Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 114, 25 March 1918 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

THE RICHMOND PAIXADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1918

PRIVATE TELLS HOW KAISER'S OFFICERS ACT Deserts German Army to Enjoy Freedom in the United States. '

MARION. Ind.. March 25 Curt HadHch, a young German mechanic employed In local shops, one' time aviator in the German array, soldier of fortune and finally an American citizen, not only believes the stories of German brutality that have come across seas, but he thinks when the whole story has been told, crimes that will darken the pages of the history of kalseriam forever will come to the people of the world. They will -be ' told not only by victims but by the very soldiers of the kaiser himself, Hadlieh thinks. He is a deserter from the German

army because of treatment he could not stand. His father Is a Ufe cripple from the indignities even of peace times. Must Grin and Bear It. "The German soldier is treated like a dumb animal," Hadllch says. "He must grin and bear it- there is no appeal." Hadllch's story perhaps is the more Interesting because he has traveled enough, seen enough and learned enough outside the confines of Ger

many to appreciate conditions that exist there. "My father is a good living example of the effects of German militarism," he said. "After the war, if he still is living. I expect to have him come to this country to live like God intended people should live. He too, can tell stories of how brutal German officers are to the soldiers under them." Arm Is Useless. "Like all young Germans he entered the military service --when he was 20 years old. One day his company was practicing scaling. He had been ill and was unable to get over the fence at which practice was being held. An officer struck him with a sword. He fell and broke bis arm. It was not properly cared for and that arm has been useless to this day. "While I was stationed at the Forts of Mets and Strassburg I saw things happen myself that would make an American soldier think that the discipline he sometimes complains about is heaven in comparison. The soldiers set Sunday off at certain

periods and look forward to them because they could visit him. . How Officers Treat Men. "I have seen it happen time and time again that officers kept some of the men In barracks, apparently merely nursing a slight grudge of personal nature perhaps merely to have a bit of sport at the private's expense. These same officers would think up all kinds of punishment for their men, often putting a fellow at some task on his day oft while several hundred other soldiers were idle and could have done the same work. "I have aeen officers order men to carry water from the big barrels kept in the barracks, sometimes three

THE HOUSEWIFE AND THE WAR

(Special Information Service, V. S. Department of Agriculture) HOMEMADE BREAD RAISER HELPS ON BAKING DAY

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Converted Dry-Goods Box, Warmea oy On Lamp or Elcstnc Light, Provides Proper Temperature for Bread Raising. . SPONGE BOX, EASILY MADE, REMOVES UNCERTAINTY OF BAKING If Kerosene Lamp la Used, Line Box with Asbestos Thermometer Enables Baker to Obtain Desired Temperature Box 26x20x20 inches Most Convenient Size.

War kitchens must be efficient. Conveniences will help make them bo. A homemade sponge box or bread raiser will help make the bread better. It enables the housekeeper to keep her sponge or dough at the right temperature so that it will rise in less time. A sponge box or bread raiser, therefore, takes much of the uncertainty out of bread baking. It can be made from an ordinary dry-goods packing box. Placing the Shelves. A box 26x20x20 inches is a convenient size. About 10 inches from the bottom of the box a shelf made of slats or strips of wood rests on cleats fastened to the sides of the box. A second shelf is placed four inches above the lower one. The shelves can be removed when cleaning the box. Below the lower shelf a sheet of galvanized iron slightly wider than the shelf is inserted. It is curved in order to make it slip in and stay in place securely. This prevents scorching of the lower shelf when :i lamp is placed below and also helps to distribute the heat more evenly. The door is hinged and fastened with a thumb-latch or hook and staple. Several small holes are bored in the lower and upper parts of the sides and in the top of the box to promote circulation of air. A cork which has been bored through the center to ad

mit a straight thermometer Is inserted In one of the holes In the top of the box. A Fahrenheit chemical thermometer that registers as high as 100 degrees can be used. Such a thermometer may be ordered through a hardware dealer or directly from an instrument dealer. Make Safe From Fire. To avoid 'all danger of fire, the box should be lined with asbestos or tin when a kerosene lamp is used for heating the box. If an electric light is used, the lining is not necessary. A 16-candlepower light will heat the box nicely. A small and inexpensive night

lamp Is ' placed in the bottom of the

box and a, shallow pan or water is placed on the lower self so that the air in the box will be kept moist. The bowl of sponge or pans of dough are placed on the upper self. The temperature of the box should be kept as near 86 degrees F. as possible (80 degrees to 88 degrees F.) when bread is being made in the quick way. If a sponge is set overnight 65 degrees to 70 degrees F. is the better temperature until the dough is made in the morning, after which the temperature may be increased to 86 degrees F.' The' temperature in the box may be varied by raising or lowering the flame of the lamp or by using warm or cold water in the shallow pan. ' . ....

ECONOMY SCHOOLS TO CLOSE APRIL 12

ECONOMY, Ind, March 25. Graduation exercises of the Economy school probably will be held on April 12. Graduates of the eighth grade: Lloyd Sanders, Mary . Beard, Forest Cain, Meree Oler. Ralph Fisher, Helen Lundy, Rena Manning, Harold Wodman, Cynthia Marshall. . Lena Stantonand. Karl Weyl. High school, Euvada Can. ady. Ruth Drake. Mary Cain. Cecil Cain. Harold Fouts. Worth Hill. Ethel Charles, Carol Weldy, Anson Lindsey, and Harold Manning, twenty-one in all. Pretty good for Perry township. Herlin Edwards, 14 years old, son of Mr. and Mrs. Prentis Edwards, died Sunday morning and was buried Tuesday afternoon in Springfield cemetery. Rev. Oliver Frazer officiated. The pallbearers wero his six uncles. " r Visitors at the Edwards Brothers home last Sunday afternoon were: Mr. and Mrs. AI Barbour and son, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Ladd, West River, Eldo Cain, north of town, Mr. Jimmy Cranor, Williamsburg, Mr. and Mrs. Seward Beard, Mr. and Mrs. Link Morrison, Mr. and Mrs. Evert Clark, Mr. and Mrs. WJ1I Williamson, Mrs. Lue Fenimore and children, Blanche and Harold, Mrs. Joe Williams and children. Economy: and Miss Bertha Jones of Portland. .... Mr. and Mrs. Whittier Beard returned from St. Louis Saturday evening where they took their daughter Lois to be treated in a hospital for infantile paralysis. She will remain six months The Ladies' Aid society of the M. E. church met at the home of Mrs. Tille Clark Wednesday , afternoon Mrs. Frank Underhill and daughter Elizabeth, near Greensfork, were guests of Mrs. Emma Hiatt, Wednesday . Mrs. It. W. Routh, of Richmond, who has been visiting relatives, has returned to her home.

NURSE RECEIVES MEDAL.

PARIS, March 25 Mrs. Charles Carroll of Carrolton, Md., has received the silver medal of honor by the French government for her work at the American Hospital at Neuilly during 1914 and 1915.

or four stories up, merely to give them a task. After they had emptied the barrels they would be forced to carry water back up and fill them. "I have seen a private put to work on Sunday morning with a bucket of water and a tooth brush and ordered to scrub the floors. "If a private does not shoot or march as well as an officer thinks he 6hould, he is certain to be punished.

One favorite treatment was to require a man to stand erect, then kneel to the ground, repeating the performance for an hour or more. It frequently happens that a three days drill on bread and water diet follows." . Hadlich says he hope& to enter the American aviation service in the future. He had taken Out his first naturalization papers only when war was declared, however, ' .

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Let Us Place This Brunswick In Your Home At Our Risk If you are even thinking of getting a phonograph you owe it to yourselfto take advantage of this offer. It is the right way for you to decide what phonograph you really want to buy. For in this way, you have every opportunity of deciding without being influenced by anything except the phonograph itself. Because of our extreme confidence in The Brunswick and its ability to prove its superiority, we are able to make this offer. s We could not do it with any other phonograph. Because others suffer when compared with The Brunswick. We know you will be charmed by the tone of The Brunswick. Its beauty of cabinet and superb finish will delight you. And you will not be satisfied with an instrument unless it "plays all records." And these are the things tone, beauty and versatility you will consider before buying. Come in today and make arrangements. Learn the easy terms. Select the instrument ' you wish to try.

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MAIN ST, COR. 9TH.

TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets). It stops the Cough and Headache and works off the Cold. E. W. GROVE'S signature on each box. 30c. Adv. .

L - EWISBURG, 0 J Mr, and Mrs. James Gates moved to their farm northeast of town Friday ......Florence Sweeney, Olive O'Connell and Mrs. Milton Markey and 6on were at Dayton Friday. . , .Mrs. William Frantz, who has been visiting her daughters in Dayton Is at home accompanied by her granddaughter.. '..Joseph Sweeny received a telegram Tuesday evening of the death of his brother-in-law, Norman Sheller, of Dayton. He is well known hero and was a resident of this place years ago. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shields of Eaton visited their daughter, Mrs. Charles Bean Wiley Karicofe of Chillicothe is home on a ten-day furlough. He is visiting his parents southeast of town Gladys Hoerner of Middletown visited Sunday with her brother, Wynn Hoerner Mrs. Joseph Sweeny is suffering another severe attack of appendicitis. .. .Hershel Locke of Chillicothe is visiting his parents cast of town.... Mr. and Mrs. Mathias Deisher , and Vergil Sweeny visited Joseph Sweeny and wife Sunday Mrs. Grace Bittle and children were at Dayton Saturday.... William Bankard was at Eaton Tuesday. .. .William Coffman and family moved from David Horn property into Bell Gate's property on the National Road.

CAMPBELLSTOWN, 0.

Mrs. Wv C. Swisher was called to Dayton last Tuesday by the death of a cousin. She visited relaUves during the rest of the week.... ..Mrs.

Leon Craig and baby returned last Thursday to their home In West Alexandria after a several weeks' stay here with her parents. Mrs. Shumate, Mrs. C. C. Gard and daughter, Dorothy, accompanied her home and spent the day.... The Foreign Mission offering at this place reached $100..., Mrs. C. S. Masterson returned from Cincinnati Friday evening, having had an operation on one of her eyes the first of the week.... Mrs. Bessie Cooper Markey, formerly of this place, but now of Dayton, is at the Miami Valley hospital Miss Dorothy Shafer visited Miss Ruth Wisman at New Paris Saturday and Sunday..... W. H. Wisman who received Uie appointment of postmaster at New Paris, haa been a teacher here at this Central school for several years. He assumed the office on Tuesday. Mrs. Elma Hoerner Roup of Richmond, is teaching his room,

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7 SUFFER

WjTHNEURALGIA Use Soothing Musterole When those sharp pains go shooting

through your head, when your skull seems as if it would split; just rub a little Musterole on your temples and neck. It draws out the inflammation, soothes away the pain, usually giving quick relief. I Musterols is a dean, white ointment; made with oil of mustard. Better than a mustard plaster and does not blister. Many doctors and nurses frankly recI ommend Musterole for sore throat, bronjchitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neural

gia, congestion, pleurisy, rneumansm, lumbago, pains and aches of the back or oints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). It is always dependable. 30c and 60c jars; hospital size $1501

which was the seventh and eighth grades.... Harold House made a business trip to Cleveland, the latter part of the week Sam Brandenburg. wife and son of Oxford, called on his parents, R. E. Brandenburg, and wife, Sunday.'. ..Mrs. O. T. Aydelotte has a new power washing machine to be r"Tated with a gasoline engine The senior class will give their play, "1 ne Heiress of Noetown" Friday evening. MaTch 22. beginning promptly at 8 o'clock. This is a three-act rural

comedy and promises plenty of excitement. The senior class of J. H. S. give a play each year in connection with their graduation.

A friendless heart is like a hollow shell that sighs over its own emptiness. Thomas Hood.

Out For Taniac WitlTStatemant Woman Tells How Tonic Put Stomach in Shape and Improved Health. "My stomach used to be in such bad shape that everything I ate would sour and I had a headache about all the time," said Mrs. J. H. Jonas, 14 North Senate street, Indianapolis. "I was always taking soda or something like that to keep my stomach from getting sour. My appetite was very poor, too, and I ate very little. "It was the bad condition of my stomach, I guess that caused me to be restless at night. I just tossed and rolled about the bed and couldn't sleep. "I read about1 Taniac In the newspapers and finally decided to try it. By the time I had finished the first bottle I felt a lot better but I kept on taking it until I had taken three bottles. I'm In ine shape now and I give Taniac all the credit." Thousands of men and women take Taniac each spring as a tonic. If you feel listless and draggy take Taniac and get your system back in shape. You can get Taniac at Thistlethwaite's drug stores or any other good drug store. Try Taniac Rheumatism Treatment for - rheumatism. It 13 the radium treatment that you are hearing ao much about. Adv.

"W. Always Have Exactly What W, Advertise"

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An Easter Gift on this, our first War Easter, will be more suitable and most acceptable if it be a piece of good jewelry selected from the House of Dickinson, where high grade articles at most reasonable prices are most abundant. A High Grade Watch a Beautiful Pin a Diamond Layalliere Vanity Bag, etc., will represent a real war-time saving as well as express your sincerest greetings on Easter Day. Silverware for the Easter Bride Knives and Forks, Table Spoons, Soup Spoons, Tea Spoons, Salad Forks, Oyster Forks, Napkin Clips, Sets, Crumb Tray, etc.

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A Diamond is a Safe Investment

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Everyone who owns a Dickinson diamond is proud of it. Our large stock of carefully selected precious stones enables you to select a diamond that you can be sure will please and make a good investment for the money. Before buying, talk the matter over with us. We have some suggestions that will help you and prices that will appeal to you. A lady seldom wishes to have her engagement ring altered. It is important, there

fore, that it be of a high quality and of a lasting style one that is fashionable now and sure to be fashionable in the future. You could not wish to see a finer assortment of Engagement Rings than we are now showing. The diamond in combination with the ruby, emerald, sapphire, opal, turquoise, etc., is shown in a variety of beautiful settings.

We Are Special Agents for Hamilton Watches and Seth Thomas Clocks

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Established in Richmond 68 Years.

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