Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 176, 5 June 1918 — Page 10
'AGE TEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1918
SILENT ON WAR, PREMIER GETS VOTE OF FAITH
Clemenceau Is the Victor in a Test Ballot on Confidence. (By Assorlated Pres PARIS, June 5. Premier Clemenceau, after addressing the chamber of deputies received a vote of confidence in the government of 377 against 110. As soon as the chamber of deputies opened. Premier Clemenceau arose and said he had received several notices of interpellations regarding the military situation.
"My first impulse," ne conunueu, "was to come heie and reply to them, but after reflection I realized that I could not at the present moment, although I am sure the Interpellations are due to a patriotic spirit to which I give homage." Refutes a Secret Sitting. The premier recalled that he had given explanations to the army committee, adding that he was unable to say more publicly, and would refuse to address a secret sitting of the deputies. Thn nremler here declared:
"I believe the country snould know what passes in the chamber. The chamber controls the government and the country controls the chamber " The speaker was interrupted with cheers from the left, center, and right. Deputy Marcel Cachln, leader of the Socialists, declared that the Socialists were not Influenced in giving notice of their Interpellations by any Idea of attacking the government because of old differences between M. Clemenceau and their party. Cannot Reveal Situation. The premier said It was impossible at this time to give explanations regarding the military situation. He :uM an investigation was being made
as to responsibilities, but that so far it had revealed nothing. "Certain people," he declared, "expect me to take active measures against chiefs who have deserved well nf their rnnntrv. These neoplo are
mistaken. ' It would be a cowardice I
shall never commit."
CHESTER, IND.
i
ABINGTON, IND.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Hargret of Hamilton. O., spent Thursday with Joseph Meyers and family. .. .Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Martin entertained Mr. and Mrs. Caleb Duke and Mrs. and Mrs. Will Martin and daughter Virginia at Sunday dinner Everett Hunt and family entertained Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Benson of Lynn. Ind.. and
Everett Reid and family of Pleasant Hill. O .Mr. and Mrs. Pierson Bane of near Economy spent Sunday here. . ..Mf. and Mrs. Herbert Webster and family of Greencastle and Joe Parish and family of Fountain City were Sunday guests of James Webster and family Miss Ruth Ulmer spent last
week with Morton McMahan and family Decoration Day services
were held at the M. E. church here
Sunday afternoon. Hubert ; Webster
of De Pauw University gave the address. A song was sung by the little girls, entitled, "A Patriotic Sweeping
Party. A reading was giwn by war
ry Forbes. The Chester cnorus tu
rected bi Mrs. Grace Gorman fur
nished the music. The procession, headed by the Whitewater band
marched tn the .rpmeterv where a
short DroEram was given, after which
the hand pave a. concert. . . .Everett
McMahan was the guest of Herman Shaffer Sundav Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Morrow of Parker City were Sunday
euests of Wm. Morrow and ramuy
..Misses Mary and Martha Evans of
Richmond spent Sunday with Miss Ruth turner Mrs. Wm. Pickett of
Williamsburg and Mrs. Frank Pickett
and Mrs. Emma Bure of this place
visited Mrs. Ulmer Monday afternoon
rr Wiles and family of Farmland
and A. T. Parker and family of Rich
mond an d Ellsworth Gwin. spent Sun
day afternoon with Rev. L. F. Ulmer
and family The "Excelsiors' ana
"Wide Awakes" of the M. E. Sunday
school will eive an ice cream supper
at the hall Saturday evening June 15.
The public is cordially invited to at
tend Mr. and Mrs. uine tjoerner and daughter, Carrie, spent Monday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kendall Wallace Kendall who left
Mav 13 for Columbus barracks has
been moved and is now at Fort Snel-
ling, Minn. His parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Kendall received an interest
ing letter from him this week, telling of his trip from Columbus to Fort Snelling and of his surroundings at the
present. He says they wash their clothes under a shower bath so he kills two birds with one stone and
takes a bath and does his washing at
the same time Wilson Kenaan still remains very poorly Mrs. Wm.
Pickett of WilUamsDurg nas neen vis
iting Frank Pickett and family.
RAID MAY SOLVE
CYCLOPS' FATE, LONG A MYSTERY
TURKS ARE RESPONSIBLE.
call of General von Falkenhayn from Palestine. He , has been succeeded, as head of the German staff in charge
of operations there, by General Llman
German military mission at Constantinople.' : , .... i y
SUFFRAGE BILL PASSES. WASHINGTON. June 5. Woman suffrage for Hawaii was authorized a senate bill passed by the bouse and j sent to the . president. '
(By Associated Press)
AMMtKUAM, June o. a 5 ., ,Wo - nDnira1 TJman th Wt Indies, to Drotect the
to the Munich Neuste Nftchricnten, "l r . . . "JY Vi,
the Turks are . responslblejol
Remark of Sub Commander
Leads to Belief Collier May Be Victim. WASHINGTON, D. C, June 5. Did
the German submarines which raided
American . shipping off the Jersey
coast destroy the missing collier Cy
clops, or did they capture it at sea put
aboard a prize crew, and send it to
Germany?
Out of the mysterious disappearance
of the American collier, now missing
three months exactly to a day, mis
nuestinn has been raised by the pass
intr rema rk of one of the submarine
commanders to Capt. Lowry of the
steamer Texel that the U-Doats naa
been on the American side of the At
lantic for two months. Miaht Have Been Sunk.
It is Dossible. though not probable,
naval experts say, that the collier with its ereat careo of manganese
and some 300 persons aboard might have been "spurious versenkt" sunk without a trace after it left Barba
dos, where it had put in for fuel. It is more likely, however, they say, that the Cyclops, sailing homeward some time after March 4, when it cleared from Barbados, was met at night by submarines, possibly by pre-
arrangement, at a time wnen oniy an officer on the bridge and a small watch on deck was to be reckoned with. Might Make Hiding Place. If the Germans met the ship by arrangement it would have been easy to send an armed crew below to quarters where most of the men were asleep and take possession of the ship. Whether the ship then could have been skillfully navigated through the allied blockade to Germany or hidden in some out of the way port only adds to the mystery. The statement of the U-boat com
mander that he has been in American
waters two months adds to the taeory
of those who have maintained that
thpre is a submarine base on this side
The submarines could not otherwise
hope to remain away from home ports
for so long a time.
BiiililliiilffilllliilW
imiiiitiiiiiiiiiiM
NUS
BAUM
The month of May was a busy month and there should be no let up for June. Summer Time is Wash Skirt Time. Our Pre-shrunk Wash Skirts are the talk of the town and sales are far in excess of last season.
Mrs. Omar Bertram and daughters,
Colleene, Vlrgile and Gladys spent Ti,oaHav afternoon with Mrs. Charles
Glune and daughter Letha, of near
Richmond Mr. and iwrs. Mar it:v ot, Hmiffhteiv Mrs. Harold Clem
ents, and Mr. and Mrs. Benton Shriner Mtsa Fvelvn O'Melia visited Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Weiss and family Thurs
day afternoon.:.. Mrs. Clarence ticui day and family spent Thursday after nrttt with Mrs T.on Wood and family
Mrs. Earl Helms visited a part of ool- with her narents. Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Turner Joseph and
Raymond Weiss and Hilda and L,u.ian Weiss called on Mr. and Mrs. William
Merkamp and family Friday evening Mrs. Addison Roby 6pent Wednes Hv afternoon In Richmond Mr
onH Mrs .Tames Jarrett and daughter
Celiabelle, and Mr. and Mrs. Parker
Tarrett snent Sunday with Mr. pna
Mrs. William Jarrett and family near
nirVimond Mra. Louise Bertram en
tertained as Sunday guests, Mr. and Mrs rharles filunt and daughter,
T enths! Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Tice
Turner and family, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Tice and family, Omar Bertram ana
daughter Colleene Mrs. Omar Bertram and daughters Virgile and Gladys visited Sunday with her father, Frank Brad burn of Centerville Everett Alexander of Richmond spent Sunday with Mrs. Parker Mr. and Mrs. Austin Morgan and daughter Cleo, and Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Higgins motored to Frankford Saturday Miss Colleen Plankenhorn visited with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Noah Plankenhorn, Wednesday night and Thursday. ....Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Weiss and family were, George Latlch. Miss Margaret Latich, Mr. and Mrs. William Merkamp and son Robert and daughter Jeanette, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Toschlog and Mr. and Mrs. William Flatley and sons Edward and Richard Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Kinder and son Charles visited Sunday with relatives in Centerville Mr. and Mrs. Dye of Richmond spent Sunday with Mrs. Mary Rodomburg Russell Stanley of Boston and Miss Marcella Baummel of near Richmond, June Dodderidge and Miss HazeJ Wilson spent Sunday evening with Miss Jeanette Merkamp Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Deer and Theodore Stinson visited Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs Tiarrv .Tarrett Miss Helen Ham
pent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs.
James Wilson, near Liberty tr.nriren'a nlcht will be hold here In the
Christian church a week from Sunday,
June Id.
The feature of this year's exhibition i
of the British Horticultural Society is j
a new orchid, with mauve petals ana
rirh nnrnle tit), which has been named
the fieneral Pershing. London Corre
spondence of New York Tribune.
Don't Cut Alfalfa Too Soon Kline
31 .
WAR BREAD DEMONSTRATION TO BE GIVEN THURSDAY.
A war bread demonstration will be
Given bv Miss Nina Short, home de
monstration agent for Wayne county, at the home of Mrs. Andrew Burgess
ruar Richmond on the Ablngton pike, Thursday afternoon. The meeting Mil begin at 2 o'clock and all women of the community are urged to attend. The demonstration, which is for the purpose of teaching the women how to conserve wheat and flour, is lo be held under the auspices of the Ladies' Aid society of the Second English Lutheran church.
EY J. C. KLINE, County Agent. On account of the hay shortage a
number of farmers are already cutting the alfalfa hay. I have known
of men who killed the altalfa by cuttine it too soon. When the new
chnnta heerin to appear at
the rrown of the riant, just above the
surface of the ground the alfalfa is j
ready to cut. These shoots should
he about one inch to two inches in
length. The shoots are the starting of the second growth of alfalfa and if the crop is cut before these appear it. mav severely injure the second
growth or kill the crop entirely. Usu
ally when the blossoms begon to appear it is time to look for the small shoots.
BOOK SELLING FAST.
A SET OF SERVICEABLE CAPS our These models are nice for
silk, satin, poplin, cravenette and other
rubberized ciotn. iney are iueai iui motoring and traveling. The nattem includes the three styles
portrayed. It is cut in 2 sizes, medium
and large. io. I win require x jaru. No. 2 will require yard, No. 3 will require yard of 27-inch material for the medium size. A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents in silver or stamps. Name Address City i Size Address Pattern Department, Palladium.
(By Associated Press) LONDON, June 5. AH the big book stores in London renort that the "War
Cabinet Report for 1917," issued as
an official Blue Book and sold to tne public at 25 cents a copy, has had a hetter sale from the day of issue than
any other book on the market. Six editions or printings were exhausted
within a month.
A Tire for a Dollar
All tires in our stock in all sizes are priced to sell at a profit of one dollar above cost price. All tubes sold at a profit of 50 cents. This means all kinds of tires from the cheapest to the best.
5,000 Tires and Tubes will be sold this year on this basis at the present pace. LEE, THE TIRE MAN No. 8 South 7th St., Richmond (Next to Reed's Hdw. Store)
1
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CANNING DEMONSTRATION AT FRIENDS CHURCH FRIDAY.
The Coterie club has arrared for a canning demonstration to be given by Miss Nina Short, home demonstration agent for Wayne county, at the North A street Friends church, Friday afternoon. Miss Short will demonstrate the cold packing process of vegentables and fruits. An invitation Is extend?d to all women to attend this meeting,, which will begin at 2 o'clock.
STRAWBERRIES For Canning, at The BEE HIVE Grocery
TOMORROW
LOW SHOES for WOMEN!
FELTMANS JKOi 11 m smart si Wmfy M
Pumps of White Reignskin Cloth, Black Kid and Patent Kid. No spapelier or more sprightly models have ever graced our store. Equipped with dressy high heel or sensible heel for walking.
White Reign
skin Cloth
"$3.50
Patent and Black Kid $4.50 and $5.00
SfasS
tore
Indiana's Largest Shoe Dealers 8 STORES 724 M AIN ST.
One-Third Off
yT We have on hand
about 50 Skirts. A
few slightly soiled, values $1.50 to $4.50. Piques, Gaberdines, Poplins, and a few Linens. One-third Off While They Last
iiiii
mm
$1
for Quick Selling
till! . : r I
Gingham House Dresses in plains and stripes. Also a few Lawns in this lot. Values equal to a year ago, while they last. . . .$1.25
Ladies $1 White Shirt Waists We have always offered the best $1.00 Waist in Richmond. We have never advanced the price or cheapened the quality. Compare our $1 Waists with what others are showing up to $2.00.
We Have a Large Stock, Big Assortment (See East Window) For Quick Selling $1.00
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UQLMJIUUY 1 Bv XI III IN II Wl
III t . -W I 13 Tv i n il V 1 1 J'l
Hoosier til M. -l
Roll Door, or t umUXi 1 1 1 1 L' T flJr' -UJJi0C 1 Hinged Door . -rTTTTm k I I " ift IlllfT rJ ONI Y 2 n&vs J&m,
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! Will tne noosiers U-.-.. fgpjfit j - I Last That Long? jCF-'"h -:
i.
Sale ends tomorrow if the balance is taken. Doors open at 8 a. m. tomorrow. No Hoosier orders accepted by telephone. Pay only $1 when you pick out your Hoosier.
Pav the balance $1 weekly only 5c a mea
Your money back if you are not delighted. The Hoosier Company has sent us word that we may take until Saturday to conclude our clearance, but it seems impossible for our stock to last that long. At the present rate, all will be gone tomorrow night ! The women who'll get these bargains are those who don't take chances, but come without fail on Thursday. All you ladies who don't have a kitchen cabinet will frooiv nrlmit that vnu'd like to have a Hoosier. Isn't
The Oversize Base Has 21 More Space
for Pots and Pans that so? And isn't it true that you'd like to get it before the price goes up? The raise takes effect the instant the few remaining Hoosiers are sold. Isn't it a fact that you can easily manage to pay $1 a week only 5 cents a meal? Then what can possibly prevent you from seizing this golden opportunity? Resolve right now as you read this warning, to get one of these last Hoosiers while you can. All your days you'll be glad you had courage to act.
Vital Features Combined in Hoosier Cabinets Only
" i
Booftlnr's Revolving Bark of 7 Alr-tUtht dux t -proof spice Jars is xclualvo.
The Shaker Floor Sifter sifts flour four
times faster most.
The Uncluttered Cupboard Rives twice the average work space.
Hoosier's Tws-W at (mi tear Bin iiolii twice the ordinary amount.
Hoonlnr's Poeeeliron Table Top j!ldes out 16 inches from the base.
The Hoosier Cabinet is a LaborSaving Machine, a Kitchen System and Germ-proof Food Container combined. All features have been certified by the Hoosier Council of Kitchen - Scientists, composed of the leading household authorities.
It saves about 2 miles. of walking a day, according to one great expert. The Hoosier Company has held out the last against a war-time price raise. Now the time has come when Hoosiers, too, must be increased. Before that happens
MM ITS T 1 U U -
you have this chance to buy at ths old-time price. Have a beautiful Hoosier an orderly kitchen with half the steps, and half the work. All your life, you'll enjoy it every day. Get it tomorrow without fail.
Summer Furniture Sale Now Going On.
