths in Standard Pillow Tubings 40-inrh, yard 70C 42-inch, yard 75 COMFORT COTTON Large 3-pound roll, opens up in one piece, size 64x68; one roll makes a comfort.. Special, roll w $1.10
THE STORE WITH ONLY ONE PRICE
mond bv Clem Thlstlethwaftp'a seven drug stores. Advertisement.
