Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 186, 17 June 1918 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, JUNE 17, 1918.
Mln Gertrude L. Pardelck left for Charleston, West Va.. Saturday morning where she has accepted a position In the Actuary's department of an Insurance company of that city. Miss Pauline Foster of Dayton, O., was the week end guest of Mrs. R. C. Johnson at her home on North D street. Mrs. J. Everett Jones of Denver, Col., Is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Will Campbell. Mrs. Jones formerly lived in Richmond. Miss Ruby Clark, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clark, and Wayland Kelsey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kelsey, were married Saturday evening at eight o'clock in the study of Reid Memorial church. Rev. J. S. 11111 officiated using the ring ceremony. Only a few of the immediate relatives were present at the wedding. Th bride wore a blue taffeta gown with blue hat and a corsage of sunburst roses. Immediately after the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Kelsey left for Pittsburgh, Pa., where Mr. Kelsey is employed as inspector in one of the large steel plants. Mrs. Willard Raines spent the week end In Portland visiting friends. " Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hoening and son Harold left for Philadelphia where they will reside. Mr. Hoening has been transferred there with the Intrnatlonal Harvester company. Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Mitchel, Miss Lucille Gwyn and Cadet J. H. Lewis motored to Dayton, Ohio, Saturday. The Child Welfare committee of "Wayne township will weigh and measure children Wednesday afternoon from 3:30 to 4:30 o'clock at school No. 9, on the Henley road east of Richmond. All mothers are requested years of age. Miss Gace King of Purdue university, assistant Junior club worker, will be here tomorrow to organize a Junio high school girl's canning club. Every girl in the city between the ages of 10 and 18 years Is urged to attend the meeting tomorrow evening in the high school building at 8:30 o'cloock. Cadet J. H. Lewis of West Point is visiting his cousin. Miss Lucille Gwyn at her home on South A street. The Day Nursery will be open each afternoon this week from 3:30 to 5 o'clock to examine children who were not measured and examined during the recent examination. A doctor will be there each afternoon and mothers having children under five years of age, who have not beeen measured and examined, are requested to bring them there any timme during these hours, There will be no appointments. Raymond Beetley was, pleasantly surprised Friday evening at his home by a number of his friends in celebration of his fifteenth birthday anniversary. The evening was spent in a social manner and refreshments were served. Those in the party were Miss Edith and Miss Grace Hunt, Miss Bernlce Laymon, Miss Helen Firth, Miss Ruby Hatfield, Miss Helen Brown, Miss Lucille Shrowder, Miss Irene Beetley, Walter Frame, Barnett Brown. Gerald Richey, Robert Hornaday, Gerald Beetley, William Mendenhall, Ernest Hoos, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Beetley, Mrs. Olive Morgan, Mr. and Mrs. William Beetley.
Miss Echo Roland has returned from
Indianapolis where she has been ,
studying in the Metropolitan school of Music. JUST THE MOST COMFORTABLE MODEL FOR A HOUSE WORK DRESS
24S3 The fullness of this dress is held in at the waistline by elastic or a drawstring, but it may be gathered under a belt if preferred. The sleeve may be finished in wrist or elbow length. The right front is shaped at the closing. Percale, drill, gingham, chambray, linen, lawn, repp, poplin and galatea may be used for this mode'. Till pattern is cut in 7 sizes: 34, SC. 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust measure. Size 38 requires 7 yards of 27-inch material. The dress measures about 2 yards at the lower edge?. A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents In silver or stamps.
Name
Address
City
Size
Address Pattern Department, Palladium.
Mrs. W. Y. Voyle and children, Robert and Katberlne, have returned to their home in Elyrla. Ohio, arter a three weeks' visit with Mr. and Mrs. George Chrisman on Klnsey street. They were accompanied to Dayton by Mr. Chrisman. Mr. and Mrs. George W. Davis, Mrs. Ida Carpenter and daughter Jane and Miss Anna Nicholson motored to Dayton today to witniss'an exhibition of French avlatoors at Wright field. Miss Esther A. Hennlng daughter of Mrs. Sanford Henning of South Seventh 6treet and Walter B. Miller, son of Mrs. H. G. Miller of La Junta, Co., were married Saturday evening at the home of the bride's mother. Rev. Arthur Cates of Union City performed the ceremony in the presence of the relatives and a few intimate friends. Prior to the ceremony Misa Jeanett Kramer played a program of bridal music, changing to the wedding march as the bridal party entered. The bride was attended by her sister, Miss Dorothy Henning, and the groom was attended by Frank D. Walker. The bride wore a dainty dress of white organdie with a corsage of pink rose buds. Mr. and Mrs. Miller left Saturday evening for Lafayette where Mr. Miller Is in training in the motor mechanics unit. The bride is a graduate of Richmond high school and has been clerk at Garfield high school for several years. The groom Is a graduate of Bradley Polytechnic institute at Peoria, 111., and was an instructor in Garfield high school. Mrs. Miller will return here when her husband is transferred to another comp. The guests at the wedding were Dr. and Mrs. W. P. Walker of Mason City, 111., Mrs. Mary A. Kauffman, Mrs. Amelia Henning, Miss Jeanette Kramer, Mrs. J. W. Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Kittle, Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Pfeiffer, Fred Pickett, Miss Bonnie Carman, Miss Dorothy Henning and Mrs. Mary Henning.
All circles of Aid society or First Presbyterian church will hold a picnic at Honeysuckle Hill in Glen Miller Wednesday afternoon. All women are urged to attend. For any person who Is not able to walk from the car line to the hill, an automobile will be provided. The women are requested to be at the church at 5 o'clock where automobiles will be waiting. Supper will be served at 6 o'clock. A luncheon bridge will be given at the Country club Wednesday. Luncheon will be served at one o'clock and bridge will be played in the afternoon. Those who do not care to play card, may form groups for knitting. The affair will be very informal and ail
women members of the club are in
vited. Those who care to, are asked to form their tables for playing before coming, however this is not nec
essary. The committee in charge of
the party is Mrs. W. L. Magaw, chair
man, Mrs. Harry Lontz, Miss Esther
Coate and Mrs. Wilbur Hibberd. Reservations for the luncheon should be made not later than tomorrow night. Prof. Frederick Hicks will give the second of his. series of recitals tomorrow evening in the high school auditorium at 8 o'clock. His beginning class will give the program tonight. Tomorrow evening the string quartette composed of Hilda Kirkman, first violin: Lucile Nusbaum, cello; Neva Bowman second violin, and F. K. Hicks, violin, will assist on the program. The public is invited. The numbers will be as follows: Heart Bowed Down Balfe Howard Detrich Air Varie No. 2 Dancla Irene Jarra Berceuse from "Jocelym" Godard Marie McManis Hungarian Sketch Howath William Romey Spring Awakening Bach Claud Miller Bolero Bohm Malvern Soper The Mill (from Op. 192 Quartette) J. Raff Berceuse Jarnefelt Ralph Giles Romanza Simonette Martha Webb Au Varie No. 5 Dancla Charlotte Colvin Serenade Badine Marie Grace Barton Soineiur de Wieniawski. . . ...Haesche Paul Swain Faust Waltz Guonod Helen AddlemanTamborin Hasse Stella Knode Gavotte No. 2 Popper Dorothy Heironimus The business meeting and social of the Epworth league of First Methodist church, which was to have been held Tuesday evening at the church, has been called off owing to the condition of Miss Ruth VanSickle who was injured in the automobile accident yesterday. Miss VanSickle is fourth vice president of the league. A short business meeting will be held tomorrow evening at the home of Miss Teresa Sharpe, 120 North Fourteenth street. All officers and members are urged to be present. The Missionary societies of Friends' churches will meet Wednesday afternoon in the community house in West Richmond. Tiano pupils of Miss Ruth Peltz will give their annual recital Friday evening at 8 o'clock in the high school auditorium. An invitation is extended to the public to attend The annual convention of the Phi Delta Kappa fraternity will be held in Kokomo June 24, 25 and 26. The dinners will be held in accordance with the food regulations. A huge service flag is being made by the Kokomo chapter which is to be honored for the 3,000 members now serving in different branches of military service. As a courtesy to Mrs. R. C. Johnson nee Miss Martha Gaar Jones, Mrs. J. Everett Jones, of Denver, Col., entertained with an informal dinner at the Arlington hotel Saturday evening. Covers were laid for Mrs. R. C. Robinson, Miss Ros6 Jones, Oliver Jones,
jvnss t'auune Foster of Dayton. O., Mrs. E. E. Jones, Mrs. Sara Share, Miss Rose Dunn and Mrs. J. E. Fos-
WORK OF U. S. ENGINEERS IN FRANCE IS VITAL; THEY MUST MOVE SUPPLIES
MVt4
'
" 0ioL ' ijfy lit
Upon the members of the American engineer forces abroad rests the responsibility of moving much of the supplies and equipment for the armies. The prompt delivery of these products is vital to the winning of the war. T4re photo shows a 25-ton lift by two American cranes in France. The cranes are lifting a locomotive part from a freight car.
Salesmen Blazed Trail For Hun Advance Into France He Says
JAMES W. FISK TO SPEAK HERE
More than 3,000 persons packed the Coliseum Sunday night to hear Prof. Claude Michelon of Paris, France, lecture on "HowWe Live in the Trenches," and to see the four reels of official. French war pictures that were shown on the screen. A free-will collection taken for the benefit of war orphans and needy families of France netted several hundred dollars. Prof. Michelon, who was brought here by the Wayne County Council of Defense, is an officer in the French army in America on a furlough as one of the executive heads of the FrenchAmerican Alliance. During the first 13 months of the war he took an active part and during most of this time was in the front line trenches. He told of his experiences on the battle line and described conditions as they now exist in France and Belgium. "Is a Scientific War." "This is a scientific war," Prof. Michelon said, "and will be won by scientific war machines, and scientific generalship. The spirit of the American boys who are now fighting with our own brave soldiers is one of the most beautiful things I can imagine. There is only one trouble with the American soldiers, and that trouble is that the officers cannot hold them back. They seem to want to be in the thickest of the fray at all times, are always ready to go over the top, and I want to tell you that is the
spirit, backed by scientific leadership
that will win this war. I tell
"One of the things they did that is not generally known in this country was to placard France in a manner that was apparently innocent, but proved in reality a blazed trail for the Kaiser's armies. Before the war salesmen would call on grocery stores and sell bullion cubes. If they could not sell the cubes they would offer 1,000
of them free to the grocer or dealer i
as a special inducement to get him
James W. Fisk, supervisor of the Business Service Division of the New Jersey State Chamber of Commerce, will be the speaker at the membership meeting of the Commercial club to be held Friday night. Mr. Fisk has had a wide business experience, and was at one time director of selling service for a New York firm, and as assistant manager of the association of adver
tising clubs of the world. He will j
speak on "How to Sell, one or nis
to handle that brand. When thev had ! most popular business institute lec-
succeeded in placing an order with a tures. grocer in this wav then the salesman I The organization of manufacturers
would put large colored signs out in i for war industry through the regional
front of the store to advertise this brand of soup cubes. These signs were of yellow, red, blue, green, and many other colors, and the color of them was the trail that the German armies followed. "A few months before the war broke out these salesman called at
au ui iiiese grocery stores ana piacea WASHINGTON, June 17. It has a new stock of bullion cubese in the , become necessary to organize a speplace, and this new stock proved to pi,! tnrC(, fnP fho nnmn nmo n
have been poisoned. As a result of j handle the work of increasing the althis thousanads of our men, women lotment3 to civil war veterans under unrl r n 1 1 r 1 ran Atari rTiot to ot '
tern Germany uses i a coir Yt Ar r
" J c tt.I L Yv, 'itive too late to include the increases
ric o Tf ,, , B. ln the checks fr Jlv 4, byt they will else we may see fit to call hem?" . be added l0 the net quarterly ay. Tells of Marne Battle. ! y
i svstem will be exnlained at the meet
ing, and the campaign for farm labor will be discussed.
Special Force Needed To Handle Pension Raise
i udi is me sys" , the act of congress recently signed by is it any wonder th pr,jHent Th0 ia homo
i ruei uai uai inns,
The professor told briefly of the !
first great battle of the Marne in
The act provides $30 a month for
which he took an active part as thef"' , T ' commander of one of the sectors servf,d nmfy d,a?f and le?s than six n,,rinr thB thin, f tho ! months in the civil war and were hon-
juu "-v .." "V: sevPTitv-twn
years
Those who are old or over and
DESCRIBES FIRST GREAT BATTLE OF THE MARNE
"God Was With Us" Says French Officers Who Commanded Sector. Professor Claude Nichelon of Paris, France, who commanded sector No. 14 of the French army at the first great battle of the Marne ln the early pail of the war, graphically described the battle In an interview with a Palladium reporter Sunday night. "The battle began on September II, 1914, shortly after war was declared," Prof. Michelon said. "We fought against the most overwhelming odds imaginable. The German armies were thoroughly equipped and prepared for the struggle. Each man had an extra suit, extra underwear, extra shoes, plenty to eat, drink and smoke, while our armies lacked all of these necessities. Yet we held them back, and I will ask you why? Because God was on our side, the righteous side. "The German armies had passed through Belgium and were on the direct road to Paris. In an open space less than 10 miles square, more than 5,000,000 men were engaged in the battle. We had no trenches but fought, as I said, in the open field. 40 Divisions to 19. ''There were 40 divisions of the German army all well equipped, against 19 of the French, very poorly equipped. For seven days we fought and bled and died, knowing that we were fighting for our lives and the lives of our loved ones for our honor above all else. "Though we had very little food and ammunition, the spirit of the French never waivered, not a man showed weakness. "Every hour messages came to us from Paris begging that we hold them, hold them, hold them, until our leaders at the capital could prepare to aid the armies already in the field. And our brave boys held them! "One night of September 10, 1914, General Naunouly in communication with General Gallieni, military governor of Paris, secured promise of a final combined effort. 'On the same night 30,000 men, fresh and with the spirit of Lafayette in their bosoms, came from Paris. They had been recruited frcm all parts of the city, from every branch of life. They were bankers, professors, business men, marching side by side with common laborers, but all there for the same great cause. Foch Sees Weak Spot. "This is what turned the tide of the battle. General Foch, now in supreme
command, saw a weak spot in the kai
ser's line and he threw every available division against it. The result was that the German army was split in two and the victory won.
"This shows the spirit of France, which is the same spirit of America and all of our allies. It means that we
cannot lose." Prof. Michelon with his sector was at Bercy, and his brigade in this battle was in the very thickest of the fight.
He is modest regarding his own part in the affair and requested urgently
that personality be not mentioned. "It is all for France," he said, "and
mere personality has no place in the
fields of battle. We must forget selves
and fight to the last ditch for our
country, by no means for individual honor." Prof. Michelon is acquainted with
UE ADS WOMEN'S . LABOR DIVISION
If is' 1 f v ' t 'mis f ,
Mrs. Hilda Richards. This is the most recent iotoirraph of Mrs. Hilda Mulhauser Richards, head of the women's division of the U. S. employment service, department nf labor. x General Joffre, "Pappa" Joffre, as ho loves to call him. In his office at the Paris School of French in Indianapolis, he has a photograph in which he himself Is seen with General Joffre and other prominent military men of France. He is expecting to return to France to again take part In tha fight in the course of a few weeks, but as yet has received no definite information as to when this will be. As executive head of the French-American Alliance in Indiana he has" accomplished a great deal of good through securing aid for the needy women and children of France. He Is well acquainted througtout the state and because of this may be asked to remain here indefinitely. But Prcf. Michelon himself is very anxious to get back into action, and he has requested that he be permitted to return.
WHAT GOOD IS MONEY WHEN YOUR FEET HURT? We treat corns, bunions and ingrown toe nails and give electrical foot massage for tired, aching feet. In connection we do manicuring, shampooing, hair dressing, scalp treatment and facial massage for both ladies and gentlemen. Dr. E. N. PERKINS CHIROPODIST Phone 2499. 403 Second Nat'i Bank Building. Office hrs. from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. M. E. Steele, Mgr.
Ihe SaMy co !l!f
this war, but with the aid of America
we are bound to win."
Describing the conditions as they existed in France just before the outbreak of the war in 1914, the professor said that Germany's spy system was 99 1 percent efficient. "Immediately after the war of 1870 the Germans came back into France by the thousands. They did not come as Germans but as Holland Dutch, and they overspread our land with a net work of spie3 that we are forced to adamit was absolutely efficient and thorough. They took over many of our big hotels, where even the maids and porters were German spies gathering bit by bit all of the information they could secure. They came as philanthropists and lovers of freedom; they assumed control of vice districts and sought to spread the lie throughout the world that the French were a worthless people. Thus they proved themselves traitors. Germany was preparing in just this way for the present great war for the last 40 years.
erpillar tanks, big guns and ships, and luTl"v ,ie yeai - raonin' ana actual pictures of battles taken close and a half 'ears. f38 a month, and
to the front line trenches. l" ears or over' u a montn. There were also several scenes Pensioners now on the rolls under taken recently showing the American act of M n 1912 wil1 get this in-
boys in the field. They were shown
arriving in France and General Pershing was seen with several detachments in Paris where servicese were held before thestatue of Lafayette. General Foch, now in supreme command, and with whom Prof. Michelon is personally acquainted, was seen on the field commanding the troops.
on their part. Soldiers and sailors of
the civil war pensioned at lower rates under some law other than the act of i May 11, 1912, must file application un-j der the act to receive the benefits of;
the new law
Palladium Want Ads Pay.
EDWARD KLUTE
EARL SMITH
KLUTE SMITH
FUNERAL DIRECTORS 14 North Sth St AUTO SERVICE I I
Phone 1284
BIG
MANUFACTURERS TO MEET WEDNESDAY
Manufacturers from the ten counties included in the Richmond industrial sub-region will attend the organization meeting to be held here Wednesday at 1 o'clock. Notices are being sent out by the Commercial club to the Chambers of Commerce and manufacturers ln the different counties, urging a large attendance at the meeting. The chief of the tenth regional district, which has Cincinnati as its center, is expected to be present at the meeting. H. A. Dill, president of the Commercial club, will preside, and C. W. Ullman, secretary of the club, wllll explain the organization. A general chairman from the sub-region, and industrial committees will be appointed. The purpose of the regional industrial
organizations is to obtain manufactur
ing classified as essentials, for those industries now putting out non-essentials, and to procure war contracts for manufacturers desiring them.
WINCHESTER SOLDIERS LEAVE.
WINCHESTER, Ind., June 17. Twelve registrants left here today for Ft. Harrison, having volunteered to enter the mechanical department service. A big demonstration was given them at the station. Prof Lee L. Driver makin gthe address. June 24, thirty more registrants will leave for Camp Sherman, Ohio, and on June 28, four will leave for Purdue to enter the automobile school.
D D
m
on
3 C
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30 $45 $55 $85 $100 $150
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There
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