Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 288, 16 October 1918 — Page 3
;THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 16. 1918
QUICK BUYING OF LOAN BONDS URGED PUBLIC
WITH THOSE IN ARMY AND NAVY
Fourth Loan Still $3,045,
000,000 Short oi TotalAlaska and Hawaii Over. (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON. Oct. 16 "Buy now today" became a companion of "double the third" as a slogan In the campaign for the Fourth Liberty loan. With officially reported subscriptions more than $3,045,000,000 short of the six billion dollar total, instructions were sect today to every local campaign committee to impress upon the American public the necessity of buy
ing bonds now instead of waiting until Saturday, the final day. Subscriptions reported by the twelve federal reserve districts yesterday amounted to only $156,000,000. The reports were undisgulsedly disappointing to loan officials and today without hesitation it was pointed out that a tremendous task is placed before the American people in the next four. days. Subscriptions must average more than $700,000,000 a day if the goal is to be reached. In answer to inquiries It was reIterated today that no subscriptions are being held up for reporting on the last day. The official total announced daily it was emphasized, represents
the exact amount of bonds sold upon which the initial ten per cent payment has been made. "Match the Navy" Subscriptions made today or tomorrow It was said will exert a great moral effect and also will dispose of the inconveniences to be met in the rush of the final day. Today was Navy day in the loan campaign and Rear Admiral Cowle,
In charge of the campaign in the Navy and Secretary Daniels issued statements not only encouraging the men of the Navy to Increase their present total of twenty one million dollars, but also appealing to the public to "match the navy." The motto of the navy, "fight or buy bonds the navy does both" was a feature of the campaign today In practically all parts of the country. , SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 16 Alaska and Hawaii have oversubscribed their quotas for the Fourth Liberty loan, according to cable advices to the twelfth federal district loan campaign headquarters here. Their quotas
were $1,369,400 and $6,765,050 res
pectively. Member of Belgian Relief
Commission Is Dead
(Ry Associated Pressl
WASHINGTON, Oct 16. Colonel
Millard Hun6iker. one of the seven
men summoned to London in October,
1914. for the formation of the commistion for relief in Belgium, Is dead in
London, according to a cable received
.oday at the Washington office of the
jommlsslon. For a number of years
?,o. Hunslker represented American
irmament interests in Europe.
This column, containing new at Richmond and Wayne county aoldiera and sailors, will appear dally In the Palladium. Contributions will be welcomed.
Lieutenant F. C. Stevenson, son or
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Stevenson, of Pearl street, has notified his parents that he has arrived safely overseas. Lientenant Raymond Nicholson, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Nicholson, of Bast Main street, is in the city on a ten-days furlough. Lieutenant Nich
olson is stationed at Washington, u. u. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Burt of White water, have recelyed word from their Bon, Ross, who Is now stationed at Great Lakes, that he expects to leave for France soon. Daryl Raney, of New Paris, O., has arrived overseas. Harry Reinhelmer, of Great Lakes, is home for. a short furlough with his parents in New Paris. Raymond Bryant, son of Mr. and Mrs. Greenbury Bryant, of Milton, is recovering from an attack of influenza, at Camp Oglethorpe, Ga.
Gordan R. Hale, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Hale, of 223 South Twelfth street, has been promoted to sergeant. His present address is Co. D, 6th Division Eng. Regiment, Camp A. A. Humphreys, Va. Elbert Hale, another son, has received a gold chevron for taking part in an attack on a submarine, according to a letter
received by his parents Tuesday.
TRADE UNION WOMEN HELP U. S. WIN WAR
y i v ' ' ' S, . f : f '-
British Casualties For First 39 Weeks of Year Total 700,000 NEW YORK, Oct 16. British casualties during the first thirty-nine weeks of 1918, aggregated 700,000, according to a cablegram received by
the British bureau of information here todav. This does not Include losses
In the heavy fighting of the last two
weeks. The message stated that aurine the neriod between Jan. 1 and
Oct. 1 the lowest casualty list for any
single week was 4,126 and the highest
over 40,000. v RoixHonor
Army casualties Issued for Wednes
day show: Killed in action liu; missing in action 69; wounded severely 364; died from wounds 62; died from accident 6; died from disease 52; wounded 174; total 837. -Indiana men named are: Albert J. Paul, Evansville, died of disease; Firman C. VanHolsbeck, Mishawaka, died from accident; Anson C. Miller. Huntington, Sergeant Horace Barnes, Fort Wayne, Robert S. Casebolt, Valonla, George K. Stone. Fort Branch, Harrison Hunt, Crawfordsville, wounded; FInley M. Winningham, Terre
Haute, Joseph Wittling, souin tjenu,
missing In action. " Ohio men listed are: Lt.' Charles J. Reilly. Baybridge, Corp. Earl Warner, Columbus, Harry M. Coogle. Colum bus, George H. Cooper, Rushtown, Edward Decelle, Cleveland, Corp. Fred
G. Oehler, TJhrichsville, Harry liaetnow, . Cleveland, killed in action; James Burk, Crescent, John G. McCabe, Cleveland, died from wounds; John Wilgus, Shadyside, Corp. Lawrence S. O'Connor, Lancaster, died of disease; Lt. Ottomar John Deinzer. Toledo, Corp. Mark I. Conroy, Youngstown, John J. Schmidt, George Cirl, Bradford, Henry A. Ashmen, St. Henry, Antonio Gambasesa, Cincinnati. John Nagy, Cleveland, Earl W. Sponhour, Canton, Lt. John P. Shinn, Newark, Harry O. Enyart, Celina, William Orod. Cleveland. John C. Schmidt,
Portsmouth. PhiliD Capobianco, Ak
History of Newport News
Shipyards Interesting Romance
(By Associated Pressl NEWPORT NEWS, Va.. Oct. 16. New ahip ways, towering trestles, spreading shops, field of steel and the incessant . clamor, day and night, of automatic riveters, great steam ham
mers and whirring machinery are the symbols of war-time shipbuilding here where deep sea craft have been turned out since the '80's. In this great plant 12,000 men and women are working at top speed. Sliding quietly from the ways, without a semblance of the ceremony that attended launching in the days of peace, ship after ship has been built and floated only to lose Itself In the maze of commerce at this gateway to the Atlantic and to the fields of France. When the war-time history of the
Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock company is written, it will be an Interesting chapter in the romance of the destroyer. It will tell how farmer boys from the rolling plains of the west, who had never seen a ship, and women whose only experience with metals had been in the handling of pots and pans, answered the call of their country to build many of the destroyers which steadily are removing the menace of the submarine and keeping open the lanes through which the millions of American soldiers are going to the western front
How well these men and women have done their work under the guidance of skilled workers, is demon-
ntrated bv the fact that every destroy
or turned out has more than met the
express-train speed required under
th naw contract. And it Is no se
cret, at least not here, that the finisha shinn which have Kone into the
war zone have given a good account of themselves even as the Fanning and other pre-war products of this yard have added new laurels to American naval records. While all possible energy is going into the "bridge of ships" to France and their guardians, the expansion of this plant into one of the world's greatest shipyards Is planned for after the war needs as well as those for the present. Shop after shop ha3 been built and cranes and other labor saving devices are installed so that when Tooa enmc!) foreign vards may be
but Is bettering that now, even as it has more than cut in half the time for
turning out destroyers. Officials and
PLAN PROMOTION OF FARM WORK ALONG7 11 S. RAILROADS
. (By Associated Press), WASHINGTON. Oct 16. To ex
workmen alike have ever before them tend agricultural educational and exon a bronze tablet, set in the side of , perimental work along railroads i In una stone column the words of the ! developed sections of the South and
founder of the yard, the late Collis P. west, the raiiroaa aammjsirauuu u Huntington, master railroad and ship j appointed committees of railroad exebuilder in the nation's pioneer days: cutivese to make investigations of lo-
ti jti v..u a .kin. . i raj rnnniunna idu buuuih. , c.uu".u
t nmfit If we ran. at a loss If we aauons 10 mo .7 .
tice' of Commercial bribery in giving gratutles to customers' employes were issued today by the federal trade commission. The order was Issued under agreement - with the. company wjilch waived right to present evidence In Bupport of the practice.
must; but always good ships."
Will Not Offer Farm Loan
Bonds for Marketing (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Oct. 16. Federal farm loan bonds will not be offered for marketing In the near future, it was announced today by George W. Norris, the federal farm loan commissioner. v "The proceeds of the bonds sold in June will take care of the loaning requirements of the Federal land banks
until nearly the end of the present calendar year," he said, "and in pursuance of the general policy of curtailing and regulating security offerings, it is probable that such bonds as the banks may have occasion to sell in the early part of next year, will be taken by the United States treasury. These bonds will thereafter be marketed by the treasury at such times and in such amounts as the Secretary of the Treasury may deem advisable." '
China to Erect Three New Wireless Stations
s
Miss Melinda Scott Women prominent in trade unioT circles are takinc an active part ir the promotion of the government'.' war program, according to MistMelinda Scott, a member of the American Federation of Labor mission to England and France. "If women are not getting proper recognition of their efforts toward winning the war, it is not because they are not doing their share," Bhe
International Farm
Congress in Missouri
(By Associated Press) KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct 16. Fin
ishing touches in the transformation of convention hall here into a huge
agricultural exhibit pavilion were
made today preparatory to the opening
tonteht of the International Farm
Congress and Soil Products Exposi
tion. The exposition has the backing of the governments of the United
States, England and Canada, which will send official representatives. Franklin K. Lane, Secretary of the Interior is one of the principal speakers on the program. He is expected to outline to congress the administration plans for the development, settlement and cultivation of waste lands and their distribution among the returned soldiers.
ron, Charles Budniak, Cleveland, Ho- met in the great race that is inevitable bart Hainline. Celina, John Kovalsik,or the restoration of destroyed tonCleveland, John Lassiter, Cleveland, j nage. Fulton C. McKenzie, Sebring, Paul Even now, there are in the building,
O'Rourke, Cleveland, Albert i . u. " two of the largest shipways in Amer-
Stump, Cincinnati, L,ester w: wans, jca. Here, after the war, wm De iaia
Lancaster, wounded; Sam Binkovnz, down two of the monster battle cruis-
Cleveland, Paris Turner, HiiamsDurg, ers COngresr , authorized in 1916, aes-
PEKING, Thursday. Oct. 10. (By the
Associated Press.) The Chinese government has signed a contract with the Marconi company for the construction of three wireless stations at Kashgar and Urumchi, in the province of Sinkiang, near the Turkestan border, and at Lanchowfu, capital of Kansu province, in Central China. A smaller station will be erected at Si-
anfu, in Shensi province. These stations will establish communicatins be
tween nasngar ana jr-eiung. mey
will be of greater transmitting power than any others in China.
Tn announcing this today, the railroad
administration explained it expects to promote agricultural extension work more actively than In the past, although agricultural emigration, heretofore promoted by some railroads under private control, will be formed upon during the war. The agricultural committee for the north and west consists of the following: C. L. Seagraves, industrial commissioner of the Santa Fe, Chicago, chairman; F. S. Welsh, New York Central, New York; J. B. Lamson, Burlington railroad, Chicago; Y. J.' KWhon Parlflr. St. Paul:
W L. English, Frisco Lines, St. Louis; J S. McCabe, St. Paul Road, St. Paul; Douglas White, Los Angeles and Salt
Lake, Los Angeles. For the Southeastern region, Texas and Oklahoma the committee consists of: W. W. Croxton, general passenger agent of the Atlanta, Birmingham, and Atlantic, Atlanta, chairman; G. A. Park. Louisville and Nashville, Louisville; H. J. Schweitert, Illinois Central, Chicago; J. C. Welty, Missouri Pacific, St. Louis; B. L. Hanner, Seaboard, Norfolk; J. C. Williams, Southern, Washington, and T. L. Peeler, Dallas. Order Roller Company to Discontinue Gratuties WASHINGTON, Oct. 16. Orders to
the American printers' roller company of Chicago to discontinue the prac-
-ff-TT-ffiinjT'j ''' Lnj?i.r rill1. -" - - ---.f
Frank Patterney
in action.
Cleveland, missing
WHITEWATER
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Niewoehner and family entertained Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Ebert of Richmond, and Russell, Everett and Ed Niewoehner of Day
ton Neal Hill or Ricnmona spent
Friday with his grandmother, Mrs.
Lester Harrison
Hill Mr. and Mrs
f l?Ann1n rMtv noro tVlfk UAStS Of
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Barton Sunday. the old recnpocal drive engine and it
ignated as the fastest and mo3t powerful ships of thir type on the sea. Nearby these new ways, four emergency ways have been thrown up on ground "made" within the year. On these emergency ways naval vessels are building and more will follow when these are launched. A few hundred yards away more fighting ships are building, two and three, to one set of ways. On still other stocks, merchant ships and other craft are being put together.
Turbines largely have suppiantea
Mr. and Mrs. John Roll spent j Saturday night and Sunday with MrJ and Mrs. Harry McClure . of Glen Karn, Ohio. . . . . .Mr. and Mrs. Fred Eastman, Misses Helen Murphy and Lucile Eastman of Richmond were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cal Eastman Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Blose and family and William G. White epent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Horne of Glen Karn, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Addleman ot Richmond spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mrs. Jennie Addleman. Mr. and Mrs. Sherly White and family were also guests... Roy Bullerdick and Miss Marie Barton spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Barton Andrew Jackson of Red Key, Ind.. and Mrs. Gelisples and daughter Pauline of Columbus, O., were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Oran Staley Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Bryam Stettler and son Richard of Hollansburg, Ohio, spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Newt Alexander Mrs. Ethel Woods and daughters, Mariam and Josephine 6pent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Osro Blose and family Aslie Clopp of Centerville was the guest of Mr. and Mrs A. B. Austin Saturday night and Sunday Miss Gladys Anderson spent Monday with her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. John Hunt Miss Thelma
Thomas of Richmond spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Billy Simpson. There are several new cases of
influenza in this community.
AN IDEAL UNDERGARMENT.
2221 This model combines en
velope drawars and a corset cover. It Is nice for muslin, crepe, cambric.
lawn, dimity, batiste, and Bilk, and may be trimmed with lae or embroidery. The Pattern is cut In 4 sizes: Small, 32-34 Inches bust measure; Medium, 36-38; Large. 40-42, and Extra Large, 44-46. Size Medium requires 3 yards of 36-inoh material. A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents In fciher or stamps. y
Name
Address
City
size
Address Pattern Department, Palladium.
Spanish Influenza Brazilian Balm Kills the germ in the blood in 3 dayS prevents pneumonia, or cures it quickly if it has developed. Saves every case. Take 10 to 15 drops every ,4 hour, (on tongue or in little water), and rub hot on chest. ' Get , 60c or $1.00 bottle. Druggist or sent by B. F. Jackson & Co.. Arcade, Wyoming Co.. N. Y.
Oxford Home Guards to Be Independent Body
OXFORD. O., Oct. 16. The Oxford Home Guards last night voted to break away from the county organization and become an independent body. Tomorrow all the members over 21 years of age, which will be about fifty, will be sworn in as deputy village marshals by Mayor J. S. Hughes. At their meeting the Guards also subscribed for $1,000 worth of Liberty bonds. Eighteen members have come out for football. After a week's practice the Home Guards team will play the Miami University team.
THIS MAY HELP YOU
Very
Home-Mixed Cough Syrup, Cheap, Very Effective.
Mrs. Joseph Mellleur, 445 Jefferson street. Tiffin. O., writes: "I have used the Mentho-Laxene for cold. Must say I find lt better than any cough syrup I have ever used yet. I coughed nisht and day for a week. After I got the Mentho-Laxene to use, the coughing stopped in three days, etc." Just buy a 2Va-ounce bottle of Mentho-Laxene (it is richly concentrated) and mix it with simple syrup, as per directions with bottle, and then you will have a whole pint of the finest, quickest cold, cough, and catarrh n3dIcine you ever used, and no opiates of narcotics, either. Hundreds of thousands of people now make their own medicine to avoid expense and uncertainty. Adv. ,
NERVOUS ENERGY life's momentum, depends upon a well-nourished body. Wken strength is depleted and the body lacking in essential nourishment, the nerves are the first to suffer.
COTFS
ULSBON
simon-pure in substance, rich in tonic qualities, nourishes the whole body and strengthens and
steadies the nerves. Wherever the sun shines, SoOtt'S is the recognized standard tonic-food and conserver of strength. Scott&Bowne.Bloomfield.N.J. 18-17
is on these that women have Deen
nressed Into service, performing the
delicate work of finishing the myriad brass paddles against which the steam
strikes to revolve the turbine arum.
much as water runs a mill wheel.
In the yard dispensary, where men
who are injured are treated, nurses
and doctors are constantly on duty
A band gives concerts In the yard
each non. Housing has been the greatest prob
lem. Two miles beyond the city on a high bluff overlooking the river is
raising a new city to be peopled ex
clusively by shipyard workers. High wages are the rule as at other yards.
with riveters, many of them negroes.
making as high as $25 and $30 a day Loyalty is preached in season and out
In peace times this yard completed
merchant ships in six months and less,
Indiana corn helps feed the world.
Seed selected before freezing weather
and stored properly means a big crop next year, with more food and more
money for the producer. Get your seed now.
Look for the Beaver! NONE GENUINE without it.
WANTED A GOOD LINIMENT Chemical Tests Reveal That DR. JONES LINIMENT Generally Known as BEAVER OIL ' To Be the Best Thousands of bottles are being placed in soldiers' kits. Get a bottle for your soldier boy. Nothing more essential. A few applications relieve sore and tired feet, strained muscles, hurts, bruises, cold in chest, sore throat, rheumatism, neuralgia, ind all pains and inflammation. Dependable for generations. ALL DRUGGISTS. 30 AND 55 CENTS.
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JIIBB
Copyright Kgittercd. 191
s
EN
Postal Card Given Prompt Attention. Landscape Designs a Specialty. Geo L. Von Carlezon Landscape Architect Gardener, Nurseryman and Florist 25 Years' Experience. We do sodding, grading, grass sowing, rolling, spraying and fertilizing. We plant, trim, or remove any size tree, shrubs, roses, grapevines, etc. Orders taken for trees, shrubs, roses and all kinds of plants, flowers, bulbs, etc We Make a Specialty of Taking Care of Private Residences by the Week or Month at Reasonable Prices. Hedges of All Kinds Planted and Trimmed. 121 North 7th St. Richmond, Ind.
A Battery or THE Battery You can buy a battery anywhere. You can buy the battery in only one place from the Willard Service Station. The Still Better Willard is the battery because it is the only battery in which you can get Threaded Rubber Insulation the most important battery improvement in years. You'll know the Still Better Willard by the Willard Mark which is branded in the box. The booklet 'A Mark with a Meaning for You" tells all about the Mark and the Battery. Richmond Electric Co. 1105-1 107 Main St. Phone 2826
KIDNEY STONES Harley Beck, of Linville, Ind., suffered untold agony for two years.
doctored all the time and could get
no relief until he consulted. THE INTERSTATE DOCTORS
Those master specialists, who have their office in the Starr Bldg, corner Tenth and Main streets. Mr. Beck'3 fnnvincinc lpt.t.er follows!
To the Interstate Doctors, Muncie, Ind. Gentlemen: I want to In this way thank you for what you have done for me. I have been a sufferer for two years and with what has been pronounced a stone in the kidney. I have suffered untold agony during these years. Would have two or three attacks a week, always throwing me to the bed. Would have to send a hurried message for a doctor to give me a hypodermic the only way I could get ease. A great many spells my
folks didn't think-I would live over
night. I lost in flesh and became a nervous wreck. I treated with several doctors, took all the advertised med
icine I could hear of and nothing
seemed to benefit me.
I am a young man, a farmer, and it was terrible to me and my mother
to think of being cut off from life so young. I had given up all hope-when my aunt near Kennard had read so much about the Interstate Doctors, she persuaded me to go to your office and be examined by you at least. I was taken to your office on the 4th of September. Your Doctor Culver examined me very carefully, tested my urine and blood, told me what my real trouble was, what he could do for me, and what the result would be if something was not done son. I believed him and commenced taking your treatment that day. The first month T had two or three attacks.
They began getting lighter and lighter j and now I haven't had an atack forj over two months am gaining strength every day and feel that I am a well j man, and able for any kind of farm j work. I certainly can't use language strong enough to give the praise to you that belongs to you for the way; you handled my case, not only saving; me from dreaded surgery, but sav-j
Ing my life and bringing peace and happiness to me and my mother. I am gratefluuy yours,
HARLEY BECK. Doctor Dudley M. Culver, the head ; physician of The Interstate Doctors, j is at the Richmond office every Fri-j day, where you can get the scientific i examination and opinion of this great j specialist absolutely free and save ,
yourself an operation and perhaps an j untimely death. He will tell you if,
ypur case is incurable and not accept it for treatment. Advertisement.
"Bona" - A name well known where
good coffee ist
appreciated Bona Coffee
may be found in the home, of the banker or mechaniclawyer or laborer. It suffen no distinction of class.. Its wholesome propertiesplease all alike. 0. W. Pare Ca., Coffee Rotten LafaytUelJmJiaaa
'
In
N
CHEAP DENTAL WORK IS THE MOST EXPENSIVE THING YOU CAN BUY ', If good teeth token efficiency. It behooves every one with poor teeth to secure only the highest class dental service. Poorly constructed, cheap dental work will never produce good teeth. Our aim and ambition Is to render the highest class dental service. Our office arid equipment, our knowledge from long experience is thm assurance you have of high class work being done here. All work Painless and Fully Guaranteed. GOLD CROWNS $4 BRIDGEWORK $41 SETS OF TEETH, $8 New York Dental Parlor Over Union National Bank Sth and Main Sts.
mm
IKlew Rflefilhiodl'
Gunmctal English lace, blnjcher, wide toe last, or semiEnglish with Gocdycar welt soles. "Tex-Tan Fiber Soles" The best fiber sole on the
market - with-,
out a doubt.
J5.00 values-
at
t Nut Brown
English Lace, Goodyear Welt leather sole, A Real $6.00 Value !
-QD r
"Better Shoe For Less" ; Up Staira, Colonial Bldg., Cor. 7th A Maiii, C. R. Michaelree, PropJ.
