Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 294, 23 October 1918 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, 1918
PAGE THREI
VICTORY WITHIN REACH, ENGLISH KING PREDICTS
Allied Armies Are Driving Foe Before Them and His People Sue for Peace. LONDON, Oct. 23 King Ceorge received a large deputation of Interparliamentary delegates at Buckingham Palace yesterday. The deputation included thirty British representatives, twenty-two from France, eight from Italy and one from Belgium. t "More than two years have passed," paid the king, "since the first visit of the interparliamentary committee of the French chambers, when you and w were In the throes of a conflict, the issue of which then seemed to many foreign observers uncertain, al- ' though you and we never doubted that our cause, being the cause of right and humanity, would prevail. Now the armies of France, ' Italy, Belgium and the United States, side by side with ours, are driving the enemy before them, his forces shattered, his people clamoring for peace. Victory Within Reach. "Victory is within our reach. And we are all agreed that it must be a complete victory. I congratulate you, . senators and deputies of Italy, on the prospect which opens before you of recovering the regions guarded by those Alpine snows, where your valiant soldiers have won such glory regions inhabited by men of your own race and speech, who have long desired to be united to free Italy. "And I congratulate, senators and deputies of France, on the approaching restoration of provinces torn from you forty-seven years ago, which never have wavered in their loving attachment to France." King George recalled that while between Great Britain and Italy there had always been peace, it was once otherwise as to Great Britain and France, who had waged many a war in former centuries. "But," he continued, "in those days there was always on both sides a spirit of chivalry which forbade bitterness, and when peace came it was made with a sense of mutual respect. We in England have always continued to admire the brilliant gifts of France, gladly owning our Intellectual debt to her, as we own also our debt from even earlier days of the versatile genius of Italy. Hope for a Free Europe. "That respect and gratitude have furnished a solid foundation for the affection which has now grown up between your nation and ours. Consecrated by the memory of the heroes who have fallen fighting side by side in this war, animated by the same devotion to their countries and to Justice, this affection and this memory are pledges of our future concord. Such concord and co-operation will, we trust, become under the blessing of Providence a security for peace not on!y to our own peoples, but to all free Europe, which 13 longing to return to the paths of tranquil- ,. ity and progress. . "And you, sir, representative of the senators and deputies of Belgium, we rejoice to Bee you also upon our soil. Your country, wantonly and wickedly attacked and devastated, has had terrible sufferings to undergo, but the day of your deliverance is at hand. The British people, which has felt for you through those sufferings, has admired the constancy and loyalty of your soldiers and earnestly wished for you a return of that prosperity which you enjoyed and which you gallantly sacrificed at the call of duty." 101 Americans Lost in Sinking of Ticonderoga (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Oct. 23. Two officers and 99 enlisted men were lost in the sinking of the U. S. S. Ticonderoga by a German submarine in midocean September SO. the navy department announced tcday. The officers were Lieut. Joseph W. Freeman, Wetumpka. Ala., and Lieut. Cleveland C. Frost, Berea, Ky.
Dae to You That We Have Unified Command, ' Foch Tells Lloyd George NEW YORK. Oct. 23. Marshal Foch, commander of the allied armie3. replying to the felicitations of David Lloyd George on his sixty-seventh birthday on October 2. gave the British premier credit for placing him in supreme command, according to the text
j of telegram made public today by
the British bureau of Jnrormation. ine message from Lloyd George read: "Please accept my sincere congratulations on your birthday. I feel a particular pleasure in addressing you at the moment when the allied armies under your direction are making so formidable a change in the military situation. I do not know whether I should the more admire your marvelous skill as a commander or your indomitable courage and the unquenchable faith in victory which you have shown in the course of this war." Marshal Foch replied: "I am deeply touched by your congratulations and thank you sincerely. I do not forget that it is to your lnslstance that I owe the position which I occupy today. The sure sign of the glorious days awaiting our armies is to be found in the perfect unity which now exists between all the allied forces."
I
CHESTER, IND.
i
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hill and Ernest Martin of Indianapolis visited Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Martin last week.. .. .Mrs. Edgar Hill and son Elmer of near Bethel, vlsiUd Chester Hill and family last Thursday Harley Bailey is sick with influenza at his home here. ....Everett McMahan of Richmond, spent Thursday with friends at this place Elbert Kemp and family called on Mr. and Mrs. Grear Williams Wednesday Miss Laura McDonald visited Mr. and Mrs. Orville Burg near JackBonburg recently.. .... .Word was received last week from Fred Pickett and Earl Bunker who have been stationed at Indianapolis, saying they had arrived at Fort Y7ayne but do not expect to be there long Miss Bonnie and Miss Blanche Carman were Sunday dinner guests of Miss Marjorio Pickett. Mr. and Mrs. Alice Boerner and daughter Carrie spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bond and daughters, Rosa and Edith, at Richmond... Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pickett and Misses ! Marjorie Pickett on Blanche and MarMorie Carman visited Mrs. William
Pickett at Williamsburg, Sunday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Burg of Greensfork are visiting Mrs. Eleanor Burg Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wesler and baby of Richmond, spent last Saturday night and Sunday with Mr.
land Mrs. William Wesler Farmers
in this vicinity are cribbing corn Miss Zetta Markley visited Miss Opal Skinner Saturday night Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Huffman of Connersville, visited Mr. and Mrs. Solomon Huffman here which they purchased of William Saturday night.. .Harry Newman and family have moved to their farm Crampton. ; " :-
MUSICIANS CHARACTERIZE INCIDENTS IN WAR
LONDON. Oct. 23. British music composers are turning their attention to atempting to characterize the incidents in the war. At a recent concert the audience was enthusiastic over the story of a Zeppelin raid in which the orchestra brought out the purring of en airplane motor, used the kettledrums for the Zeppelin engines and machine guns and big drums for the bombs while the other instruments piled up color.
CONDUCTS EXPERIMENTS
OXFORD, O., Oct 23. Dr. Bruce Fink, of Miami university. Is conducting a series of experiments in which he is endeavoring to isolate the influenza germ from sputum of persons afflicted with the disease.
SOLDIER DIES AT CAMP
OXFORD, O.. Oct. 23. The body of Wesley Sanders, hospital cook at Camp Taylor, Louisville, Ky., a victim of pneumonia, arrived in Oxford yesterday. The funeral was held yesterday afternoon, and was in charge of the Home Guards. Burial at College Corner.
DUNREITH MAN LOST MEMORY
HENRY MONTGOMERY LOST HIS MEMORY DUE TO A FALL FOUR YEARS AGO. BUT IS GAINING IT BACK.
Inter-State Doctors Take Charge of Case and Quick Improvement is Seen.
French Soldiers Find American Y. M. C. A. Substitute For Homes
Not only American fighters, but the soldiers of France and the allied countries, are aided by the work of the American Y. M. C. A. in the war zone. James W. Morgan of Centervllle, now engaged In Y. M. C. A. work with the French army, has sent the Palladium the following letter from Gabriel Roe, a French officer, who expresses his appreciation for the work done among his countrymen by the American "Y" workers. "We are leaving, they say, for a new center, and my regret at leaving you is doubled by the thought that there, there is not the kindness and cordial hospitality of a Y. M. C. A. "Villemaure, our future abode, does not possess a "soldiers' fireside" at
the present time at least. t
"Be proud, my dear friend, of the work which ycur fellow-citizens of the Y. M. C. A. have done on our old French soil, and let me tell you before leaving of all the good which I think of the "Y" In particular, and of that of St Martin de Rossenay in particular, where the cordiality, benevolence and the urbanity of our freind', Lacouchie, are praised highly. "I am an old pcilu, and since August, 1914. I have "rolled" over the entire front from Loos to Verdun and Lorraine. "I have known all the miseries there are, and the greatest, my dear Morgan, is isolation. . "That surprised you, perhaps, but it is. Yes, isolation, which obstinately pursues you after the fire of action has died down. One feels alone in the cantonment, alone at the resting places, alone in the "huts." Nothing goes to replace the absent fireside, not even the friendliness of our comrades, and the spleen has the best of you in the long run. "You know the name we poll us have given this unhealthy state? The "grouch." "Your great and noble country,
fairy godmother-like, has made "soldiers' firesides" to grow on the battle front, as well as in the rear. "You know I am one of your most assiduous patrons and each evening it is a new pleasure to go and sit with my friends, In the midst of our men, and chat with them of our absent families, to write, read and discuss the communiques. This rest is for me and all of us, most beneficial. "Not only is your task a moral one, which is approved by my old Huguenot heart, but I consider it a patriotic work. "In the midst of this intimate .cordiality, to which we return each evening, enlisted men and non-coms, our work ended for a time, we learn to know each other better, and to esteem each other better, and the next day. in giving out the orders we are more paternal, and the execution is more zealous. Since your arrival we have not had a single punishment on our company. "Your Y. M. C. A. is attracting and holding our soldiers, keeps them from alcoholism, and other degradation. "Everywhere here we hold you in unbounded consideration, for your work expresses the 'kindness of our friends in America, who we truly feel, are indeed our friends. Tell them everywhere that we love them with all our hearts. "Increase as you can the work of the "Y" and you will accomplish so a beneficial and highly moral work, which should be an important factor in the final victory, victory of right, victory of Justice, victory of all that is good over all that is evil.
"Farewell my new and dear friend. And long live the United States of America." v
Allies Employ Chinese for Work Behind Lines fRy Associated Prs.) LONDON, Oct 23. The Allies have employed 50,000 Chinese behind the fighting lines in France, principally for road and railway building, blacksmith and carpentry work. Although China declared war on the Central Powers almost a year ago the Chinese are made to understand that when transported to France they will not be used in the fighting lines. Coolies are paid about $13.50 a month and ray for other laborers ranges upward to about $27 a month for skilled men. In addition they are given J250, a fabulous sum for coolies, as a bonus for embarking for France, $75 In case of injury and $150 is given to the next of kin in case of death.
Eastland Cases Are Geared from Docket
Federal Banks to Aid Farmers in Minnesota (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Oct. 23. The federal farm loan board will approve the St. Paul federal land bank's proposed policy of extending financial aid to farmers in the burned district of northern -Minesota, it was stated officially today.
' snh i& l) imdigIstqJf
6 Bell-ans
Hot water Sure Relief
ELL" AN S FOR INDIGESTION
(By Associated Press) CHICAGO. Oct 2?. State cases in criminal court against men indicted in connection with the steamer Eastland disaster of July 24, 1915, were cleared from the dockets today. The case against Walter K. Greenebaum. general manager of the Indiana Transportation company, charterer of the boat, was dismissed on motion of the state's attorney and manslaughter charges against four officials of the St. Joseph-Chicago steamship company were dismissed with leave to reinstate. ' Shortly after the disaster the federal government made unsuccessful at
tempts to try the men, according 10 the state's attorney and this resulted in the state dropping the cases.
17HAT ACOUT YGn GO? The elements comprising the body are constantly wearing out I s. 1 J
enu mux uc iciicwcu uaujf the outgo of strength exceeds the income. & ;' i u;iv'--. SCOTTS will help the tired business-man cr woman keep pace with the wear
and tear of life, icoff nourishes the body, Llood and nerves, and helps maintain an even balance of strength and energy. Safm-guarJ yoar income of strength vcilh Scott's, too & Sowue. KoomScld. 27. J.
1W!
SPANISH INFLUENZA RUB IN AND INHALE Dr. Jones9 Liniment GENERALLY KNOWN AS
TBASI If ASK
and get relief. Good for cold in chest and catarrh. It reduces swellings, inflamation, and is a powerful disinfectant and preventative Dr. Jones' Liniment is good for the soldier boys in training.
in the home, shop, store -in fact everywhere. Always good to have on hand as a first aid measure . All Druggists - - ; - 30 and 53 Cents
GAS ON STOMACH SOUR STOMACH INDIGESTION HEARTBURN Instantly Relieved by BISUf&TED MAGNESIA IN FIVE GRAIN TABLETS And Powder Form. BISURATED MAGNESIA is a Magnesia compound especially prepared for the safe, speedy and certain correction of dangerous stomach acidity. It comes only in the form of five grain tablets and powder in sealed blue j-ackages. Do not confuse with commercial magnesia, milk of magnesia or citrate of magnesia. Look for the word BISURATED and get the genuine from DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE. Adv.
Alter each meal YOU eat one
ATOMIC
(?6yY0DBST0MAgH,S SAKE3
and get full food value and real stomach comfort. Instantly relieves hear, barn, bleated, assy feeling. STOPS acidity, food repeating and stomach misery. AIDS digestion; keeps the stomach sweet and pure. EATONIG to the bast remedy and only costs cent or two a day to use it. You will be Delighted with results. Satisfaction guaranteed ox money back. Please call sod try it. a. u. louden &. Co.. Distributors, Richmond. Ind.
NEW METHOD'S TUFF WORK
SHOES
2nd Floor
Colonial Bldg.
u' ' ' ' ll
When Your Little Child cries at night, tosses restlessly and mutters in its sleep, is constipated, fretful and feverish, or has symptoms of worms, you feci worried and have your night s rest disturbed by the little one s crying, or perhaps because of your own anxiety. Many thousands of mothers rely at such times upon a tried and trusted remedy always kept in the house, Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, Csed by mother for 30 years. These 1ow d?rs cleanse the stomach, art on the Liver and eive healtblul sleep by reirulatitjff the child a system. Kasv
10 live ani picasaai ior the child to take. Happy mothers in every community are using tbem with splendid results. Afrtthr it wwf ftltlff
nas the symptoms here described you should!
try these powders. Trade Hark.
Your drncffist bas Don't accept inem, , - ,. an, tu;ttj(,rt,. 1 Be sure you ask for, and obtain. Mother Cray's Sweet Powders
FOR CHILDREN.
The fact that Henry Montgomery has Improved so much in regard to hl3 mental faculties has created quite a stir among the Dunreith neighbors. Many have asked him about his recovery and he writes the following letter for publication, hoping it may be the means of helping some other sufferer: I had a fall off a load of hay four years ago that injured my brain. I began to lose my mental faculties. I doctored and doctored and they told
me I had Sugar Diabetes, with lapse of memory and mental worry. I went to your office February 14 with these disturbances. You told me It was caused by false membrane In the Intestinal tract, caused by excessive acid from the stomach. I had mucous in my urine. I put myself under your care February 14. Have been improving ever since. Have no trouble any more. Let me say In addition that the neighbors had said I was going wrong in my mind. They see the difference since I began treating with you and that vibrator over my spine has worked wonders with me. I have all confidence in you and your methods and will hail your name from the house-top of m yhouse. HENRY MONTGOMERY. Dunreith, Ind. The Inter-State Doctors are con
stantly In receipt of many letters ' such as the above, which testify with no uncertainty to the merits of their : work. They have made' a special ' study for many years of all form of nervous, chronic and deep-seated dl- j seases. They are qualified to give you a definite and correct diagnosis , of your case, and will not accept any case for treatment unless they can i be benefitted. If you will call at the Richmond !
office, which Is located on the second floor of the Starr Building, Tenth and Main streets, on Friday, you will receive a thorough examination at the hands of DOCTOR CULVER, The Head Phvsielan.
400 Cords Dry Stove Wood Delivered in lots of 2 or 4 cords. This wood was cut last winter and will be good to burn in furnace with soft or hard coal. Standard Supply and Transportation Company . Main & First Streets Telephone 1 069
YOU
NEED
Quaintly DemHisttry You deserve the best there is In dentistry when Investing your money in dental work. You need Quality Dentistry because you expect long service. Buying good Dentistry Is like buying anything with merit. Your purchase will be a source of satisfaction to you. All dental work we do is warranted to give good service. Hundreds of our satisfied patients will tell you that the prices are moderate. Visit the office of Complete Dental Service. EXTRACT YOUR TEETH WITHOUT PAIN Do Not Neglect Your TeethEvery Tooth Guaranteed
Porcelain Crowns $3.00 to $5.00 , Extracting .50c
Gold Crowns... $3 to $5 Bridge Work... $3 to $5 Full set of Teeth. .$5 up
DIR. J. A. EUDALY DENTIST 715 MAIN ST. Open Monday, Wednesday and Saturday evenings. Free Examinations. Look for the Big 8lgn In the middle of the block
ENGLAND
FRANCE
TALI.
In Fact, the Whole World is Short on Hogs Many Countries Have But Half the Number They Had at the Beginning of This War. YOU MUST HELP PRODUCE THEM! f UR Government asks a 1 5 percent increase for 1918. As a true American, you will do your best. You cannot now increase the number for this year's market. WHAT THEN-? Make More Pounds of Pork with the Same Feed. Do This by Using Moorman's Hog Powder the perfect combination mineral conditioner for hogs. Progressive hog men have put Moorman's Hog Powder to the test no guessing and know its real value in their business. By its use you can get two pounds of extra gain out of every bushel of corn. In addition to making not less than $50.00 clear profit out of $50.00 invested in Moorman's Hog Powder, it will help prevent disease. This is nothing wonderful. There are only a very few users who do not make greater claims. It merely proves there is a real need for such a preparation in the case of the hog which is a short-lived, quick maturing animal. WHY THE PRICE IS REASONABLE There are three principal reasons why you can buy MOORMAN'S Hog powder at the present low prices. First: Because of our long term contracts for raw material entered into before the war broke out in Europe. Second: Because every ingredient used is bought on a long term basis and in large quantities not merely in car loads. Third: Because we have refused to take advantage of this situation and use the war as an excuse for raising the price. You can get Moorman's Hog Powder at such reasonable prices you wiO feel that you can afford to use it freely as such a preparation should be used. , ' - ' -v.; See t h e CUD p o r m a mi Gift an. Stockman Supplies ' QUINCY, ILL.
Indianapolis, Ind. ,'' - St. Joseph, Mo. - Nashville, Tenn. "
Denver, Colo.
