Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 302, 1 November 1918 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SiN-XEiIkGIIam" lfRiDAY, NUVEMJ3EK 1, mis.
v
? HUNGARY'S DEFECTION HASTENS KARL'S EMPIRE TO ITS END
Mrs. Henry ,MUler entertained last evening at her home on South West Second street with a masquerade Hallowe'en .trjjr The. guests were Mrs. B. A. Beach r, Mrs. Ed C rowel, Mrs. Will Fisher, i Mrs. ' D .Crump. Mrs. Ralph Snavely, Mrs. John Cully, Mrs. Harry Cain', and Mrs. Henry Storch of Cambridge City, ' - Mrs. Clara Drewer"was hostess at a ' prettr Hallowe'en party at her home on " North Eighth street, Wednesday afternoon. The rooms were decorated with autumn leaves, golden rod and fall flowers. A Hallowe'en luncheon was served by the hostess. The guests were Mrs. Bertha White, Mrs. Jennie Brumfleld, Mrs. Carrie Smith, Mrs. Margaret Doner, Mrs. Hettie Home, Mrs. Osbourne, Mrs. Nellie Ford of Cincinnati, O., Mrs. Cora Stanton of Dayton, and Mrs. Clara Brewer. Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Hough of South West Second street announces the approaching marriage of their daughter.
Inez M., to Harold B. Williams, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles O. Williams. The marriage will be solemnized Sat
urday eveningV Rev..H. L. Overdeer
of ' Grace Methodist church will officiate. 'Mrs: Robert Crane and little daugh
ter, Betty, of Dayton, O., are guests of
Mrs. Crane s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W.
E. Johnson for a few days.
Mr. and Mrs. George Geyer, 211
North Sixteenth street are the parents
of a son, John Pershing Geyer.
Miss Ruth Marlatt, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles E. Marlatt, is seriously ill with pneumonia at the General Hospital In Cincinnati, O. Miss
Marlatt Is a nurse In Christ Hospital
The November Board meeting of the
Woman's Franchise League of Indiana has been postponed from November 6, the first Tuesday of the month, the regular day of the monthly board meetings, to Thursday, November 7. The postponement is made because Tuesday is election day, and many
suffragists who usually attend will be
busy at the polls securing member
ships and signatures from the voters
The meeting probably will be well at
tended as the October meeting was
called off by the ban on. public gatherings and there has been no meeting
since the September one.
Rev. and Mrs. Carl Aue and daugh
ter, Esther, of Emporia, Kansas, have returned to their home after a short
visit with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fetta
Mr. and Mrs. John Saylor motored to RushVllle today to visit Rev. and Mrs. Clvde Black, who are ill with
influenza.
An Informal reception In compliment
to Timothv Nicholson, who celebrates
his ninetieth birthday annivehsary
will be held tomorrow afternoon from
2:30 to 5 o'clock and tomorrow eve
nine from 7:20 to: 9 o'clock, at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. John H. John
son on North Eleventh street. Friends of Mr. Nicholson are cordially invited
to call during these hours. A family dinner will be given tomorrow evening
at the Johnson home in courtesy to
Mr. Nicholson. Mrs. Johnson i3 daughter of Mr. Nicholson.
Harlow Haas, who Is a student, at
Wittenburg college In- Springfield, O.
In the guest of his parents, Mr. and
E. M. Haas, of South Sixteenth street
Miss Blanche Bowen ha3 gone to New - Mexico, where she was called :v the serious illness of her sister,
Miss Jeannette Bowen, who has been
in New Mexico several years for the
benefit of her health.
Maybe Crowder Has Lost
His Job or Something Someone In the community thinks
Ihe war department has been trans ferred to Richmond. This morning, M
V, Kelly, clerk of the Wayne county
Circuit' court, and member or the con
scriDtlon board, received a letter ad
dressed "M. W. "Kelly, Provost Marshal
General. Richmond, Indiana, ar De
nartment." Whether someone Is
earnest or whether other members of
he conscription board are trytn
"get something on" Mr. Kelly, he ha
not been able to learn.
The former Danish West Indies are called the Virgin islands, because that
is the name the inhabitants selected.
When the islands were annexed to the
United States our government com
piled with the request.
s v- S !l o & 1 5 S dOHEMIA VS-I Cy I C2.ECHS. 1.950.000. G A CT C A C v ' : rftORMWS SLOVAKIA if . POLES , 3.S0Q.000 t VlP'NS SZ'3LO?e T SfcMANS.060,000 T RAN SYLVAN At Wooo k-l JS S LOVAKS Z.OOO.OOO ( A MT iTJV'X;V ' ..- . MAGYARS, pOOpoO & f- '-RZ fg, t CEftMANS- 60.000 ( . , . vw ,w -r
for the extensive system of sterilizing t and delousing. As the vast debris of
the? battlefields is gathered up-r-brok-en cannon and guns, ammunition, harness, tentage, etc. it comes back here
in huge masses to be assembled ana forwarded to the big salvage station at Tours. ' , .
The sterilizing system also radiates
from here, and while the actual work
is done at the front, yet the regulating-
Is all carried on here, with stacks of
clothing, underclothing, shoes, etc., moving forward constantly to meet the
requirements of this systematic
cleansing. . - -
Gas attacks have developed the
greatest need for thorough cleansing, for often after one of these attacks every stitch of clothing of the gas pa
tients has to be destroyed, and all the
blankets and equipment which have
the faintest trace of the deadly fumes, and this In turn calls for a complete
re-outfit of clothing and equipment of
all those exposed to the gas.
SMART COATEE IS OF BEAVER CLOTH
An idea of Emperor Karl's prob-1 la'.ion map of the "dual" empire 'femfi may be gained from this popu- ldual no longer since Hungary's .de
POPULATION -'
fection. Hungary proper, with a "corridor to. the sea,'? probably will have a separate government from now on. Large sections of what is now Hungary will later be annexed to Roumania and Jugo-SlavU
to
LOCAL BOARD GETS
FIRST NAVY "CALL a fall has been received at the con
scription board office for eleven white men qualified for general military service, They will entrain at Camp Wadsworth, S. C. the live day period
beginning November 11. The first navy call that the board has received came this morning. The call asks for a volunteer coppersmith,
sheet metal worker, or tinsmitn. i ne quota for this board is one man, but it wants as many as it can get. . This morning the board received a communication which said that offices had hpen established all over the Unit
ed States where men who wanted to get into officers training camps could get any information desired. Anyone interested in this community may
write to the offices or tne i raining romn association. Consumers Build
ing, Chicago.
THREE ORDERED TO
OFFICERS' SCHOOL Threp mpn from the Richmond auto
mechanics training detachment school
were sent to the officers training camp at Camp Grant, 111. They were Sergeant John Walker, Sergeant George
E. Hall, and Sergeant tiaroiu i. cmgess. - - , . ' The men for the third; school here have not yet arrived.. Tfcey may not arrive for" several days, as there may be delays at the camps of concentration, or with local draft boards. "Drive slow" signs have been erected on the Chester pike, at both boundries of the camp. A number of acci
dents and one or two aeatns nave occurred in other camps over the countrv, where it was necessary for the men to fall out for formation on a public road, as is at the Richmond camp, and Captain Roberts says that he fears an accident. It is urged that neonle observe the signs and use
care in passing the camp.
Bernstorlf to Tell Them About American Affairs BASEL, Switzerland, Nov. 1 The Frankfort Zeltung, a copy of wlrich has been received here, says Count Von Bernstorff, German Ambassador to Turkey was to arrive in Berlin Friday, having been recalled from the Constantinople Embassy not so much on account of recent events in Turkey than the necessity to have some one 1n Berlin especially acquainted with Amprlcan matters.
The newspaper adds that the Turkish ambassador in Berfln, Turkish officers in Germany and ""two Turkish princes who were studying in the German capital have been recalled- to Turkey. The same newspaper says three thousand workers in Budapest have plundered the arms and munitions depots in the Hungarian capital.
SIMPLICITY MARKS THE WINTER HAT
Kansas Wheat Gleaners
Save 7,000,000 Bushels WICHITA, Kan., Nov. 1. The
"gleaners" in Kansas wheat fields this
year saved 7,000,000 bushels of grain
which otherwise would have been wasted, according to the Kansas food administrator's report, This showing
I placed Kansas ahead of all other
states in this particular, Captain Kenneth Hequembourg, chief of the thresh
ing division of the federal food admin
istration, Informed the Kansas food
administrator, Walter Innes.
According to Captain Hequembourg,
thirteen wheat states reported that
16,275,625 bushels of wheat was saved through "gleaning" the fields after the harvest. This was. effected through
raking the shock rows, cutting the
back-swaths, by the use of tight bun
dle racks and wagon beds. In Kansas
the gleanings averaged from one to
one and one-half bushels to the acres
harvested.
Americans to Have
Plenty of Fire Wood 1 n mm.- mi m . i to '" (By Associated Press! WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN
FRANCE, Nov. 1. American fighting j
men at the fiont are to keep warm j this winter. The forestry section of i the American expeditionary force has
promised to deliver on the road ready
to be hauled to the men at the front before January, 1,100,000 cubip meters
of fuel wood. This is equivalent to
a pile of wood a yard wide and a yard
stretching from Paris to Berlin.
Thousands of foresters are now
busy in the French forests gathering
and cutting the wood, which comes
from dead wood and refuse In the for-
est. The fine trees of which the
French are so proud are not being cut.
The Decullarity of the Turks is at
once apparent when we observe that
their history is almost exclusive a catalogue of names and battles, says
Sir Charles Eliot
I IWP I I I I , .11..
This very smart coatee is made of beaver cloth. The lines are loose and full and strive to give comfort and utility to the wearer. The hat shown is of tan panne velvet. An uncurled ecru ostrich plume is placed high on the crown at one side.
io want Clothes that Dazzle?
It's SO easy!
A single trial package of Red Cross Ball Blue will convince yon that never before have you known true happiness at the end of the day. White ? why it gives your clothes a whiteness that even the fleeciest clouds cannot rival. Don't Wait, Dont OouM Get it Use It and KNOW 5 Cents. At GOOD Grocery Stores
This superbly simple hat of black chiffon velvet is particularly smart for formal wear during the winter months. It is a shape which is becoming to many and the black paradise feathers placed at a rather unusual angle gives it a distinctive note
Vast Quantity of Supplies Are
Stacked in Warehouses in France
AMERICAN REGULATING BASE, ; ADVANCE ZONE, France, Nov. 1 (Correspondence of The Associated Press) . Warehouses stretching over several square miles, baled hay by the acre, piled thirty feet in height . and other vast quantities of supplies needed to maintain the American army, mark this distributing center as one of the points where one obtains an adequate idea of the tremendous push America is putting into the war. -This wast accumulation of supplies is necessary to keep trainload3 of food, clothing, ammunition trucks, wagons, wheelbarrows, medical stores and the whole range of the army wants, moving forward in a huge daily traffic with unvarying precision so that no division, no matter what its losses in material, need suffer. Each warehouse is a hive of industry, -with the supplies moving out from one side to the front, and moving in from the other side as the steady streams of supplies flow in from the American base ports so that the full quota always be maintained here. At 'one point machine guns were being tested before going forward to the front. This was in the machine-gun section of the ordnance park, with a vast array of these deadly mechanical devices. Squads of soldiers were making the final tests, and the rattle of guns sounded like an early morning
FREE TO ASTHMA SUFFERERS A New Home Cure That Anyone Can Use Without Discomfort or Loss of Time. We have a New Method that cures Asthma, and we want yon to try it at our expense. No matter whether your rase is of long-standing or recent development, whether It is present as hay fever or chronic Asthma, you thould send for free trial of our method No matter In what climate you Hvft, no matter what your age or accuration. It you are troubled with nsthrua. our method should relieve you promptly. We especially want to send it to those apparently hopeless cases, where all forms of Inhalers, douches, jpium preparations, fumes, "patent smokes." etc.. have failed. We want u show everyone at our own expense, 1mt this new method Is designed to ud alt difficult breathing, all wheezii g,' and nil those terrible paroxysms t once and for all time. This free offer Is too important to -icglcct a sing?: day. Write now and htr begin the method at once. Send
, mono Simply mall coupon Deiow.
Co i today.
FREE ASTHMA COUPON FRONTIER ASTHMA CO.. Room 10C2-T, Niagara and Hudson Sts., Buffalo. N. YSend free trial of your method to
Court Records
I sme Brings joy
H
appsness
As
tho Hours Pm the Coming Baby Draws Nearer Are' 'You Prepared?
of
STERNS DISMISSES SUIT The case of Charles A. Sterns against Dr. W. G. Huffman, Dr. Bond, Dr. F. W. Kreuger, Dr. George B. Hunt and Frank Strayer was dismissed on motion of defendants for want of prosecution. The suit asked $10,000 damages for alleged malicious prosecution. , A judgment of $60.40 was given to the Capp Plumbing and Electrical company on a note against Daniel Evans. MRS. BARLOW WANTS DIVORCE Norman F. Ewbank has filed suit for divorce against Lucy R. Ewbank, charging her with abandonment. Jeannette Barlow has filed suit for divorce from Benton Barlow, whom she charges with cruel and inhuman treatment and failure to provide. She asks for a change of name to Jeannette Mae Towle.
LAND TRANSFERS Joseph H. KInsey to Addie Sasher, lot, 4, Moffett addition. Richmond, $1,300. . Margaret Smith Hnie to R. Garland WllletC -lot' 88, is Or W,- Starr addition, Richmond; $1.A -M. ' William Dudley Foulke to Ada L. Bernhardt et al, lot 15, J. P. Smith addition. Richmond, $1.
The Caiman Islands, dependencies of Jamaica, are the turtle-hunters' paradise.
Use Palladium Want Ads.
No woman awaltlni the Joy of coming motherhood should allow the days to psas without using- the wonderful penetrating ap-
pitrauon, Motnera rriena.
By Its reeular use throuehout tho period
is prepared ror the coming event
and strain and tension is relieved. It ren
ders the broad, flat abdominal muscles pliant and they readily yield to nature's demand for expansion. As a result tho nerves ara not drawn upon with that peculiar wrenching strain, and nausea, nervousness, bsnrircdown and stretching pains are counteracted. The abdomen expands easily when baby arrives and the hours at the crisis are naturally less. Pain and danger as a consequenca Is avoided. Mother's Friend not only allays distress In advance, but assures a speedy recovery for the mother. The skin Is kept soft and smooth and natural end free front disfigurement. W'ite to the PrndHeld RcgumtorCompany, Dept. J. Lamar Building, Atlanta, Georgia, for their Motherhood Book, and procure bottle of Blotter's Friend from the druggisc It It just aa standard as anything you can think of.
skirmish on the firing line.
-Almost as noisy as the machine
guns, were the machines for baling hay which stretched in long batteries like threshing machines, devouring the Stacks of loose hay and turning it out in compact hundles for the artillery
and cavalry horses.
Farther on the balloon sheds were turning out the big gas bags for use
on observation along the front. These are assembled and packed, and some
of the parts are made here. Like ev.
erything else the supply of balloons
must be finally regulated here, depending on the number lost or destroyed along the front, and the varying activ
ities of the different sectors.
Near by, 1,800 German prisoners were at work piling fuel wood. It was a hot autumn day and the air was heavy and gray with the dust of the immense traffic going on. But the prisoners did not seem to mind the
creature discomforts, but bent to their
work with a will, while American guards with rifles ready .stood at the
summit of the liuge piles of wood to
see there was no slacking.
Another 700 German prisoners had
arrived the night before, so soon there
will be 2,500 of these workers hand
ling picks and shovels instead of rifles
This is the headquarters also for the salvage carried on at the front, and
i ii ii if i iffis, m -rnrmm z'j' m I 4 as. i i i'm a t ii .i ... .?i s.ac &rrr mw ii i mmm m i ti ,m t
jzssxvzezm HmwvwjKsv k. -vr i. uswuu.auff .ul m vmwMfmMtifsn wmvv
WHEN TONGUE IS COATED DRINK
CELERY KING
Take it yourself and give it to the children for it's a purely vegetable laxative tea that acts promptly on the bowels and never causes the least dis
tress.
It puts you right over night and
when you catch cold and become fererish ycu mustn't fail to drink a cup
ful hot before going to bed. For sick headache, billiousness, dizziness, disordered stomach and slug
gish liver there is nothing that will I do the work so well. Every druggist
has it. A generous package costs only
a few cents.
ft i,.t-1
MlftttWBi
a m - v "U
The best of a Bumper Crop America's triumph in the wheat field almost equals, in imnnrronrA 1 fo trilimnh OT1
the &attle-he&. With care with conservation our bumper crop of 1918 will see our soldiers, our allies and ourselves safely through the year.
Last year millers had to take what wheat they could get. This year we are back to the established Valier policy of buying the very best wheat, and paying top price to get it. We are grinding into Valier's Community Flour
Pure u;Aife nothing but wheat
the best of the bumper crop especially selected, heavy, fully ripened, hard wheat. We mill it according to Government specifications, but by the same methods that made valier 's Enterprise Flour famous: slow, careful grinding; sifting through Swiss silk; modern machinery; expert supervision; sanitary surroundings and handling. You pay for Valier's Community Flour the price fixed by the Government for flour. We maintain the Government price because we also maintain Valier quality. By the sack Valier's Community Flour is a little higher than ordinary flour by the loaf it is cheaper because you get better bread a bigger loaf, lighter, sweeter, tastier. Try it and enjoy the old-time quality in your bread. Ask your grocer for Valier s Community Flour.
Let's win the warValier' Enterprise'
then yoa can bay the flour of float.
PMIilNj MIUING CO, fmmammmx
6t.lou i s. no. I M ST.JACOB.ILl V JF flARINE.lLLl
Look for Palladium Want Ads Classified Advertising Pays.
WHAT IS RHEUMATISM! WHY SUFFER FROM IT?
you rid yourself of this terrible dis-
Sufferers Should Realize That It Is a Blood Infection and Can Be . Permanently Relieved. Rheumatism means that the blood has become saturated with uric acid poison. ,' - - . ; : : It does-not "require medical advice to know that good health is absolutely dependent upon pure blood. When the muscles and joints become Bore and drawn with rheumatism, it is not a wise thing to take a little salve and by rubbing it on the sore spot, expect to get rid of your rheumatics. You must go deeper than that, down deep
into the blood where the poison lurks ; furnished without charge,
and which is not affected by salves i Swift Specific Company,
and ointments. It is important that I Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. Adv.
ease before it goes, too far. S. S. S. is the blood purifier that has stood the test of time, having been in constant use for more, than fifty years. It will do for. you what it has done for thousands of others, ' drive the rheumatic noisons out of vour blood.
i making it pure and strong and enab
ling it to make you well. S. S. S. is guaranteed purely vegetable, it will do the work and not harm the most delicate stomach. Write the physician of this company and let him adyise you. Advice Is
Address 435 Swift
3E
BUEHLER: . BROT HE
3
i
715 MAIN ST.
I!
!aituFrJay Sale The Original Cash Market. Shop Early PRIME RIB BEEF ROAST, lb .......... . . 18c CHOICE POT ROASTS, lb . 18c BOILING BEEF, lb 14c SIRLOIN and PORTERHOUSE STEAKS, lb 24c FRESH HAMBURGER, lb. .............. 18c LAMB ROAST, lb. : 18c LAMB LEGS, lb.. ....... . . 22c
BUEEILEIK BM(D)IHITER 715 Main Street
I
et
