Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 157, 8 April 1919 — Page 10
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1919.
PAGE TEN
CONVOY SCHEME MADE POSSIBLE ALLIEHICTORY Sims Declares Protection of Vital Ships Figured Greatly in Winning War.
(By Associated Press) NEW YORK. April 8. The convoy pystem which many naval men had termed Impracticable, overcame the German submarine menace and figured tremendously In the winning of the war. Rear Admiral William S. Sims, commander in chief of the American navy's forces in European waters, declared on his arrival here aboard the British liner Mauritania. Depth charges and listening devices, he said, contributed materially to success in maintaining the trans-Atlantic "bridge of transports and supply ships essential to the allied victory," as did the "magnificent work" of the merchant seamen who "took their cargoes across, convoy or no convoy." Germany Wat Winning But It was . the convoying scheme, the officer asserted, which made possible the transportation and supplying of the great American forces that turned the tide against , the German Invaders. Germany was winning the war, the rear admiral stated, when he arrived In England the day after the United States became a belligerent. Teuton interference with allied "shipping, ho added, was a serious problem, solved only when conferences of the British, American and allied commands adopted the system of protecting vital ships which prevailed until the cessation of hostilities. Enlisted Men to Retain Part of Their Equipment . A - A .9 WASHINGTON, April 7. Every enlisted man, on discharge, the war department said today, will be allowed to maintain as his personal property the following articles of uniform equipment; j Overseas cap (for men with over- , seas service, hat for others) olive 'drab shirt; woolen coat and ornajroents; woolen breeches; one pair shoes; one pair leggins; one waist ;belt; one slicker and overcoat, two i suits underwear; four pairs stockings; lone pair gloves; one toilet set; one barracks bag; gas mask and helmet (for overseas men only). Soldiers who have already turned in their equipment are authorized to re-draw them by applying to the director of storage in this city. The department today called attention to the fact that it was unlawful for a discharged soldier to wear the regulation uniform without the red chevrons which show his connection with the military establishment has been terminated. Dalton, Ind. Word has been received by Mr. and Mrs. Erastus Burroughs that their son Ray, had landed at Newport News safely and would be home 60on Joseph Harter is still ill. . . .Mrs. Anna Bowman spent Monday with Mrs. Russel Dennis Mrs. Porter VanTress spent a few days with her daughter, Mrs. Warren Dennis. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Walter Beeson were Sunday visitors at the home of Ilarley Beeson. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Fred Beeson spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Olinda Beeson... Mr. and Mrs. J. Clapper of near Mooreland, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Clapper. ., .Several of the young people of this community attended the box supper at Losantville Friday night. ....Rev. Mr. Billhlmer has returned from the M. E. conference at Peru... The ladies of the Franklin M. E. church will hold an Easter market Saturday, April 19, in the Parson meat market at Hagerstown. Donations for this market will be appreciated Miss Grace Hadley of Richmond, called on Mrs. Homer Jones Friday afternoon.... Miss Helen Jones will go to Purdue University Monday, April 21, to attend the short course given for the girls who took first and second prizes in canning clubs and boys who were winners in corn clubs Mr. and Mrs. Branson Dennis and children and Mrs. Jobe Dennis visited with Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Grubbs at Losantville Sunday. Boston, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Crawford of Abington visited Mr. and Mrs. Warner Brattain, Thursday. . . .Mrs. Thomas Staton was a Cincinnati visitor last week. .. . Mrs. A. E. Kulter' accompanied by Miss Bertha Kilgus of Richmond, spent Thursday and Friday in Cincinnati .... Mrs. Lilly Brattain, who has been visiting relatives in Peru for the la3t three months, has returned home.... Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Carrico of Cincinnati spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Herfert Carrico. .. .Mrs. Edgar Johnson and little son of Peru, visited with relatives over Sunday Mrs. William Simons and son Robert, and daughter Viola, spent Sunday in Richmond. .. .William Looney has returnrd after two months visit at Lexington. Ky....Mr. and Mrs. Ieo Mitchell and son, Mrs. A. H. Piper and children motored to Richmond, Sunday evening. .. .Mrs. R. G. LTlm of Peru is here visiting her husband Mrs. Carl Lamb of Toledo, O., is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Harry reck.... Mr. and Mrs. Walter Seany and children mo tored to Alexandria, Ind, Sunday.. J. C. Tyle is ill. USED FIFTY YEARS
NEWS FRONT EARLHAM COLLEGE
mah anoup, rormer instructor mi history and political science at EarlT.". , T - . uain, was recently married to Miss Irene Mehl, Burlingame, Kas. Mr. and Mrs. Shoup are now located in their new home at Whittier, Calif., where Mr. Shoup is head of the department of political science in Whittier college. Both Mr. and Mrs. Shoup are graduates of Washburn college. As there will be no spring vacation this year, a number of week-end engagements have been secured for the different gospel teams that had planned to go out to various towns and conduct a short series of relig ious meeting at that time. The first of these teams to fulfill one of these engagements was one composed of Kent Morse, Theron Coffin, Gebren Joyner and Norval Webb, which went to Plainfield last week-end. The team arrived in time to conduct a meeting Friday night, then again Saturday evening and the regular services Sunday morning. The purpose of the teams is to give the different commu nities to which they go a college man's viewpoints on Christianity and religion. Thomas Elsa Jones, '12, has accepted a position as the general secretary of the Y. M. C. A. in Vladivostok, Rus sia. He will be in charge of the so cial service and refugee work. Halford L.- Hoskins, "13, instructor in history at Trinity college, Durham, N. C, will be at Chicago during the first summer term for the third con secutive summer as assistant to Dr. W. E. Lingelbach, head of the department of history in the University of Pennsylvania, and during the second term will be instructor in the Univer sity of Kansas. Lawrence. His last two Syllabi, designed for use on high school history classes, recently published in Topeka, Kan., are meeting with approval throughout the central states. The following Is a program for a season of Earlham events: April 12 Baseball, St. Mary's at Dayton; Junior, Sophomore and Fresh man parties. April 18 Day Students' play. April 19 Baseball, Franklin at Franklin. April 21-25 Short Course for Church Workers. April 25 Baseball, Butler at Rich mond; Richmond Concert. April 26 Track Meet, Cincinnati U. at Richmond; Debate, Wabash at Richmond; Butler at Indianapolis. May 3 Track Meet, Butler at Indianapolis. May 9 Baseball, Franklin at Rich mond. May 10 Track Meet, Franklin at Richmond; Press Club camp supper. May 16 Baseball, Butler at Indianapolis. May 17 I. C. A. L. at Franklin. May 21 Baseball, Muncie Normal at Richmond. May 24 State High School Meet at Richmond; May Day Celebration; College Social. May 28 Baseball, Muncie Normal at Muncie. May 31 State Track Meet at Crawfordsvllle; Baseball, St. Mary's at Richmond; Woman's Athletic Associa tion Banquet. June 6 Musical Recital. June 7 Play by department of public speaking. June 8 Baccalaureate; Joint Association led by President Edwards. June 9 Phoenix-Ionian play. June 10 Class luncheon; Class Day; Alumni Supper. June 11 Commencement. Miss Helen Rust, ex-'20, who has been teaching at Elkhart, Ind., during the past winter, is visiting former acquaintances at the college this week. Miss Rust plans to return to Earlham next fall. Horace Coleman, '95, will visit his old friends at the college and in Richmond for about two weeks. Mr. Coleman, who has been engaged in the Y. M. C. work in Japan for several months, has become the field secretary of the World's Sunday School association for Japan. At present he is on a year's leave of absence and is making arrangements for a convention of the W. S. S. A. next year. Henry J. Cadbury, a professor in Haverford college and formerly a member of the faculty of Earlham college, has accepted a position in the )Mm lis There are millions of people who Buffer almost daily from the horrors of an acid-stomach indigestion: sour, fassy, ptomach; distressing hearturn; sickening food-repeating; painful bloat and that miserable, puffed up, lumpy feeling after eating. Many of these people have tried treatment after treatment; medicine after medicine; others h,ave gone to doctors and stomach specialists and some to hospitals but in spite of all of their efforts they have obtained no lasting relief or a "permanent cure. These symptoms simply mean acidstomach. It allowed to run on, they are very likely to cause a lot of serious trouble, byspepsia, rheumatism, gout, lumbago, sciatica, splitting headache, dizzy spells, nervousness, sleeplessness, mental depression, melancholia, a feeling of listlessness and all-goneness these are just a few of the disorders which can be traced to acid-stomach. As a matter of fact, acid-stomach is often the direct cause of those almost incurable conditions known as catarrh of the stomach, intestinal ulcer, and cancer of the stomach. The lives of those who suffer from these serious troubles are nothing short of daily agony. Surely, then, you must see how important it is to go at once to the seat of the trouble acid-stomach. You know what acid-
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Andover Theological Seminary, which is connected with Harvard. Mr. Cadbury will lecture on the Hew Testa
ment and his services will begin next fall. The Harvard Press recently published a production by Mr. Cadbury, called "The Diction of Luke and Acts." . . , On the evening of March 23, a group of former Earlhamites assembled for a social hour at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Stanley, Morningside drive. New York City. The old stu dents present were J. Clyde Little, '17; S. Janney Hutton, '17; Mary Hiss. '17; Lester C. Hayworth, '10; Mr. and Mrs. Stanley. Mr. Hayworth will sail for France in a short time to engage in the Y. M. C. A. work. Mr. Louis Morrison, son of Prof, Morison, who has just returned from the Friends' Reconstruction Work in France, has accepted a position in the motor testing department of the Starr Piano company. Ralph Nicholson, chairman of the committee recently appointed to make arrangements for the Day Men's Den, has announced. that the room offered the men by Miss Edna Johnson, will be ready for occupancy sometime during the week of April 6. At that time Miss Johnson's classes will move into one of the second floor rooms of the libarary. . It. being impossible to equip the den with entirely new furniture, the, furniture of the former den will be used for a time. Dr. Joseph Herschell Coffin, head of the department of philosophy, was selected to represent Earlham in the absence of President Edwards, along with the representatives of other colleges, in a conference with the state board of education in Indianapolis last week. The object of this conference was to determine a definite course of study for the two years' normal course for the colleges and the normal schools of the state as provided in the bill Number 375 as ' passed by the legislature. , ; j i , Through the efforts of Prof. E. P. Trueblood, Carl W. Ackerman, '11, has been secured to deliver an address to the alumni and old students on Alumni Day, June 10. Mr. Ackerman has Just been engaged to give a series of lectures in different cities throughout the country on international problems of the day. In old days the town crier was a recognized institution throughout France. But when the art of printing came in, the newspapers drove the town crier out of business. Painful Piles A Free Trial of Pyramid Pile Treatment la One of the Grandest Event Yon Ever Experienced. You are suffering dreadfully with Itching', bleeding', protruding plies or hemorrhoids. Now, go over Yon Positively Cannot Afford to Ignore These Remarkable Pyramids. to any drug1 store and pet a. 60-cent box of Pyramid Pile Treatment. Kel!ef should come so quickly you will Jump for joy. If you are in doubt, eend for a free trial package bymail. You will then be convinced. Don't delay. Take no substitute. FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY. 678 Pyramid Building., Marshall, Mich. Kindly send me a Free sample cf Pyramid Pile Treatment, in plain wrapper. Name Street itv PtatP. Test For mouth does to the teeth how it eats right through the hard enamel and causes them to decay. Think tnen of the havoc that must be caused by excess acid in the stomach! Even if you are not suffering any immediate stomach pains, but are not feeling just as fit and fine as you should, you should by all means make this test: go to your drug store at once and get a big box of EATONIC. It 13 in the form of pleasant-tasting tablets you eat them like a bit of candy. EATONIC is prepared for just one purpose correcting acidstomach by driving out the excess acid. EATONIC literally absorbs the excess acid. It brings instant relief from the pains of indigestion, heartburn, belching, sour, gassy stomach, bloat, etc. It makes the stomach pure, sweet, cool and comfortable, puts it in a normal, healthy condition, so that your food i3 properly digested. You need every bit of strength you can possibly get out of the food you eat and EATONIC helps you get it. Don't put this test off if you value your future good health and happiness. You run no chance at all because EATONIC is absolutely guaranteed to give you relief or your druggist will refund your money. The cost is a mere trifle.
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Cambridge City, Ind. Mrs. Lillian Lowery visited Mr. and Mrs. Walter Henley in the country, Thursday Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Rowe visited friends In Richmond Sunday. . Miss Ruth Feemster Is visiting her
sister, Mrs. Lester Smith at Wheeling, W. Va. . . .Mrs. Tom Bird was at Indianapolis Friday J. Creecraft of Hamilton was in Cambridge Friday on business. .. .Gresham Drishel is home on a ten days' furlough. . . .Miss Bertie Lafever has gone to Newcastle to take a position as nurse in the public hos pital Little Miss Julia Louise Barnett of Indianapolis, is visiting her aunts, Miss Jennie Barnett and Mrs. Kate Blue Mr. and Mrs. Willard Rummel and daughter Miss Thelma, of Newcastle, visited Mrs. Rummel's parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. N. Falls Mrs. Martha Williams has returned from Indianapolis after a visit with her children. .. .Mrs. Emma Winches ter and daughter, Mrs. T. A. Mount of Seymour, recently visited Mrs. Mar garet Ayler and daughter. .. .Mr. and Mrs. James Horney and family, of Richmond, spent Sunday with Mrs. Mary Mauk....Mrs. Jennie Jones is spending some time in Richmond with Mrs. Emma Hodskins E. R. Bates of Richmond, visited with Cambridge The hired man with shlnlsft face,. . -. I , i U tlu nlui. works as tnougn dc w uvs He works ail day hia work's. well done. He's alwsys happy and foil of fun. If he only has his Golden Son.. OUR own grocer -will sell you better coffee ana at a xairer price than. you. will sjet fronu peddlers who depend upon premiums and not quality to secure your orders. ) Trade with reliable merchants. The . 8 Woolson Spice Co. Toledo, Ohio -
Special Announcement Fancy Fish from the Atlantic Ocean direct to your table FIRST CAR SOLD OUT SECOND CAR HERE PRICES SMASHED DOWNWARD We will retail one car Fancy Fish to the people of Richrhond at Wholesale Prices next Wednesday, Thursday and Friday on railroad track in Pennsylvania yards, North D and 5th Streets. Our method is to introduce ocean fish to the people of inland cities at attractive prices. Our stock is chilled immediately after being caught, so when it reaches you it will be perfectly fresh when it is defrosted ready to be used, thus assuring you of receiving fancy fish. We offer the following varieties:
Dory Haddock, Boston Bluefish or steak pollock, Market Cod, Flounders,
White Sole,
Evf-r-o Qoidl Fancy FINNAN. HADDIES Xtra OpeCiai While They Last, 2,000 lbs. at
Note the large assortment and the most extraordinary low price. All fish remaining unsold Friday will be donated to charitable institutions. Any deserving institution willing to accept same will leave name and address at car. BUY FROM THE CAR Car open Wednesday at 7 a. m. till 5 p. m. Open Thursday and Friday at 7 a. m. until sold out. Kindly bring basket or paper if possible. . Atlantic Fish Distributing Co. Main Office Boston Fish Pier, Boston, Mass.
friends Sunday. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Danner and daughter of Indianapolis came Friday remaining over Sunday to visit Mr. and Mrs. Amos Danner. ...Mr. and Mrs. Carl Earefoot of Cowen, Ind, visited Mrs. Barbara Barefoot and Mr. and Mrs. John Dodson over Sunday Mrs. Delia Williams
A handsome Lad is Reddy Green. With Edgemonts always he is seen, He eats em reglar with his chow, An in between-times,thenanJNOW.
Dory Steak
came home from Newcastle to spend Sunday Elihu Mills was In Richmond Sunday to visit a relative. . . . Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Miller spent Sunday with their daughter. Mrs. Fred Clark at Dayton...... Miss Marjorie Hurst, granddaughter of Mrs. C. E. Bond of this city, nurse at Washing
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ton, D. C, and John Sutton of Dublin, now at Washington, D. C, attended a meeting of the Indiana Society jpWashington a few evenings since.
The textile Industry of Brazil sup-; plies 75 per cent of that country's j cloth consumption, lb. JL
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CLEARS .SKIN AT JILL DRUGGISTS .
C FOR YOUR ACID-STOMACH )Y
