Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 165, 23 May 1918 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY," MAY 23, 1918

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Okiciyopi Campflre girls will give a 1 patriotic pageant, "Awakening America," In the high school auditorium, Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock. In addition to the pageant, a troop ot Boy Scouts will take part in the entertainment and a comedy, written by Miss Martha Eggemeyer will be given. A small admission will be charged and the proceeds will be given the Red Cross war fund. The public is invited. As a compliment to Rev. W. J. Cronln who wil celebrate the fourteenth anniversary of his ordination into the priesthood,' Sunday, the choir of the church will render Van Breese's Mass In A flat at the ten o'clock mass. The orchestra will play the accompaniment. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Rodefeld have gone to Austin, Tex., for a visit with their son, Edward, who is in the aviation training school there. The Brotherhood class of First Methodist church will entertain members of the G. A. R. post at the chnrch this evening. A good time Is being planned by the social committee and all members of the class are ' urged to be present. The recital given by pupils of St Mary's music school was well attended yesterday afternoon. Juniors in the department gave the recital, assisted . by the boys' glee club. The glee club consists of all string Instruments and scored auite a hit yesterday. The re

cital closed with the 6inging of the new Red Cross song whic appeared in the newsDaner last week. The seniors

of the school will give a recital this evening. Second Lieutenant Russel Gaar returned to Rock Island last Sunday evening ofter spending a ten days' furlough with his wife and his parents, . Mr. and Mrs. Clem Gaar. One of the most important social functions of the Earlham spring festivities was the reception held last evening by President and Mrs. David M. Edwards for members of the fac- ; ulty who will not return next year. The guests of honor were Miss Elgia Witwer. Prof. Earl Shoup, Dr. and

Mrs. W. O. Mendenhall and Dr. ana Mrs. Lloyd Van Doren. The house

"was decorated with spring flowers and here and there touches of red,

white and blue gave a patriotic note to

the party. Among tnose wno cauea

during the evening were Dr. and Mrs.

. Hemchel Coffin. Trofessor Lawrence

lladley. Professor John Rae, Dr. and Mrs. Millard Markle, Professor and Mrs. Raymond Binford, Mlas Martha . Doan. Dr. and Mrs. Alexander Purdy.

Miss Edna Johnson. Miss Elsie Mar-

' shall. Mrs. Mary A. J. Ballard. Miss

Laura Gaston. Professor Philip Fur

nas. Miss Clara Comstock. Miss Ger

trude Bartel. Miss Elsla Witwer. Mrs. Vitwer of Madison, Wis., Mr. and Mrs. Ttav Morrow. Rev. and Mrs. Charies

Woodman. Dr. L. F. Ross, Miss Mary

. Anna Stubbs. Dr. Kirk Porter. Mrs

Lillian Hiss, Miss Bertha Miller, Miss

Bertha King, Professor and Mrs. J. T. , Giles. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gluys, Mr.

and Mrs. Oscar Kulghum, Mrs. Tho

mas. Miss Ethel Cox, Mr. and Mrs.'S. . J. McCracken, Dr. and Mrs. Walter Woodward, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Hadley, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Woodward. Professor and Mrs. William N. Trueblood, Professor and Mrs. E. P. Trueblood, Dr. and Mrs. Allen D. Hole, Mrs. Harlow Llndley, Professor and Mrs. Arthur Charles, Professor and Mrs. Edwin Morrison. Mr. and Mrs. F. K. Harris and son, Charles, motored from Detroit for a visit with Mrs. Harris" sister, Mrs. M. B. Galvln. Miss Ruth Van Sickle will entertain

members of the Epworth League of

First Methodist church at her home Tuesday evening.

Harry L. Bertrand of South Fourth street will leave Saturday for Camp Taylor, where he will enter the mili

tary training camp.

Miss Louise Bllckwedel. daughter of

Mrs. Fred Matti of Fountain City, and Rov O. Sick, son of Mrs. Eliza Slek,

were married this morning at ten

o'clock at the Trinity Lutheran par

sonase by Rev. Oscar Tressel. There

were no attendants and only the parents of the couple were present. After a short wedding trip to Chicago and

Milwaukee they will be at home to

their friends at 620,i - South Ninth

. street. Boys and girls of the junior and in

termediate departments of First Pres- .' byterlan church will rehearse in the church auditorium tomorrow afternoon

after school. Mrs. H. Mitchell and Mrs. C. W.

Chappel have gone to Indianapolis to

spend the week-end. The Past Chiefs club will meet Frlday afternoon with Mrs. George FerlIng. at her home, 101 South Fifth Street.

Pupils in the Music department at

Earlham will give a recital tomorrow

evening in Llndley hall at 8 o'clock.

Students of piano, voice and violin

. will take part in tne program as

follows: . ; Sonate. Op. 2, No. 1 (First movement) (Beethoven) Marcella Wallace . Piano Scherzlno (Schumann) Catherine Bunting. Vocal "Winds In the Trees" (A. Gor ing Thomas) Oneita Winslow. Scenes from An Imaginary Ballet, Op. ; 74. No. 1 (Coleridge-Taylor) Maxlne Murray. ; Fourth Mazurka (St. Saens) Luclle Johnson. Violin Solo (Selected) Dorcas Hiss. I Serenade (Stojowskl) Helen Wickett. Melodle (Moszkov.ski) Elma Henby. Banjo Song; Sing Me a Song of the Lad that is Gone (Homer) Louis ' Kelly. Spirit Flower (Campbell-Tipton) ; April Rain (R. H. Woodman) Kath- ' erine Havlland. The Mandolin Players (Reinecke) Margaret Gentle, Mary Porter. ' Mrs. Roy Geyer and Mrs. Ben Hart- ; zler have returned from Cincinnati and Middletown, O., where they have i been spending several weeks with relatives and frfends.

derson and Is now on his way back to Philadelphia where he will leave with a number of men In the selective service army, Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. John Kerr have returned fro Newcastle where they have been visiting for a few days. Miss Ethel Lockwood is in Columbus, O.. where she ' is visiting Mrs. Frank Deck. Richmond Division No. 30 of the Railway Relief Association of America, will hold a social in the Odd Fellows' hall, Saturday evening. All members and railroad frends are cordially invited. An organ recital on the new organ recently installed in Grace Methodist chnrch will be given next Monday evening at 8 o'clock. Van Deman Thomspop, organ teacher at DePauw University will give the recital and will be assisted by Mrs. Carolyn Hutton on the violin. Mrs. Edward T. Ryan will accompany. The program will be given as follows.

I Symphony VI VIdor

(a) Allegro (b) Cantabile (c) Finale Mr. Thompson

II "Elegy" Op. 27, No. 1 Miersch

"Romanza" Spring's Awak

ening Bach

Miss Hutton

III Gavotte from "Mignon"... Thomas Nocturno '. Greig In Springtime Kinder Finlandia Sibelius

Mr. Thompson IV "Legend" Op. 21 Goetzl "Thais" Massenet Miss Hutton V Sketches from Shakespeare's "Tempest" V. D. Thompson (a) The Enchanted Isle (b) Mirzanda (c) Ariel Mr. Thompson VI "Fenfare" Shelley Mr. Thompson

George Walte of Philadelphia was ?th guest' of friends here today. He Has been visiting his parents in An-

DRAFTEES IN

Continued From Page One.

"The new regulations will also affect

the following classes: "(A) Persons engaged in the serv

ing of food and drinks or either, in public places, including hotels and so

cial clubs.

"(B) Passenger elevator operators

and attendants, doormen, footmen and other attendants of clubs, hotels, stores, apartment houses, office buildings and bath houses. "(C) Persons, including usher3 and other attendants engaged and occupied in, and in connection with games, sports and amusements, excepting actual performers in legitimate concerts, operas or theatrical performers. . "(D) Persons employed in domestic service. "(E) Sales clerks and other clerks employed in stores and other mercantile establishments. Men who are engaged as above or who are idlers, will not be permitted to seek relief because of the fact that they have drawn a late order number or because they have been placed in Class II, III, or IV on the grounds of dependents. The fart that he is not usefully employed will outweight both of the above conditions. Will Extend List. "It is expected that the list of nonuseful occupations will be extended

from time to time as necessity will re

quire so as to include persons in other employments.

"Temporary absences from regular

employment not to exceed one week, unless such temporary absences are

habitual and frequent, shall not be con

sidered as idleness. Regular vacations

will not be considered as absences in

this connection.

"The regulation throws a further safeguard around men not usefully

employed, by providing that where there are compelling domestic circumstances that would not permit change of employment by the registrant without disproportionate hardship to his dependents, or where a change from

non-useful to useful employment or

occupation would necessitate a removal of the registrant or his family, local boards may give consideration to the circumstances. The regulation further provides that where such a change of employment would compel the night employment of women under circumstances which a board might deem unsuitable for such employment of women, the board may take such circumstances Into consideration in making its decision." Gen. Crowder Explains. Explaining the new regulation and

the necessity for it, Gen. Crowder

said: "The war has so far disorganized the normal adjustment of industrial man power as to prevent the enormous industrial output and national organization necessary to success. "There Is a popular demand for organization of man power but no direct draft could be imposed at present, "Steps to prohibit idleness and noneffective occupation will be welcomed by our people. i "We shall give the idlers and men

not effectively employed the choice between military service and effective

employment. Every man in the draft

age at least, must work or fight.

"This is not alone a war of military maneuvre. It is a deadly contest of

Industries and mechanics. Germany

must not be thought ot as merely pos

sessing an army, we must think of

her as an army an array in which

every factory and loom in the empire

is a recognized part in a complete

machine running night and day at terrific speed. We must make of ourselves the same sort of effective machine,

"It Is enough to ask what would hap-

CUT THIS O ITT IT IS WORTH MOSEY DON'T MISS THIS. Cut out this slip, enclose with Bo and mall It to Foley & Co., 2833 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, 111., writing your name and address clearly. You will receive In return a trial package containing Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, for coughs, colds and croup; Foley Kidney Pills, for pain In sides and back; rheumatism, backache, kidney and bladder ailments: and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly cleansing catharttc. for

ronsiipauon, Diiiousness, , neaaacho and

uuggisn Doweis. i-or sale by A.

ELKHORN MAY MEETING Sunday, May 26th: 10:00, Sunday school; 11:00, morning worship, observing "Old People's Day," with old time songs, and a message especially for eld people by the pastor. 12:00, Dinner in the basement of the church. 2:00, Special music by the choir, and sermon by Rev. P. A. Roberts, pastor of the Baptist church at Richmond. The public is invited to all of these services. As the custom has been heretofore each family 6hould bring their dinner. There will be .no evening service. SHELBY C. LEE, Pastor.

SENT TO JAIL FOR

, WHIPPING CHILD

Little Clara Wilcox. 6 years old, and William Spears, were the principals in a case of assault and battery tried in city court Thursday morning before Mayor Zimmerman. Mrs. Mary Wilcox, grandmother of the girl, took the stand and told how Spears, a distant relative by marriage, had siezed the girl and whipped her until her body was marked. She said that he had whipped the child on a

previous occasion but because of distant relationship she had not caused his arrest. Mrs. Bradshaw, who lives in the nighborhood, also told on the

stand that she had seen the marks on little Clara's body, the result of the whipping she had received. When Prosecuting Attorney Frank Strayer asked Spears if he were guilty . of the charge, he replied : "Yes. I gave her a paddling." He was sentenced to serve ten days in jail and fined $10 and costs.

CHILD DROWNS IN JAR Harrodsburg, Ky.', May 23. While playing on the back porch this afternoon the two-year-old girl baby ot

Walter Marlmon fell head foremost Into an eight-gallon ja half filled with water and was drowned..

Abyssinia is th4 original home of the coffee tree.

pen if every man In the nation turned

his hand to effective work.. We must

make ourselves effective. We must

organize for the future. We must

make vast withdrawals for the army

and immediately close up the ranks of

Industry behind the gap with an accelerating production of every useful thing In necessary measure. How is this to be done? Answer Is Plain. "The answer is plain. The first step toward the solution of the difficulty is to prohibit engagement by able bodied men in the field of . hurtful employment, idleness of ineffectual employ

ment, and thus induce and persuade

the vast, wasted excess Into useful fields. "The very situation we are now considering, however, offers great possibilities in improvement of the draft as well as great possibilities for the composition of the labor situation by effective administration of the draft Considering the selective service law, we see two principal cases of deferment to the call to military service exemption and the order numbers assigned by lot. The exemptions themselves fall into two conspicuous categories dependency and industrial employment. One protects domestic relations, the other the economic interests of the nation. Between the two there is an inevitable hyatun, for it is demonstratably true that thousands, if not millions, of dependency exemptions have no affect- of industrial protection whatever. "One of the unanswerable criticisms of the draft has been that it takes men from the farms and from all useful employments and marches them past crowds of idlers and loafers away to join the army. The remedy is simple require that any mon pleading exemption on any ground, shall plso show that he is contributing effectively to the industrial welfare of the na

tion. "The regulation itself makes plain

tne determination of the war department. The great organization of local and district boards, which has already accomplished a notable work may be relied upon to catch the spirit of the movement and sorely needed manpower will soon be flowing into the fields of endeavor or Into the other direct ion of military strength." To conserve water it is proposed at El Paso, Tex., to make use of water from refrigerating plants, which has simply been used for cooling purposes, by turning it into the public baths.

"After the Honeymoon"

how they" will appreciate this versatile entertainer, the all-record-playing Starr Phonograph ! Its "Singing Throat" of melodiously vibrant Silver Grain Spruce lends to its versions a full-bodied

softness untinged by metallic twangs. Hear this

It is the handiwork of famous musical artisans, skilled by a half-century's success in creating instruments of rarest tone. The style illustrated is $135 one of 8 beautiful models Compare its tone ! Let your ears judge Continuous Concerts Extended Payment The Starr Piano Company i fully cooperating with tha request of the War Industries Board on production. ) THE STARR PIANO CO., 935 Main Street and DRUITT BROS., 627 and 629 Main Street

ARTS and GRAFTS JEWELRY Every High School Graduate knows it is hand made. Every piece made by skilled craftsmen. Lavalieres.........$2.S0 and up Brooches.. $1.00 and up Hat Pins ..$1.00 and up Beauty Pins... $1.00 Set and up Bar Pins $1.00 and up Watch Fobs $1.50 and up Cuff Links $1.00 and up Tie Pins 50c and up Richmond Art Store 829 Main St (Richmond's Art and Gift Shop)

1 Luk

en & Co. Adv.

(((

Friday and Saturday

13 UAIN ST.

An Advantage of Selection to Early Buyers

Sale!

HELP THE RED CROSS DEFEAT THE IRON CROSS

Peerless May

BETTER-BIGGER-GREATER Mills and manufacturers helped to make this sale possible. Materials were bought the rise in prices and making was contracted for months ago. This sale is a most important one.

CHOICE OF 200 SUMMER DRESSES

Very Unusual Values They're d e 1 i g h t f ully wearable these summery fabrics so fresh and cool looking. These new tub frocks are made of Gingham Voiles Pongee Organdie and Sheer Lawns J75

May Sale Silk Dresses 14.50 to 17.50 HQ jr Values at M O There is quite an array of Summer Dresses in this group. Dresses of Georgette, Crepe de Chine, Silk Taffeta etc., in Gray, Rose, Copen, Navy, Green, Blue, Black

Mi

300 TUB SKIRTS Divided in 3 Lots $1.00 :- $1.48 -: $2.75

MAY SALE $25.00 Chiffon Taffeta Suits. . .$15.00 $25.00 Taffeta Coats $15.00 $10.00 Gingham Dresses $6.98 $12.50 Foulard Dresses . . .$9.75 $10.00 Pongee Dresses. .$7.98 Wool Outside Suits $18.50 $25.00 Poiret Twill Suits . . . .$18.50 $4.00 Georgette Waists .$2.98 $20.00 Wool Trench Coats $14.75 $3.50 Fancy Smocks $2.79 $1.50 Wash Waists .98c $1.50 House Dresses $1.19 $5.98 Taffeta Skirts ........ .$3.98

COAT SALE Vool Poplin Coats Velour Coats Serge Coats Military Coats

ill

113

"Choice of The House" Sale of Ail-wool Suits - $18.50

1

SPECIALS Friday and Saturday: " BEANS : Michigan Navy, 3 lbs..... .454 Colorado Pinto. 2 lbs.. . . .25 Lima, lb. 17c; 2 lbs (or.... 33

MILK Pet, Wilson or Carnation V Tall Cans, 2 for 25 Small cans, 4 (or ---25 Eagle Brand, 2 fcr 39 Post Toasties. 2 for 25 Calumet Baking Powd. lb. 21 Trilby Soap, 3 (or 25 Sweetheart Soap .......... 6 Herehey's Cocoa, lb. ..17 Raisins 10c, 13c, 15 Peaches. Dried, 2 lbs 25 Prunes, 2 lbs 25 Rolled Oats, 2 lbs. 15fc Macaroni, 3 lbs. (or 25 526 MAIN 526 MAIN Tea and Coffee House

OIL COOK STOVES Wickless, Valveless, Blue Flame, Automatic

1i

'yf All Done at Once

Reasons why the FLORENCE Automatic Oil Stove is the Stove for You I. SAFETY. No danger, even if a lighted burner is forgotten. It will burn itself out without explosion or damage to the stove. II. LEVER CONTROL OF HEAT: You can burn slow, medium, or intense heat without odor. III. POWER OF BURNERS : Large, powerful burners supply great volumes of clean heat but are easily controlled by the lever for slower heat. IV. ECONOMY: Intense hftat at low cost. V. FINE APPEARANCE: Hard (dull rubber) finish of black enamel. Rich dark blue enamel oil reservoir and apron. Vitreous enamel chimney jackets and nickeled levers and trimmings. Mantel finished in black enamel with nickel trimmings and blue enamel back. VI. STRENGTH, RIGIDITY AND DURABILITY OF WHOLE STOVE: Cast iron legs support the stove securely. Electric welded manifold pipes insure against leaks and for safety. Sanitary style of frame makes cleaning easy. VII. HEAT CONCENTRATED close to the cooking. Minimum of lost or wasted heat. 1 VIII. OUTLET CAP at end of manifold pipe makes it easy to drain pipe of sediment. IX. ASBESTOS KINDLER causes flame to start quickly, burn with safety, and is easily replaced at small cost. ; X. OUR GUARANTEE: "When operated in accordance with our few simple directions, this stove is guaranteed to work as represented." .

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MAIN STREET. CORNER NINTH

mm

TIKE

SHOP

W. C. PIEHL j . J. NOCTON S12 JVfaln Street PMCES APVAMCE ' ' ,

JUNE FMftST

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