Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 143, 28 April 1917 — Page 12

PAGE FOURTEEN

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. SATURDAY, APRIL 28, 1917

OBTAIN SUPPLY OF NATURAL GAS FOR NEXT FALL

' ProBpect that Richmond will be without a supply of natural gas next winter was dispelled today by a definite statement of N. H. Johnson, manager of the Light, Heat. & Power company, that the Logan company, which supplies the local corporation with its gas, , had completed arrangements whereby Richmond and other Indiana towns which have been obtaining gas from the West Virginia fields would be insured a satisfactory service next winter. . -I Johnson has been notified by the Logan company that it has. Just recently opened several additional wells in its West Virginia field which will bring its gas supply up to normal. This company has also arranged to obtain gas from some prolific Ohio wells in the event an emergency demands securing such additional service. The Logan company has also assurred the Light, Heat & Power company that In the Improbable event the anticipated gas service for the coming winter is not sufficient to provide the company' Indiana patrons with a normal supply the Logan company is prepared to cut off the service it has been giving several large eastern munition plants.

Slayer of Fly Demands Bounty From City; Volunteers to Donate M oney to Y.M.C.A.

George McKinley, city food inspector,is a worried man. He is fearful that in his campaign, to arousethe public against the fly evil, the Impression has been obtained that he intends to pay a bonus for every fly slaughtered in Richmond this year. This fear which has gripped MsKin-

RUSSIAN MINISTER TELLS OF HARMONY

. PETROGRAD (Via London), April 2S. Minister of Justice . Kerensky gave to a representative of the Associated Press ' today a clear presentation of the present status of political and economic affairs - In the country and with the aid of concrete facts, contradicted the assertions and rumors of all dlsograpization in the armies and factories generally circulated and creaked in Petrograd in the last few weeks. The mtaister declared that not only is the army better prepared and more

willing to fight than before the revolution but that the factories are putting : out more ammunition than at any previous stage of the war.

LENORE ULRICK COMING TO MURRETTE SOON

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PAIDAS'PABAITOT

"BUY A HOME," ADVICE GIVEN

'Tuy A Home." I To v full of meaning is that command It means a place in which you r.rr kfng nd ruler; wJiere you take no cr.mrnands tut rule supreme. '

Throughout. the ages men have striv

to his OWN HOME, feels that Jie Is really going home. Every little bit of improvement he adds contributes to hiH OWN WEALTH and to his OWN COMFORT. No one but himself and

en to own (heir homes a plot of his family gets the benefit of the ground and a home planned and built work he does in beautifying the lawn. JUFt as tho owner wants it. in keeping the place looking spick and;

Throughout the ages men have striv- span.

en to own their homes a plot of ground and a home planned and built Just as the owner wants it. "My home is my castle," is a dictlm that iss as old as the hills. To keep a home inviolable against search and confiscation by tyrant, men have fought and bled. Many of the principles of free government have originated from the theory that ever man has an inalenable right to own a home and preserve it against intrusion. Home Is Refuge and Comfort. If you have your own home, you cannot be evicted or forced to leave at short notice, It is Your property, it is recorded in Your name, it is Your refuge and Your source of comfort and enjoyment. Teh man who goes home from work

Buy A Home." Your enjoyment of

life will Increase. You will contribute , to the wealth of ycur city and country.

BUY A HOME See Classified Pages

Richmond Sanitarium Now open for a limited number of patients. Institution" especially adapted for chronic diseases, with methods other than medicine and purge ry, as well as medicine and surgery; arrangement for other special treatment of patients outside of institution. Male and femalo nurse. Electric, Carlsbad, Super-heat Air Bath, Steam Bath, Battle Creek Massage, Vibration and Dietetics. Reasonable rates. Richmond Sanitarium

205 NORTH 10TH ST.

PHONE 1905

Pall acli urn Wa n t Ad s The Big Sales Market of Eastern Indiana

ley's fly-hating heart appears - well founded, ' for he has just received, through the mailr a small box in which reposed on -a bed of cotton the remains of a fly. .'" st" ' Accompanying the box was a letter requesting the inspector to pay the executioner a bounty of 10 cents, or, if he saw fit, to give this amount to The Palladium which paper was, In turn, to contribute the dime to the Y. M. C. A. fund. "I want It definitely understood that the city is offering no bounty for dead flies. Our people should kill flies for their own good without expecting to be rewarded for their efforts," McKinley said today. "If the city paid even one cent for every fly which will be killed here this year It would have to float a 1100,000 bond issue."

MILTON GRADUATES WILL HEAR ELLIS

MILTON, IndU April 28. The following is the program for Washington township high school commencement to be held at the Boosters' hall, Saturday evening, May 5: Invocation, Rev. M. S. Taylor; orchestra; address. State Superintendent Ellis; orchestra; benediction, Rev. P. C. McCormick. The following are the graduates. Hiflh school Minnie E. Higham, Dorothy Hosbour, Laura L. Bertsch, Howard L. Basson, Harry L. Gause, Robert T. Kirtley, Olin W. Davis. Common school Abigail Hoshour, Harry Franklin, Homer DuGranrut, Roderick McCormick, Paul Connell, George Smith, Zelma Pierson, Mildred Clevenger, Elizabeth Warren, Naomi Squier, Marjorie Null, Pauline Fritz, Mary Stoops, Merle Wolford, Bernlce Wolford, Mildred Larson, Gladys Trine, Charles Fread, John Posey Jones, Mabel Hall, Viola White, James Williams, Beulah Hess.

cessfuL "Even the children were so belligerent, ' he ''. remarked, that they spat on him whenever he said anything good about Germany. He declared Germany feared the effects of this hatred after the war and that the army was trying every method known to education to make, friends of the children. But, he added, he had learned that it was a hopeless task, because the mothers of the children were so loyal to France that they bad only one thought the complete defeat and destruction of the German army. Germany spent thousands of marks having textbooks printed for these French children in an attempt to teach them the German viewpoint of the war. The army also spent considerable money

printing newspapers and magazines in,

French for the Information of the older people. But while this occupied territory has been made a great fortress as far back as the German frontier it is still the home for several million French and Belgian citizens, who hope and pray for the hour of their deliverance. In some cities where the German army has taken over the beautiful churches and cathedrals the people have had to worship out of doors or in their own homes. ' As the Allies advance they are not

Germany Performs Great Engineering

Continued From Page One.

man forces only a sub-general staff has been located in Charleville. When the French reach this city they will probably be surprised to find so few French inhabitants, because the Germans over two years ago compelled every French man, woman and child to leave. Unless the Allies are able to break through the Western line and compel the Germans to retreat in disorder; unless the morale of the German army is broken, a slow, ruthless retreat may be expected in this occupied district. And in case the retreaters take their

time it is certain that they will dynamite or burn everything which they are compelled to leave. In most of these cities the French and Belgian inhabitants have been awaiting day and night for over two years the return of the Allied armies. They have been awaiting deliverance. Their' suffering they show in everything they do. I have seen women standing In the doorways of partially destroyed homes, and their faces showed such bitterness, hatred, such suffering and distress, that one would think they could neither cry nor laugh again. I have seen children playing in the streets with dolls and toys which they had before the war, because they have not had an opportunity to get new ones. Little girls play with headless and armless dolls, and consider even these little playthings as sufferers under the Invaders. A few months ago, when I travelled through most of this territory, there was, not an ounce of candy to be bought any place. One could buy small quantities of milk chocolate, but it was so expensive that children could not buy it. These children of France have probably forgotten what candy 'tastes like, Just as they no longer know how it is to play with a real pretty new doll. A number of times when I talked to shopkeepers and convinced them that I was an American I heard pathetic

tales of suffering and depression. When the people In this territory met an American ft was the same as meeting a friend from the other side of the firing line the people are so grateful to the American . Relief Commission. The German deportation measures have been the ones which have caused the greatest distress. Those who have not been sent away have lived in constant fear of the evil days when they might be called upon to leave all friends and relatives for a strange city. f Cambrai, as late as last December, was the headquarters of Crown Prince Rupprecht From here all operations on the Somme were directed. The city at that time was not destroyed. Stores were doing a normal wartime business among the soldiers and officers. The beautiful city hall was occupied by the Intelligence departments of the Crown Prince's army. .The big French chateaus ' were housing German generals and officers. French families owning beautiful chateaus were compelled to give them up entirely or to live in one or two rooms upstairs and turn the other parts of the chateaus over to German officers. ' The- contempt and hatred which tnese people have for the Germans cannot be described. It is so extensive and so deep that the German army from time to time, fearing its own safety, has attempted to win the friendship of the people. I have seen officers go through these cities and

HAIR COMING OUT? )

Dandruff causes a feverish Irritation of the scalp, the hair roots shrink, loosen and then the hair comes out fast. To stop falling hair at once and rid the scalp of every particle of dandruff, get a 25-cent bottle of Danderine at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it into the scalp. After a few applications the hair stops coming out and you can't find any dandruff. Adv.

RID STOMACH OF GASES, SOURNESS, AND INDIGESTION "Pape's Diapepsin" ends all stomach distress in five minutes.

You don't want a slow remedy when your stomach Is bad or an uncertain one or a harmful one your stomach is too valuable; you mustn't Injure it with drastic drugs. Pape's Diapepsin Is noted for Its speed in giving relief; its harmlessness ; its certain unfailing action in regulating sick, sour, gassy stomachs. Its ..millions of cures in indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis and other stomach

trouble has made it famous the world j over.

Keep this perfect stomach doctor In

vour home keen It handv eet a large

give money to the children, hoping in! fifty-cent case from any drug store and

that way to win their friendship. But i then if anyone should eat something It was not successful. Children had 'which doesn't agree with them; if been taught by their parents not to j what they eat lays like lead, ferments accept anything which was offered f and sours and forms gas; causes headthem. In some cities the Germans . ache, dizziness and nausea; eructahave opened school. German officers j tions of acid and undigestr 1 food who could speak French and who had j remember as soon as Pape's Diapepsin been teachers in Germany were placed comes in contact with the stomach all in charge. One day in Munich I met such distress vanishes. Its prompta young officer who had a school near 1 ness, certainty and ease In overcoming Sedan. He said that although he had the worst stomach disorders is a revbeen there a year he had been unsuc- j elation to those who try it. Adv.

Served BJ.SSJ. "Vegetable

only freeing these hnman belnga who for two years have been tortured by the war, but they are capturing day by day positions which it has taken the Germans two years to defend. As they march on they are also capturing Zeppelin harbors and threatening the German control of the Belgian coasts, which, as Sir John R. Jellicoe stated recently is one of the knotty problems which the' Allies have to face in solving the submarine danger. The German navy has made the coast of Belgium a strong fortification. From every important harbor submarines can obtain supplies. As the British advance into France and Belgium this strategic marine joint of Germany will be more and more threatened, and the destroyers, torpedo boats and submarines which are mobilized off the coast of Belgium will be forced out or be captured. In Namur there are three Zeppelin sheds, and in a number of other Belgian cities the Zeppelin hangars have been constructed at a great cost of money and labor. The last time I was in this occupied territory one of the officers pointed to the defence lines and said that this

country was so well defended that tt would be impossible for the Allies to break through in anything less than ten years. But. at that time, be did not expect American intervention, nor a Russian republic, nor such a large English army to be. lined dip against Germany During the Somme battle the morale of the German troops was on the point of breaking when the? Allies stopped their advance. Theyf have now at two points on the Western line started- an -offensive which, if It Is continued long. enough, can so shattj ter the morale of the enemy as tas compel a more extensive retirement onf the Western front than has taken place, at any other time. Only the Incessant, hammering of this German fortiflca tlon until there is a break, will compel the Germans to retire in such haste? that they will not have an opportunity to destroy what still remains in tbe occupied territory. v l If the German retirement is slows Belgium and Northern France will kef nothing but an ashheap, for German officers have always said that if thew ever had to retire from this country" they would make It a desert, as the re treating Russians made Poland. , ;

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Offices of Wilson, Pohlmeyer & Downing Funeral Directors 15 NORTH 10TH ST. PHONE 1335 Open Day and Night

Kodak Films dereloped Free Prints 3c each, thwaite's Drug Stores.

Thistle-

Old est, Largest and Strongest Trust Company

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CAPITAL AND SURPLUS

$350,000.00

IT IS VERY EXCITING to hear the call of the bugle, and the tramp of the boys marching away, but we who stay at home must do our share towards the protection of our' country, by saving money and cultivating every acre of ground. The Dickinson Trust Company is helping by providing, in its Savings Department, a safe depository for money, and pays as liberal a rate of interest as is consistent with the high degree of safety afforded.

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Hudnufs Grits meat pie will reduce your cost of living

Here is a big, satisfying dish for a whole family. Hudnut Grits will give you better food and more food than any vegetable and at far less cost. That means, by purchasing Hudnuts Grits you may make a substantial saving, yet live better. The many appetizing dishes you

can make with this highly nourishing food will be welcomed by every member of your family. And you will find them very delicious and body building containing an unusual amount of real nourishment. If you really want to practice true food economy order a bag of Hudnuts Grits without delay.

RECIPE Hudnuts Grits Pie To one cup GRITS add 3 cups water and half teaspoon salt, boil 30 minutes. Boil onehalf or three-quarters of a pound of stew meat, with Just enough water to cover. Then mince meat finely, and mix it and the liquor in which it was boiled together with the boiled GRITS: add a pinqh of pepper and a small chopped onion. Bake in a quick oven and serve hot.

In 4V2-Ib. bags At your grocers : Hudnuts Grits has been the recognized food staple fon fifty years throughout the south as widely used as potatoes have been in the north. Directions for cooking Hudnuts Grits into a number of palatable dishes are contained in every bag. American Hominy Co., Indianapolis

Hudnuts Pearl Hominy in 4 -lb. Bags Hudnuts Cream Meal in 3-lb. Bags Now on Sale at All Grocers

L 4 LBS J j

NOT A LUXURY but Parti off flfae MacMmie that runs your business. A modern' desk is a great time and worry saver. Come in and let us show you how. The prices will surprise you. All styles in stock. Any finish. Bairlel & Koine

921 MAIN ST.

PHONE 1916

Your Auto Storage ' Problem Solved. Call Richmond Garage . 44 N. 7th St. PHONE 2397

JUST ARRIVED Another bis lot of new Soring TIES AU excellent values 50c LICHTENFELS 1010 Main St. In th VVMteott

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