Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 94, 1 March 1918 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1918.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGIUV

by

Published Every Evening Except Sunday

Palladium Printing Co. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr. 'alladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Sntered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, as Second Class Mail Matter. MEMBER OF TIIE ASSOCIATED PRESS Th Associated Prs is exclusivaly entitled to " u lor republication of all nws dispatches credited to It or lot otherwise credited In this paper and also tneiocat J!vs published herein. All rlhts of republication ot p. Mai dispatches herein are also reserved.

City Gardener Murphy's Plea

A strip of ground three feet by six will suffice for a kitchen garden, says City Gardener Murphy. You cannot raise enough potatoes on a patch of this dimension, but you can grow enough lettuce, radishes and onions to supply the table with some spring vegetables. The city gardener mentions the advantages of a small patch merely to call attention to the necessity of cultivating every inch of spare ground that can be devoted to gardens. Every foot of ground in Richmond that is put under cultivation lessens the demand for truck and garden stuff, giving Uncle Sam an opportunity to buy what he needs, and permitting professional gardeners to devote their time to the

raising of crops that cannot be grown successfully on small patches. Readers of the Palladium are urged to read the garden articles which Mr. Murphy will prepare and also to read and clip the series prepared by the Department of Agriculture which is appearing now in this newspaper. These articles are by experts. Their advice is worth heeding. You will avoid mistakes and increase your crops by listening to what these men have to say. Be sure and clip them daily, so that when the actual work of tilling the ground and planting the seed begins you will have an excellent source of direction and guidance. More than 4,000 copies of the War Garden Manual will be soon ready for distribution at the Commercial club rooms. Obtain a copy. .Thrift Stamp Buying Satisfactory progress in the sale of thrift and war stamps is shown in Wayne county. Organizations in the townships are pressing sales and informing citizens of the purpose of the movement. The sale of $500,000 worth of stamps in Wayne township will bring to light money that has been idle and doing nothing for the cause of patriotism. Purchase of that amount of stamps will add a large sum to the savings of this township and help spread the doctrine of thrift. A wide distribution of sales is sought by the government. For that reason sales to one person are limited to $1,000. Formerly the man of little means complained that he had no opportunity tn nut his small savincs in safe invest-

- - i ments. War savings stamps are a boon to him. They permit him to save his money by investments of twenty-five cents in thrift stamps until he has accumulated enough to buy a savings stamp costing a little more than $4 and redeemable at maturity for $5. Thrift stamps have become highly prized possessions of children. They are working at all kinds of jobs to earn enough money to make the purchase. The influence -of the thrift stamp drive will.be. felt in twenty, years to come, for the habit of saving is being encouraged and fostered among the children. They will persist in the habit after -they have attained majority.

Seventh Federal Reserve District, for the last two or three weeks has been busy "feeling the puis" of the state, and he has learned enough to convince him that Indiana will be proud of her

record in the forthcoming drive. "Indiana is ready for the great drive," said Mr. Dunscomb following a great "get-together" meeting in Indianapolis. "This fact has been clearly established by the series of district Liberty Loan organizations, and state Liberty Loan officials. k "Briefly summed up, the Liberty Loan conditions in Indiana at the present time are about as

follows : "The farmers of the state are awake to the burden that they must assume to help finance the war, and will respond wherever the story of

the Liberty Loan has been preached to them in the proper way. The greatest need existing in the state at present to make the forthcoming campaign is closer organization organization that will reach into the homes in the individual blocks in towns and cities and into the farmhouses on every road in every township in the rural communities. "The majority of the counties already are comprehensively organized for the drive. Some few are partly organized and one or two are not yet organized. These weak spots just now are receiving attention from state headquarters. "The Women's Liberty Loan Committee in Indiana has joined hands with the men's Federal Reserve organization and the two are 'going down the road together.' "Plans for publicity are going forward rapidly through the press, advertising schemes and through the utilization of correspondence

i agencies of every organization of human beings

in the state. "Political parties, churches, schools, commer

cial organizations, women's organizations and!

other groups are being utilized in the grand or

ganization scheme.

is ready to subscribe whatever quota-is placed on her shoulders."

. The Food Administration Says: WHY IT IS NECESSARY TO AT LESS FATS: The chief source of fats for eating is in dairy products. We are able to produce no more of these now than before the war. Yet last year we sent our Allies three times as much butter and ten times as much condensed milk as we used to send them. Because their milk cows are still decreasing we must send even more butter and condensed milk this year. Because their hogs are decreasing we must send them more lard.

WHAT AND HOW TO FEED By H. A. Nourse, Editor Poultry Herald. When fresh eggs are scarce and high in price every poultry keeper wants to know how to feed his hens to produce the most eggs and still how to feed them without unnecessary expense. Feeding which produces good results is almost invariably profitable, but if anything i3 fed which does not help to produce such results the feeding of that should be dispensed with, if it costs anything.

It is a good plan to rouow nature s

In order to get the best results in egg production in winter we must copy as near as we can the natural method. To take the place of the seeds, wild

grain, etc., we feed the grains of commerce, including corn, wheat, oats, barley and rye, both whole and ground, and in the case of corn, cracked. The ground grains are mixed with water or milk to a crumbly state and fed in troughs in the form of damp mashes, once a day, as much as the flock will eat up in a few minutes. Sometimes these mixtures are fed dry in hoppers

and kept before the fowls constantly

that they can will.

supply themselves at

THIS CORN WILL PEEL RIGHT OFF!

methods as far as possible. We know or part of each day. The whole and that in the natural order of things cracked grains are fed in a litter of

hens laid only in warm weather ana

Handley is Member of Liberty Advisory Board L. A. Handley of the American Trust and Savings bank has been appointed member of the state advisory board of the Liberty Loan campaign bv Will H. Wade, ttate chairman. Announcement or the appointment was received here Friday.

Masonic Calendar i

Fridav March 1 King Solomon rhantr No 4. R. A. M. Called meet-

ins Work in Royal Arch degree. Sahirdav. March 2 Loyal Chapter No. 49 O. E S. Stated meeting. D I N N ER 5TORIEi "Young man." said the office man

ager "if vou knew as mucn aoout we -!hisinpRS "of this firm as you do about

In a word, Indiana already i baseball, you'd be holding down my 1 - .-. K "

"if know that, sir," replied the office boy. "And if you'd make your busi-

that at such times they could find wild grains, seeds, tender roots, bugs, worms and insects, tender green grass, small sharp pieces of gravel, etc., and this made up a ration which sustained the bodv of the wild hen and provided, in addition, the material of which to make eggd.

Why the popular meat flurry? Useless is the hurry-skurry. They've discovered substitution That is quite beyond belief. With the porterhouses juicy From the ribs of Frank and Lucy. Late of hacks or fire departments, We should worry about beef.

Conquest and Kultur "We must strenuously combat the peace propaganda. War must regain its moral justification and its political significance in the eyes of the public. It is necessary that its high significance a3 a powerful promoter of civilization should become generally recognized. In short, we must become convinced that a war fought for an ideal or fought , with the intention of maintaining one's position in the world is not a barbaric act but the highest expression of true civilization ; that war is a political necessity, and that it is fought in the interest of biological, social, and moral progress." F.' von Bernhardt Britain as Germany's Vassal (1912), trans. London, 1914, pp. 105.

Hoosiers Ready for Liberty Loan George H. Dunscomb, Liberty Loan Director of Sales for that part of Indiana lying within the

H

No Mercy for Traitors

From Philadelphia Ledger.

OW long are the plotters against the safety, wel

fare and honor of these dominions to escape .the ounishment that fits their crime? Day after day

arrests are made which reveal dangerous and criminal activities, A recent case is that of a chemist in the employ of tho United States Geological Survey, charged with being implicated in an attempt to blow up a cable station in Hawaii. The penalty will be internment for the war. Is this adequate? Will it discourage others who are ready to engage in similar acts of treachery? There is difficulty enough under our lax methods of detecting German agents. Even the revelations which followed the dismissal of Bernstorff have not sufficed to stir the Government to energetic efforts to break up the spy system. Many of the crimes committed have been crimes of violence in which lives have been lost. In other words, the authors of them have been guilty of murder. To burn down a munition plant or blow up a ship at sea gets the offender only a prison sentence at best. If there is not law enough to deal with these odious miscreants as they should be dealt with, then in heaven's name let the necessary legislation be passed!

THIEVES STEAL VALUABLE SEED

BY NATE EOWARDS ECONOMY. Ind.. Mar. 1. Linnie Swain, the clover kind had 154 bushels of fine seed from 20 acre. Last night thieves broke open the granery doors and stole teveral bushels. Clover seed is selling at V- a bushel here Mrs. S. W. Hodglns. of Richmond, who was a delegate to the National W. C. T. U. convenilon in Washing ion, was here Wednesday afternoon and gave an excellent talk before the Economy W. C. T. U. She was the Ruest of Mrs. Emma Iliatt while here Tne John Farlow public sale v.rts well attended Wednesday. Mr.

Farlow has bought a farm near Losantsville and will move on same in a few days John P. Salisbury has sold his farm near the Randolph county line and will continue to reside in Economy Doc Stottard has sold bis pretty farm to Darrie Oler, who will have a tenaut move into the house as soon as it is vacated Lyndsey Ca-nady, Jr., moved over

ness as interesting as baseball you'd have kids beggin' for a chance to work for you and willing to pay for the privilege."

A friend of ours weul to a training camp and wanted to be taken on as an aviator. He was a bit over age. "Have you had any experience?" they asked. "We!l," he said, "I have been flying In the face of providence ifor forty years."

A little Haig & Byng's favoriate remedy for spring drives may cure von Hindenburg.

The New York weather forecaster says: "Let everybody make his own predictions regarding spring." So

there is one government bureau at least which has not limited the ancient

right of the people.

The new German Zeps carry their

own fog camouilage.

Fog is something the German situa

tion is never going to run out of. It is suggested now that people eat fish on other days than Fridays. On Fridays fish are go expensive. Also on meatless Tuesday fish take3 an exalted position in the world. A fish is no fool. He knows when it is time tp be expensive.

"Gets-It" Makes Corns Come Off The "Banana-Peel" Way! Why have to flop on the floor, squeeze yourself up like the letter "Z," and vuth bulging eyes draw your face up into a wrinkly knot, while you gouge and pull at the "quick" of a tender corn? That's the old, savage

straw, hay, leaves or something of that kind, so that the fowls will be obliged to scratch them out and in that way obtain exercise which in nature they obtained by running about in search of food. To take the place of bugs, worms and insects, which nature provided to make up the meat part of the ration, we furnish commercial beef scraps, cut fresh bone, fish scraps, meat trimmings from the kitchen, etc. Usually the beef or fish scraps is mixed in the mash and the cut bone and meat trimmings fed separately or mixed wth a little bran, to serve as a lunch. To take the place of the tender green grass and other such succulent vegetable material which the hens found in the fields, in their warm weather laying period, we provide cabbage, mangel beets, potatoes, poor quality apples and steamed, green cured clover and alfalfa. Of these the closer and alfalfa are usually mixed with the mash when the mash is fed damp, or they may be fed separately. Sometimes clover and alfalfa is put into the pens dry and the fowls pick off the leaves. To take the place of sharp gravel, which serves as grit, we furnish the commercial grit made for that purpose and we keep it before them in boxes or hoppers so

2 or 3 Drops Applied in a Few SecondsThere's no Fussing or Cutting. "Gets-It" Always Works! way. "Gets-It" is the modern, painless, simple way. Lean over and put two drops of "Gets-It" on the corn, put your stocking and shoe right on again and forget the corn. Pain is eased. "Gets-It" has revolutionized the treatment of corns. It never irritates the true flesh. You'll stop limping on the side of your shoe, and do away with greasy salves, bundling bandages, thick plasters and painful methods. Use "Gets-It," it's common sense. ' "Gets-It" is sold by all druggists (you need pay no more than 25 cents I. or it will be sent direct by E. Lawrence & Co.. Chicago, 111. Sold in Richomnd and recommended as the world's best com remedy by A. G. Luken & Co.. Clem Thistlethwaite, and Conkey Drug Co.

DK, W. Ro MAY SPECIALIST

Will Be at The

Babs' uncle met her in the street one day and asked her whether she was going with a picnic party from her school. "No," . replied the eight-year-old niece, "I ain't going!" "My dear," said the uncle, "you must not say 'I ain't going.' You must say T am not going.' " And he proceeded to give her a little lesson in grammar. "You are not going. He is not going. We are not going. They are not going. Now, can you sail all that?" "Oh, yes!" responded Babs heartily. "There ain't nobody going!" Mrs. Newlyrich, by virtue of her husband's wealth, had obtained an invitation to a big dinner party, and as she was being piloted from drawing room to dining room she noticed a marble bust on one of the pillars in the hall. "Do you know who that is?" she inquired of her escort. "That is Marcus Aurelius," was the answer. "dh, is it, now?" ejaculated the lady. "But can you tell me," she added, promptly, "whether it is the present marquess or the late marquess? I do get so mixed up with your dukes and things!"

Don't expect immediate results from your efforts. Baby has to learn to creep before it can stand or walk.

The French know how to handle traitors and spies. There will be a little Bolo-Pashaing in this country some day, too. HOG ISLAND, UNDER INVESTIGATION BY THE GOVERNMENT, SEEMS TO HAVE BEEN A PRETTY GOOD NAME FOR IT. The Germans now threaten a great new spring offensive, but they will have to go some to be more offensive than they have been in the past. LIFE IN DEAR OLD PETROGRAD IS JUST ONE DAM GOVERNMENT AFTER ANOTHER

Leon Trotzky has been trotting around in a circle, and has bumped into the same old war again. Nothing is harder to get away from than a war like this one. It sticks closer than a mustard plaster on one's back. If the war comes and knocks at the door and Leon doesn't get up, it comes in and pulls him out of bed. But the war has never yet caught Leon in the bathtub, so he has something to be thankful for.

We sometimes believe the Shanghai liar who was so prominent during the Russo-Japanese war has gone to work for the United States weather bureau.

Motel RICHMOND, Monday, March 4 And Every Four Weeks Thereafter.

Dr. Mayo has treated a number of cases of cancer without the knife. Dr. Mayo has treated successfully all forms of Chronio Diseases that are curable, such as Diseases of the Brain. Heart, Lungs, Throat, Eye and Ear. Stomach, Liver, Kidneys. Bladder. Blood Poison, Rectum, Catarrh. Rupture. Eczema. Epilepsy, Dropsy. Female Diseases, Nervou3 Debility, Functional Weakness, Etc. MEN A speedy, permanent and lasting cure Is what I give you beyond a doubt if your case is curable. If not. I will not accept your money and promise to do anything for you. The best reference I could give as to profes6ional reliability 13 the many cured, satisfied patients I dismiss. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO DISEASES PECULIAR TO WOMEN I will give the POOREST man a chance, as well as the RICH, to receive a cure from me at a SMALL COST. There Is no one too POOR to get my best advice FREE. VARICOCELE AND HYDROCELE Our one treatment cure 13 what you should have. Only one visit is required. We do no cutting. All signs disappear in a few days or a few weeks. BLOOD POISON, SKIN DISEASES We will &tve you treatment that will in a few days or weeks cure all rash and sores. STRICTURE KIDNEY, BLADDER, BLADDER TROUBLES Are scientifically treated by us. Our methods Immediately benefit you. PILES, FISTULA We can cure you so quickly and so easily that yoo will be surprised. We will give you just the result and cure you are looking for. RUPTURE TREATED After an examination we will tell you Just what we can do for you. If we cannot benefit or cure you, we will frankly and honestly tell you so. Call on or address W. R. MAYO, M. D. 843 North Delaware Street. Indianapolis, Indiana

near Williamsburg Tuesday after but a few weeks stay in this part of Wayne Mcll Woods moved on the farm he renter near Modoc Wednesday. He has been working for Will

Williamson tor the last three years. . . j George and Harry Thornburg, of West River were guests of Richmond friends j recently and were here Thursday j transacting legal business. J

THAT ANNOYING, PERSISTENT COUGH

may lead to chronic lung trouble, or

mean that th chronic sfu.ee already U reacted. Ia eltber c,a try

ECKMANPS ALTERATIVE

This tonla ana tlssus-rapairer supr,llia m acknon-ledred benefit of Cal

cium treatment without disturbing tha

stomach. Contains no Alcohol, ! cotlo of Habit-Formlnc Drug-. $2 size, now $1.50. $1 size, now 80c. Price includes r tax. All drue1sts. Eckmaji Laboratory. Philadelphia ,

I HEAD STUFFED FROM ! X CATARRH OR A COLD ! Sara Cream Applied in Nostrils 1 Z Opens Air Passages Right Up, Instant relief no waiting. Your clogged nostrila open right up; the air passages of your head clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffing, blowing, headache, dryness. No struggling for breath at night: your cold or catarrh disappears. Get a email bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream in your nostrils. It

nenetrates through every air passage!

of the head, soothes the inflamed or;

swollen mucous membrane and reiiei comei Instantly. It'a Jut flna. Don't stay tuffed-up with a cold or nasty catarrh. Adv.

A Champa

SiD Aoella in the eveninc. It is a companionable

which will not tire or distress, but actually benefit you. The flavor is distinctively new neither too sweet nor too tart but delightfully snappy and fascinating. Apella is the pure unr fermented juice of sound Autumn apples, clarified and made to sparkle and bubble like champagne, the great aristocrat of drinks. It is as heathful as the fine fruit from which it is made. You'll enjoy your evening book or paper more with Apella.

SparWcV

2 Flavor

drink a

' ' 1 ' T

Tr& Apella x3o3? at the so$a fountain, club, or cafe, or order it hj the bottle or ease from $our grocer.

ySl L APPLE JUICE "jj "Jj.aiilmitrrw!t.tj xt EsM ' foow-iiiwC

NATIONAL FRUIT JUICE CO, iAFAYETTE. IND.

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orm-a-ltVucli

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Bettltoairdl Aotto Ageecy 1117 Main Street Richmond, Ind.