Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 187, 18 June 1918 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 1918.

Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp will give a dance Thursday evening In the 1. O. O. F. hall. A special Jazz orchestra composed of a mandolin, soprano banJo, Hawaiian guitar, French horn, Ukolele, Mandolin guitar, bass violin, piano and drums, will furnish music for the evening. Harry Frankel of New York city, who Is spending the summer here, will be soloist for the evening. A small admission wil be charged for the balcony, the money to be turned over to the Red Cross. The Middleboro Aid society will hold a market all day Saturday in the McGulre building. The public Is Invited. All women of the Country club and visiting guests are invited to the luncheon and bridge party at the club tomorrow. Luncheon will be served at one o'clockand bridge will be played in the afternoon. All reservations for luncheon should be made as early a3 possible. Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Dickinson of Tuscaloosa, Ala., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Dickinson at their home on Ft Wayne avenue. Yesterday afternoon Mrs. E. C. Dickinson gave an informal reception for her guest. Fifty women called during the afternoon. The Golden Rule Bible class of First Methodist church will meet Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Leroy Nichols at her home 774 National road, west.

The Penny club will meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. Clara Thomas at her home on North Eighth street. Miss Martha Groan of New Albany who has been the guest of Miss Doris Groan for a few weeks, returned to her home. She was accompanied by Miss Doris Groan who will visit in New Albany and Louisville, Ky., .for some time. Captain Stephen C. Markley of Camp Sherman, O., is visiting his wife here for a few days. Rev. and Mrs. J. G. Bovey of North Baltimore, O., came here to visit with Captain Markley during his furlough. This evening Mrs. Markley will give a six o'clock dinner for her guests. Covers will be laid for Rev. and Mrs. J. (I. Bovey, Mr. and Mrs. Henry ZuttermeiEter, Miss Vera Zuttermeister, Marion Zuttermeister, and Captain and Mrs. S. C. Markley. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tuea have returned from Newcastle where they have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. D. F. Gregory. The Good Cheer Bible class of First Methodist church will meet Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Carl Wadman at her home, 27 North Fifth street. ;A11 members are urged to attend the meeting. Miss Edith Fox has returned from a short visit in Newcastle. ' Mr. and Mrs. S. I. Horner have received word that their son, Elden W. Horner, has arrived safely in France. Mr. and Mrs. John Keller, of Montpelier and Henry Rosenbush of Union City, who motored to Spencer, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Adam Feldman over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Morrison entertained a number of friends at dinner Sunday at their country home in honor of Mrs. Alice Conley. who celebrated her birthday anniversary. The dining

room was attractively decoratea wun flowers and covers were laid for Mrs. Pearl Conley Seibert of Colorado, Mr. and Mrs. Ancil Powell of Muncie, Mr. and Mrs. Garfield Cox of Carlos Cltv. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Conley of Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. William Howell and Kenneth Fritz of Modoc, Earl Conley and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Petro and daughter, Alice Louise of Economy, Mr. and Mrs. William Morrison, Miss Ruth Howell of Modoc, Miss Belle Vore of Richmond, Miss Idonna and Miss Naomi Cox of Carlos. Miss Gerlene and Miss Frances Conley, and Miss Gladys Morrison of Economy, Miss Mary Alice Conley of Richmond, Clarence and Paul Conley and William Morrison, Jr. The Middleboro Aid society will give an entertainment at the church, Wednesday evening, June 26. Refreshments will be served. Proceeds will be turned over to a war fund. Miss Maggie II. Miller who is spending the summer in southern California, was a visitor last week at the exhibit of southern California products which is maintained free to the public in the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce.

AERIAL DEFENSE STATIONS TO GUARD COAST LINE; NEW YORK SHINING M ARK FOR HUN PLANE RAID

The Woman's Loyal club will meet tomorrow evening at eight o'clock in the Moose hall on North Tenth street.

The United Brethren Aid society will hold an all-day meeting tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Eli Cook, 461 Linden avenue. The day will be spent in sewing for the Red Cross. Mrs. W. L. Misener received a cablegram this morning announcing the safe arrival of First Lieutenant W. L. Misener in France. Dr. Misener is In the medical corps. The Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary society of St. Paul Lutheran church will meet tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in the chapel. Mrs. Frank Bescher and daughter, Dorothy, of St. Louis, Mo., arrived today for ten-days' visit with Mr. and Mrs. Frauk Banks on South Fourth

6treet. Section 3 of the Aid society of Grace Methodist church wil lmeet tomorrow afternoon with Miss Iva and Miss Edna Hort at their home on the

The heart of New York. The upper right-hand picture shows a part of lower Broadway, the huge Equitable building towers over the other buildings. In the left foreground of that picture is the Trinity church steeple; back of it the Singer building. The photo in the upper right-hand corner shows the Municipal .building. The lower Cicture is that of the Woolworth uilding. War Secretary Baker has asked congress to provide for sixteen aerial defer.se stations to guard

against airp.ane and submarine attacks by the Germans. Thirteen of them are to be placed along the Atlantic coast line, some near tho scenes of the recent raids by the German U-boats. These stations, when built, will furnish better protection to New York, as well as other points along the coast. The metropolis is believed to be the lojrical place for the Huns to attempt their first air raid, if one is staged. Its preat docks and immense building3 form ideal targets. That's why city officials have ordered all brilliant Whts dimmed at night.

GOW BRINGS $310 AT P. A. REID SALE

About 1,590 people attended the

sale at Pettis A. Reid's farm Monday at West Florence, between Boston,

Ind., and Eaton, O., and more than $12,000 worth of cattle was sold. Among the principal foreign buyers

who attended the sale were I. Robert Blackburn of Dayton, O.; George W.

Weber of Indianapolis; P. C. Ross of Pickley, O.; Holden Brothers of Higginsport, O.; H. J. Craig of Oxford, O.; and Harry Stokes of Waynesville, O. Hundreds of local buyers and farmers from this section of the state and from western Ohio, were also present. The cattle sold for $85 and up per head, the highest price for one cow being $310. The Red Cross women of Campbells-

town, O., served dinner at noon and about $300 was derived by the chap

ter.

MRS. A. BUSGH HELD BY FEDERAL AGENTS

Liberty pike. The afternoon will be spent in sewing for the Red Cross. Members and their families of all circles of the Aid society of First Presbyterian church will hold a picnic tomorrow afternoon on Honeysuckle Hill at Glen Miller park. Any elderly person who wishes to attend and can not walk from the car line will be taken in automobiles from the church a five o'clock. Supper will be served at six o'clock.

Skin Sufferers You will iigh with relief at the first mic touch of D. D. D., the toothin waihofoils. Many are rrateful for thi advice. You will be too. Try D. D. D. todajr. vc. oc and li.oo. c T-ricxu-id Wash

The Ladies' and Pastor's Union of Grace Methodist church will meet tomorrow afternoon at two o'clock with Mrs. W. M. Kittle at her home, 103 North Twentieth street. Beginning pupils of Prof. Frederick K. Hicks appeared in a recital last evening in the high school auditorium. John Black, Robert Ryan and Argus Ogborn, the first three on the program displayed good technique in their playing. The "Reverie" played by Miss irma Weaver, was especially good and played with musical understanding. George Krueger. Edith Druver, Rhea Wellbaum and Reba Townsend played their selections well, each playing in excellent tone. Mrs. F. W. Krueger, soprano soloist, sang three 6ongs which were especially appropriate for a children's recital. "Miss Mariar," "Naughty Boy" and "Vacation" each appealed to the audience and was sung in Mrs. Krueger's usual pleasing manner. Thelma Martin, Glenna Miller, Helen Welfer, Ernest Hussel and Mildred Kenworthy played difficult selections with ease and grace. The last two numbers on the program played by Joseph Hale and Robert Hough were unusually well played, giving the players an opportunity to display their skill. Intermediate pupils will appear in a recital this evening assisted by a string quartette of violins and cello. Tomorrow evening the advanced pupils will give their recital and will also be assisted by the string quartette. The public is cordially invited to both musicales. The program for tomorrow evening will be as follows: Concerto No. 4 in D Major. . W. Mozart 1st Movement Allegro Mary Jones Concerto No. 9 A Minor. .Ch. de Berlot 1st two Movements Allegro-Adagio Helen Rethmeyer Concerto No. 7 A Minor P. Rode 1st Movement Allegro Inez Hough "Antante Cantabile" Opp. 11 P, Tchaikowsky String Quartette Concerto No. B Minor Ch. de Berlot 1st Movement Allegro Moderato Neva Bowman Concerto No. 22, A Minor.. J. B. VIotti 1st Movement Allegro Moderato and Cadenza by Mustin & David Miriam Hadley Concerto in G Minor Op. 26 Max Burch 1st two Movements Allegro Moderato Adogio Hilda Kirkman.

(By Associated Press WASHINGTON, June 18. Mrs. Adolphus Busch, of St. Louis, returning from a long stay in Germany, is being held temporarily at Key West, Fla., for examination by the immigration authorities and agents of the department of justice. She is chief owner of the great brewery and other properties ordered taken over by tha alien property custodian. WASHINGTON, June 18. Disposition of the estate of Mrs. Lily Busch, widow ,of Adolphus Busch, late millionaire brewer of St. Louis, which has been taken over by the government under the alien property law.

i has not been decided upon, it was said

today at the office of Alien Property Custodian Palmer. The estate, the largest property of

its kind yet to be placed under government control by the act, is estimated to be worth several millions of dollars and consists of breweries in St. Louis and other cities and stocks, bonds and real estate in New York. Two courses under the alien property law, it was pointed out today, are open to the government. The property may be sold and the proceeds held to be Daid to Mrs. Busch or her heirs

! at the end of the war, or the govern

ment may hold the estate for the period of the war and then return it to its owner. Announcement of the taking over of the estate, published today said the seizure was made months ago and since that time, operation of the property has been in the hands of

la St. Louis trust company acting for

the government. Announcement of the taking of the property was withheld awaiting the arrival in this country of Mrs. Busch, who has just returned from Germany, where she has been living for several years. It is expected that the widow of the late millionaire brewer will attempt to prove her claim to citizenship to the satisfaction of the depart

ments of justice and state.

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"Lit Up" Again!

NEW YORK, June 18, After two weeks of darkness Broadway blazed with lights again last night in response to an order issued by Police Commissioner Enright, rescinding the ban against all nunecessary lighting. The lights originally were dimmed to safeguard the city from possible German air attacks. Commissioner Enright conferred with Major General W. A. Mann, commandant of the Department of the East, after which the welcome rescinding order was issued.

Pershing Chooses First Army Head

Profound Dejection" Now Reigns Among Germans, Says Neutral Diplomat

GENEVA, June IS The enthusiasm created by the first German offensive has passed and a feeling of profound dejection reigns among the German people, according to an interview with a neutral diplomat who has just arrived in Geneva from Berlin, in La Kiiissp The npnnlf at. homo fYnfrtfrl

a quick victory from the early reports

in official bulletins, and above all, a quick peace. The principal question

asked in Berlin last week was: "Have we entered. Paris?" The economic situation in the interior of Germany, the diplomat declared is becoming more and more serious. Germans, both military and civilians now realize and virtually admit that the constant arrivals of fresh American troops will turn the tide of the war. The diplomat concluded his interview with a statement that during a recent secret sitting of the reichstag, the question of autonomy for AlsaceLorraine was discussed officially for the first time since the beginning of the war.

Women in England have entered almost eevery trade except carpentry.

' ''Jit SSF '

COAL CONSUMERS MUST BUY WINTER SIMY NOW Consmnere must Iniy tlwir "Writer supply of Coal duiizg the Sprirvd and Summer for siornte ii Production is to 1x2

maunavneo. as, a. maximum andihe country ejublecL to avoid, a serious Coal shortage this "Winter

.(X 6 aAiaJ f U.S. 1-X7C1. AIHllUTKialON

Brig Gen. B. S. Foulis. Brig. Gen. Benjamin S. Foulis, formerly chief of the air service of the American expeditionary forces, has been detached from that post and appointed by General Pershing as head of the air service of the "First Army." He will now be in active command of the aviators at the front. Colonel Robert N. Paddock will have Foulis' former po&t.

TRENCH FEVER

CAUSE FOUND; 66 MEN HEROES

American Troops Risk Life to Assist in the Disease Germ Hunt.

WASHINGTON, D. C, June 18 American medical officers with the assistance of sixty-six heroic soldiers of the expeditionary forces in France have taken the fire-step in eradicating trench fever, one of the most baffling diseases with which the allied armies have had to deal, by identifying the fever as a germ disease which is spread by trench lice. Medical officers hail thi3 new discovery as being as important to the allied armies as the service Gen. Gorgas did for humanity In identifying mosquitoes as carriers of yellow fever and eliminating that plague from Cuba and Panama. American medical officers in France identified trench fever as a germ disease by taking blood from men with the fever and injecting it into healthy men. It was established that lice carried the disease by allowing lice from trench fever cases to bite healthy men. From New England.

These men were from field hospitals and ambulance companies and practically all of them came from the New England division of national guardsmen. They were selected from a large group of volunteers as the healthiest and consequently the best able to withstand a long siege of trench fever. All of them recovered and are now either entirely cured or convalescent. "It is no mean thing that these volunteers did in France," Secretary Baker said today. "To face illness of weeks, with extreme suffering, requires peculiar valor. The average loss of weight for these men was from twenty to twenty-five pounds. Incidentally the hospital in which the experiments were carried out was shelled by the Germans in the early part of their March drive. It is believed by the army medical corps that the sacrifice of this group of sixty-six men will in time lead to the protection of thousands of men from the ravages of trench fever." Would Decorate Them. A movement has already taken form to obtain military decorations for the sixty-six volunteers who were willing to sacrifice themselves that many might be saved. Although trench fever is not a fatal disease, it left a certain portion of its victims permanently unfit for military service through its debilitating effects, and was recognized as one of the greatest causes of disability in the allied army. Allied medical officers, however, could not establish by experiments on animals what the disease was and how spread, because no animals susceptible to the disease could be found. With discovery of the cause of the disease, the American medical department, in co-operation with the allied medical corps, has taken up the question of controlling the disease.

LICENSED TO WEO

MarriaGre license was issued Mon

day by the county clerk to William

Bowel 1, 62 years old, ot Argon, ina., and Laura Rohrer, 51 years old, of Greensfork, Ind.

Miss Agnes Nestor, head of the International Glove Makers' Union, began her life aa a glove maker. She is now directing the women who take the places of men In industry. In some parts of West Virginia women are employed as coal miners.

NO AOVANCE IN PRICE

M

OTHERS Keep the family free from colds by using

Aiuud tnXamr Haw'

p LmlBodjM

iraaaAmwiainaa

25c 50c $1.00

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY

EDWARD KLUTE

EARL SMITH

KLUTE SH SMDTE5

- FUNERAL DIRECTORS

14 North 9th St.

Phone 12S4

AUTO SERVICE

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1

Prussian railways employ 100,000 women in various capacities, from section men to railroad conductors.

The final returns from the third liberty loan campaign show that at least 50 per cent, of the subscriptions have come in through women.

You Can Fool Yourself But Not Your Battery You may think you added enough distilled water, and still be mistaken. You may waste current and never realize it. You may be using the headlights too much and charging the battery too little. But your battery writes the real story as it goes along.

That's why you ought to stop today and have a test made to see whether you have been fooling yourself or not. And ask about the Still Better Willard with Threaded Rubber Insulation. This is the only battery with the "Bone Dry" principle that is your absolute assurance of getting a battery as new as the davit left the factory RICHMOND ELECTRIC COMPANY 1105-1107 Main St. Phone 2826

Copyiicht rcctawted, 1918

COAL

Bry early Save money

aSUO UK-JLldillLMUS - if Tt .1 I

Aiaxwtignws Ireventlicatlws days

IT. a. FUEL. ADMimaTRATIO

Cotton-mill shuttles and other similar supplies will be manufactured by the Hearne Manufacturing Co., Sanford, N. C.

HOW SUB BANISHED BACKACHE Mrs. Effie K. Kleppe, Averlll, Minn., writes: "I was at a sanitarium three weeks at one time, two weeks another time, for rheumatism and kidney trouble and got -no relie". On my return home I began using- Foley Ridney Pill and found immediate relief; a half bottle completed the cure." This Is further proof that these wonderful pilli give relief where other treatment. fail. Unequaled for weak, sore, aching kidneys, bladder, back, muscles or joints. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co. Adv.

CEMENT.

Owing to the rapidly increases in prices of labor and materials we will have to Advance Our Prices Effective at Oece This is consistent with good workmanship that you always find here and usual prompt service.

WILSON Gleaner

"When Its Done by Wilson Its Done Right." 1002 Main Phone 1766 In the Westcott