Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 222, 30 July 1918 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1918.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Seo ond Class Mail Matter. MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It o Bot otherwise credited In this paper and also the local awa published herein. All rtfhts of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
A Victim of German Kultur (From the Committee on Public Information.) This picture is the first that has come from Belgium to show the results of systematic Teutonic starvation of a conquered people. The facts that go with it are few and simple, but they are a spiritual indictment of the German nation. Edouard Roupen died at the age of 19, starved to death as a punishment for his loyalty to country. He had been a prisoner for three and a half winter months in Germany. During that time his weight had fallen 56 pounds. He was sent back to the hospital at Mons and died three days after his picture was taken. When Germany deported thousands of Belgians in 1916 to carry on the industrial war work of the Teutons, a wave of indignation swept the United States. Fathers and brothers were torn from their families with cynical indifference, young girls were dragged from their homes for immoral purposes without a pretence of decency. By this wholesale crime the military -easte of Germany once more proved itself outside the pale of humanity. The departed Belgians were passive resistants. They refused to work. They would not sign the pledge to labor for Germany. As they passed through Belgium the prisoners flung from the car windows of the trains the pledge cards that had been given them, "On ne signera pas" was written across the blanks. But the German military overlords are past masters at punishment, especially in ways that
leave no visible marks. They made the poor Belgians stand for a half day at a time in ice cold water. They stripped their clothes from them and left them exposed to the winds of winter. They fed them one bowl of fish head soup a day, just enough to keep body and soul together. The rugged Belgians still refused to work for the enemy, though tempted by good foo'd and promises of many indulgences. Their health failed. Some died. Others wore away until they were only shadows of their former selves. Shattered in health, these last were contemptuously sent back to Belgium.
EIouard Roupen was one of these. He was deported October 18, 1916, and at that time weighed 146 pounds. He was sent back to the hospital at Mons February 4, 1917. On February 15, a little more than a week later, he tipped the scales at 90 pounds. Three days later he died. He had been starved and tortured to death. Once more German Kultur had vindicated itself.
General Foch A Pen Portrait From the New York Times. FOCH Is the typical French soldier. ' He was born on August 4, 1851, at Tarbes, a little city in the Pyrenees, where his father held an administrative post. His education was obtained in provincial cities and at the Ecole Polytechnique, which he entered in 1871. He pasted through various garrisons as an artillery officer and in 1884 was admitted to the Ecole de Guerre as a student. Twelve years later, ranking then as a Major, he returned to the Ecole de Guerre as an instructor. After five years in this professorship, in which he showed brilliant powers and exercised a great influence over the students, he was sent back to the line as a Lieutenant Colonel. In 1907 he was transferred, as a Brigadier General, to the post for which he was preeminently marked out, that of Commandant of the Ecole de Guerre, where for four years he worked to increase the efficiency of that institution. Later he was given the post of honor of the French Army, the 20th Corps, Headquarters, Nancy. There the war found him. He was the great teacher who, more than any other man in the French Army, created the mode of thought under which its Generals and Staff entered the present war. Classes of young officers, selected from the, whole of the army, sat at Foch's feet at the Ecole de Guerre, pud carried away with them an unbounded devotion to and faith in the man they had been privileged to listen
to. He was an enthusiast and his patriotism and his profession merged into a splendid effort of intellect in which his students delighted. Later these young officers rapidly came to the front as commanders of French divisions and this enabled Foch, in part, to realize one of his great ambitions, which was that the French Army should be permeated with the doctrine the Ecole de Guerre had taught of belief in the offensive, the offensive at all costs. General Foch will undoubtedly attempt to show us the working of this doctrine in its soundest aspects. , At the first battle of the Marne, afterward in joint con
trol of the operations that saved the Channel ports, and during the following winter General Foch rendered the greatest services. From the first day of the invasion until the crisis of last spring, when Foch was chosen generalissimo of the Armies of Civilization, it stands out very clearly that, of all the subordinates of Joffre, Foch has had the most consistent record. The American Army stands joyously under the orders of Ferdinand Foch. We know we shall find no better leader whatever the issue, we shall cherish his long and proven record as that of a great soldier and a great Frenchman. Our histories will record our pride at having fought under his orders. (Extracts from "General Foch: An Appreciation," by Major Robert M. Johnson, U. S. N. A.)
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VIOLATED TRAFFIC ORDINANCE
OXFORD, O., July 30. L. A King, well known farmer, was arrested yesterday and fined the costs for viola-, tlon of tbe vehicle traffic ordinance ' recently passed by council. Mayor Hughes has Instructed the village police to enforce rigidly the provisions of the ordinance. He says he is tired of having autoists burn up the streets of Oxford, turn where they please and park wherever it Buits them.
All that Huns left of one house. A German shell exploded near this bouse back of the western front and the explosion caved in the walls so that the building collapsed and the roof fell to a level of the street. A British soldier is talking to the woman who lives in the house. Notice the smile on her face. The ruin wrought hasn't crushed her spirit. She has seen the allie troops as they have passed in their counter drive against the Germans and knows they are on the road to wipe out the kaiser's crew.
PinnerJtories
He had been marrioH ahnnt
a"d had taken to spending his evenings down town with the boys. One night his conscience worried him and he thought he would phone his wife and get her to come down and meet him and have dinner with him. So he called her up. "Hello, kid," he began. "Say, slip on some old clothes and run down and meet me on the quiet. We will have a good dinner and then we will get a machine and go out and smear a little red paint around. How about it? "111 be delighted to join you, Jack," was the reply. "But why not come up to the house and get me? There's nobody home." As the young husband's name is Tom, he spends his evenings at home now. And his wife wears a queer smile when he is not looking at her.
HOT WEATHER NOTE Mr. Lemuel Higgins of Ticonderoga county reports the loss of several cows. He hns a large field of pop corn, and when the extreme heat come on, the corn all popped and the cows, thinking it was a snowstorm, immediately froze to death. A motion picture concern has rented Mr. Hlggins' popcorn field for tho purpose of staging some winter scenes. ATTILA. Attila the Hun was a piker, A common old yeggman adrift, A faint-hearted, doddering hiker. Efficiency was not his gift. A hobo on kultur's great highway, A dime snatcher, it is confessed; Small crimes he pulled off in the byway; Ry science old At was not blessed. He poisoned no candles for babies, A harmless old boob at his worst; He had but a mild form of rabies. In frightfulness he was not versed. In scorn does the later-day kaiser Turn great-grandpa's face to the wall; Old At was a cruelty miser, And he had no kultur at all.
MEATLESS MEALS THIS SUMMER I r J
L : -'m -- ,. m. 8
a double boiler until thickened: 1 egg beaten until light. 2 tablespoons vinegar. teaspoon sugar. tablespoons cold water. M teaspoon celery seed.
! teaspoon salt. .
While this Is softening, soften 1 tablespoon gelatin in 4 cup cold water and dissolve by placing over hot water. Add the dissolved gelatin and 1 cup minced fish to th sauce in the double boiler. Mold in individual cups or a large mold, which can be served sliced as jellied chicken is served, or as a salad with salad dressing. Such cold dishes are especially appetizing on a summer day when yqu want something different. Why not make a salad such as the fish mold or one made from minced fish or from cottage cheese or cold beans do duty in place of meat for the 6taple part of the meal? Other Substitutes for Meat. Other cold dishes that can take the place of meat may be made by combining cottage cheese with nut meats, chopped pimentos, gren peppers, of other crisp vegetables, molding and slicing and serving like cold meat loaf. These are but a fsw suggestions for meat substitute dishes. A chese and nut roast or a cheese sauce served with mashed potatoes or boiled rice.
a milk soup, a vegetable soume, or vegetable omelet are all ways in which meat may be replaced by combining the foods that supply the requisite protein. Let many of the summer meal3 be meatless meals.
much sugar, Sheir destruction Is less difficult in fruits and tomatoes than in such vegetables as corn, peas and beans, or in meats, which of all foods are the most difficult to can safely. Bacteria in their active growing state can be killed by moist heat at boiling temperature, but unfortunately for the canner the bacteria spores are much more reslsfint to heat. All bacteria in the spore state can be destroyed by a temperature of 240 degrees F. moist heat. This temperature can be secured only with steam under pressure.
CONTRIBUTED VERSE
INFORMS U. S. OF PANAMA'S REFORMS
These Two Tables Appear Much Alike, and They Hold About the Same Amount of Nutriment, But the Top O ne is Meaty, and the Other :s Meatless
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Many of the meat substitute dishes are better suited to summer needs than the meat dishes that they replace. Xow Is the time to make the most of them, for meat is scarce and high priced. Fish, cheese, milk, eggs, beans, peas, and nuts are recognized as good substitutes for meat. They all supply protein which' the body needs. Used intelligently they can be combined into such attractive and well-seasoned dishes that meat will not be missed
in the summer meal. Baked beans, which find favor as a substitute for meat in winter, are not such a favorite dish for summer, but Lima beans baked with a well-seasoned tomato sauce make a hearty dish which many like. Baked Lima Beans. Soak the dried Lima beans In cold water for several hours and cook until tender. Make a tomato sauce, usfng 2 cups tomato pulp and juice strained through a sieve. Thicken with 2 tablespoons flour blended with 2 tablespoons melted fat. Season with salt, pepper and celery seed. Put a layer of beans In a baking dish, sprinkle with grated cheese, and cover with tomato sauce. Repeat until dish U full. Bake for about half an hour. Fish. Fish, fortunately is available to most people in some form; if not fresh, canned, smoked or salted fish can us-i ually be procured. Either canned fish ' or fish left from the boiled, baked oi
broiled fish of a previous meal can be used in the recipes which follow: Fish Timbales. 1 cup salmon, tuna or gray fish. 1 cup softened bread crumbs.
x cup oonea rice or nominy or
mashed potatoes. 1 teaspoon salt teaspoonful paprika. 1 egg. li cup of milk.
Mix ingredients in order given. Pour
into small buttered molds, and surround with hot water. Cover and bake until mixture is firm. Turn from molds and serve hot with an acid sauce. Fish Mold. To make fish mold cook together in
Kills Pesky
Bed Bugs P. D.Q. A Two ounce box of P. D. Q. make a full quaff f the best buf -killer on earth. Better than a barrel of old-fashioned butf-killer. P. D. Q. (Pecky Devil's Quietus), kills like 48eentimecre shell. It settles bedbugs, fleas, roaches, nts and chicken lice, and not only kills the livo pests, but the eiuts as well. P. D. Q. won't injure clothing, carpets, curtains, draperies or wall paper. Try it on the dog and the fleas flop. Your druggist has it or can get it for you.
PROPER CANNING
KILLS FOOD FOES Foods decompose or spoil because they are attacked by living germs, minute forms of plant life of the lowest order. Three types of these tiny organisms molds, yeasts and bacteria cause foods to spoil. They are present constantly everywhere in air, water and soil, and on food. All exist in teeming millions, and all except molds are so tiny as to be invisible without the aid of a microscope.
The object in canning is first to kill all the molds, yeasts and bacteria that may be on the food, and then to seal the food in germ-free containers, and seal them so well that no other organism may enter. Molds thrive in dampness and darkness and prefer freedom from currents of air. They require oxygen, moisture and warmth and feed upon sugar and starches. Since they can grow in the presence of acids, they readily attack fruit and tomatoes. Molds are killed easily by moist heat. Yeasts are of many kinds, all onecelled plants, which reproduce by the growth of a bud on the edge of a sell. The buds quickly become full grown and break away from the mother cells. The use of yeast in bread-making is familiar. When supplied with food in the form of sugar, warmth, moisture, and air, yeasts grow, breaking up the sugar and producing alcohol and a gas called carbon dioxide. Bubbles of this gas are seen when canned fruit ferments. Yeasts usually are killed by moist heat at 190 degrees F. (simmering). Bacteria are much more difficult to destroy than molds and yeasts and are the chief foe to combat in preserving food. They are one-celled plants but smaller than yeasts. A single bacterium may produce millions more in a few hours. Bacteria require warmth, mois'ture and food. Certain species thrive without air. Since few bacteria thrive in acids or int he presence of
William Jennings Price. William Jennings Price, American minister to Panama, is in Washington conferring with Secretary Lansins: and other officials. He reports that reforms are being worked out in Panama and Colon by the American troops policing those cities. He states that saloons are being driven from the prescribed districts and the sale of intoxicants stopped. Intervention by the American troops apparently had been justified by the lack of disorder at the elections recently. Supervision of the American authorities also secured Cairness in the elections-
JOHN N. WOLFE DIES
OXFORD, O., July 30. John N. Wolfe, aged 85 years, a retired farmer and veteran of the Civil War, died of general debility at his home here last night. He leaves a widow and nine children.
Disturbed sleep usually comes from some form of indigestion. Strengthen the stomach and stimulate the liver with a course of
Pills Urgt Sala of Any Medicine in th. World. Sold everywhere, is Base. 10c. 25.
The following verse is dedicated to the cousin of the writer, Mrs. J. M. Gregory, who was formerly a Richmond resident, but who now resides in Parsons, Kansas. The cousin, Bradford Williams, was repeatedly rejected for service but owing to his great patriotism he was finally admitted to the ranks as a private. He is a resident of Wayne county. SOVEREIGNS OF THE U. S. A. The American army in battle array Is fighting somewhere in France today; Of freedom and liberty they joyfully sing, For every soldier is a king. Unfurled our flag, the red, white and blue; Which stands for all that is good and true, To uphold the right and throttle the wrong; That's why we are here, a million strong. Women, children of Belgium and France, . We fight for you, 'Sons of Liberty In battle array Loyal Sovereigns of the U. S. A. Our souls are clean, our purpose pure, No booty do we seek or claim; Righteous our cause to free the earth And loose the shackles of autocracy and shame. We are with you, bleeding Russia, Your flag we will help unfurl, For Liberty is your sentiment, And it will rule the world. ' We are here to proclaim it, here to StayFighting Sovereigns of the U. S A. ,
Our flag unfurled to all the world. We cheer and greet our brother; We are getting there, somewhere, a million strong, And when the top, we are over. Somebody will pay their full score For their atrocities in Belgium and France: In terms they ne'er dreamed of before. To the hopeless of earth, all suffering mankind We have a place for you Perhaps in the ranks with our Sovereign host. Under the red, white and blue; United we 6tand in battle array, Loyal Sovereigns of the U. S. A. Mrs. J. M. Gregory.
AMBITION PILLS For Nervous People The great nerve tonic the famout Wendell's Ambition Pills that will put vigor, vim and vitality into nervous, tired-out, all in, despondent people in a few days In many Instances. Anyone can buy a box for only 50 cents, and Leo Fihe, A. G. Luken, Clem Thistlethwaite, Conkey Drug Co., is authorized by the maker to refund the purchase price if anyone is dissatisfied with the first box purchased. Thousands praise them for general debility, nervous prostration, mental depression and unstrung nerves caused by over-indulgence in alcohol, tobacco, or overwork of any kind. , For any affliction of the nervous system Wendell's Ambition, Pills are unsurpassed, while for hysteria, trembling and neuralgia they are simply splendid. Fifty cents at Leo Fihe's, A. G. Luken & Company, Clem Thistlethwaite, Conkey Drug Co and dealers everywhere. Adv.
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PLEASE NOTICE My dental office will be closed during the month of August. DR. E. J. DYKEMAN
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WEDNESDAY SPECIALS FRESH SLICED LIVER, pound 5c Choice Sir Lob and Porter House Steaks. .... .25c Fresh Sausage 20c
EBo2 Sullen Bros
715 Mais Street
