Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 316, 16 November 1914 — Page 8

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l'HJS KlUHMUND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, NOV. 16, 1S14.

SKILL'S ADDRESS WARNS YOUNG MEN

;t evil days Baptist Pastor Urges Congregation "to Stay in Game When Friends Poke Fun at You." The following is an excerpt from the sermon by the Rev. V. O. Stovail at the First Baptist church, last night: "In Eccleslastes 12:1, the preacher savs: 'liemember also thy Creator in the days of thy youth, before the evil days tome.' These words bring up a question at once. Is It true that evil days are coming? Is this man a killjoy who would set up a death's head at the festival of youth? Is it true as the night follows the day that sorrow, burdens, cares, regrets, remorse, guilt must follow the care free, joyous days of youth? "Let us see. Here is a man who had tasted life. He had had opportu nitv. He had made resolutions and broken them. He had glimpsed high ideals and had lost them. He had been in the best things and the worst. He had observed Observation was one of his specialties. Read the Proverbs and Eccleslastes, and see how many things he has said about you and me, and yet he never saw us. He went out of this world long before we came into it. But ether folks lived while he was here, and he knew them. And apparently they were , very much like su. Experience Warns Young. "After watching for some time the things that go on under the sun, he (. formed some conclusions and gave out some advice. Now did he know? Are I evil days coming? Let us not split! hairs with the preacher over this thing, the man who has gone up in the airship of experience and looked down on the doings of the world for a generation has a right to be heard. It becomes us to listen when he points his finger towards the future days and says, 'Look-out! Evil days lurk down that wa.v days when pleasure shall lose its tang; days when life's sun-s-hine f:ha;i be veiled in clouds; days when physical life shall lose its zest; days when conscience shall sound like a midnight alarm; days when every noise sl'al! be imagined some creditor to collect his bill, some despot his tribute, some Shy lock his pound of flesh. Beware, young man and young woman, how you rush heedlessly along that way!' " 'In the days of thy youth' is the time to begin, according to the preacher. That is when the material is still fresh and the opportunities are all still before you. There is no confidence like the confidence that the young men and young women possess i now. Walt Whitman has put your feeling into words for you. "Those evil days, the preacher hints at are for those who do not stay in the same. It is 'to him that over- j cometh,' that the Master has said He will give the good things of life, the things worth while, the eternal things. All heaven, along with all earth, despises the 'quitter. ' "The great difficulty is not to get young people to make a good start and to kindle noble impulses within them. The great difficulty is to stay in the game when the taunts and ridicule cf friends poke fun at you, to stay when doubts and questionings confront you, to stay when temptation makes its onslaughts on you. "Now this the thing that I wish to emphasize especially and directly. I might call attention to the church as a place for social life of a high type, or as an opportunity for young people to be of service in the world. These are fine things. It is a wholesome tiling to have the young people consider the church as a sort of center for their social occasions, and it is helpful and uplifting to have them unselfishly engaging in the work of making life better and happier; but these things are only incidental and amount really to nothing unless the church can help the young people get that strength of character and enthusiasm of spirit that are possessed only by the life tiiat considers God in all its affairs." GIRLS IN BAD HEALTH Hundreds of girls go to work day after day, afflicted with some ailment peculiar to their sex, dragging one foot wearily after the other, working always with one eye on the clock and wishing for closing time to come. Every such girl should rely on Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to restore her to a normal healthy condition, then work will be a pleasure. For forty years this famous root and herb medicine has been pre-eminently successful in controlling the diseases of women. Why don't you try it? Advt. Elevens on Top in Scrimmage Indiana. Earlham, 25; Franklin, 0. West. Notre Dame, 48; Carlisle, Illinois, 21; Chicago. 7. Purdu, 34; Northwestern, Ohio State, 39; Oberlin. Minnsota, 14; Wisconsin 0. 3. Cornell, 28; Michigan, 13. Iowa, 26; Ames, 6. Nebraska, 35 ; Kansas, 0. Missouri, 26; Washington, 3. East. Yale, 10; Princeton, 14. Brown, 0; Harvard, 0. Navy, 31; Colby, 21. Army. 28; Maine, 0. Dartmouth, 41; Pennsylvania, 0. Williams, 14; Amherst, 6. Tufts. 60; Bowdin, 7. Syracuse, 0; Colgate, 0. Haverford, 10; Johns Hopkins, 0. South. Auburn, 6; Vanderbilt, 0. Georgia Tech, 7; Georgia, 0. Washington and Jefferson, 59; West rirginla Wesleyan, 6. CHIEF BENDER HURT. HARRISBURG, Pa., Nov. 16 "Chief" Bender, the Indian pitcher of the Athletics was severely cut SunJay when he was thrown through the windshield of an automobile he was driving near Sunbury, Pa.

AGAN

Protecting American In terests in fur key

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U. S. S. North Carolina, the cruiser which is now lying off the Syrian roast at Bierut with the U. S. Cruiser Tennessee to protect American life and property in Turkey. The recent rumor that the North Carolina had been blown up by a mine in Bierut harbor has been denied by the authorities at Washington, who received a report that both cruisers are safe.

Notes From F. H. Chmidt, O. L. Calloway, Frank Luddington and Will Butler formed a hunting party Friday to Rush county, near Glenwood. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Zehring, Mrs. M. C. Buckley, Mr. and Mrs. Shades and son, Mrs. Enyeart and Mrs. Kahn of Connorsville were the guests on Thursday of Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Zehring. ' Miss Helen Filby spent Thursday afternoon in Richmond. There is on exhibit in the window of C. H. Gravers' grocery specimens of Texas fruit, sent to the Tribune office by Thomas Copeland, formerly of this city. One specimen a lemon weighs 1 pound and 10 ounces; the other, a Japanese persimmon, is 111-4 inches in circumference with a weight of 14 1-2 ounces. Mrs. Raymond Ferguson and son, Paul, went to Indianapolis Friday to spend Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Ferguson. Mrs. J. W. Harper spent Friday in Richmond, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Xusbaum. Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Fry and children 1 of Indianapolis are spending a few days with Mrs. Fry's brother, I. H. Peet, and family. Upon their return to that city they will go into a new bungalow, which they have just erected on West Thirty-sixth street. Mrs. Cozie Main of Indianapolis is spending a few days with her sister, Mrs. Glen Cooley. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Calloway went to Greenfield Sunday to be the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Robert Calloway, Mrs. Calloway going to Indianapolis to spend a few days with friends.

Mrs. E. F. Reagan returned Friday I eighty wounded. to Richmond after several days' spent I with Mr. and Mrs. Foster Scudder. it is reported that oil fields have Mrs. George Butler entertained the been discovered in the Vacuifa mountAuction bridge club Thursday after- i ains of Bolivia. noon at her home in East German- j town. A tempting lunch was served

at the close of the game. The calendar indicated B. L. Stratton's birthday as occurring Friday, but in order to guarantee a genuine surprise, which was such, not only for him, but to Mrs. Rtratton, as well, a number of friends in the neighborhood went to their home late in the afternoon the ladies in advance of the gentlemen. A rabbit supper, with other good dishes, was soon in preparation and when at 6 o'clock the unsuspecting host and the gentlemen of the company, one by one, put in an j appearance, they brought with them tneir appetites, which were appeased j only after the serving of a game sup-; per, of which rabbit and other tooth- j some dishes, formed the "spread." The company included Mr. and Mrs. F. H. j I wuinu, :ur. Aiut'i i juiiiii, nir. anu ivirs. i gives natural beauty to skin and hair There can be no comparison between a naturally beautiful complexion and one of the defecta of which are covered vp. Resinol Soap helps you to have the right kind of skin. It is a delightfully pure soap, perfectly suited to everyday use in the toilet and bath. Yet to it are added gentle Resinol balsams. These stimulate the pores to healthy activity, allay irritations, and prevent or overcome the complexion defects which are so often caused by neglect, improper treatment, or the use of artificial aids to beauty. SoM by all dratrglsts. For oample frwa, wet to Dpt. 4-F. tteataol, Baltimore ltd.

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Ferd Romer, Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Luddington and Dr. and Mrs. R. C. Leslie. Mrs. L. J. Flanders was in Indianapolis Tuesday on business. Miss Louise Ebert spent last Friday night in Connorsville with Miss Irene Smith, who goes to Fort Wayne on an extended visit. Miss Florence Webb, Mrs. W. A. Roth and Mrs. J. W. Judkins returned after having attended the joint meetings of the Indiana Library Trustees association, and the Indiana Library association. Mrs. Judkins was called home in advance of the others by the death of a relative. Mrs. W. R. Wharton, Mrs. Earl Tout and Mrs. Hugh Bavender, of Hagerstown, spent Wednesday in Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Call of Knightstown; Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Masterton and son of Shirley and Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Drisc.hel of Richmond will be the guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Dean House. Sal-Vet, worm destroyer, conditioner and tonic. Quigley Drug Stores. . ' j ! nrCimnnv rTTTTC?rir DESTROY CRUISER TO PREVENT CAPTURE rDNicAecniAiDe-i i LBY LtAbtU WIHE..J , VIENNA, Via Berlin and Amster day Nov. 16. Official announcement j was made today that the Austrian ( cruiser Kaiserin Augusta was sunk off ! Tsing Tao after her ammunition was ' exhausted. She was sunk by her own ; crew and not by Japanese shell-Are. The crew was added to the Tsing-Tao i garrison and fought bravely on land. Eight of the sailors were killed and

Tuesday and Wednesday Shubert-Brady presents Robert Warwick in "The "The Man oi the Hour" Man of The Hour," by Geo. Broadhurst, in 5 Acts.

Winter is Here Start your Base Burner right. Use our Lykens Valley Red Ash

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PHONE 1178

LUTHERANS ADD $17 TO BUILDING FUNDS Second Church Contributes at Second Appearance of Jehoiada's Chest.

The monthly meeting of the Jehoida's chest took place yesterday at ! the Second English Lutheran church. The special offering brought $17 into the fund which is being set aside for a foundation to a building fund. . It is the second appearance of the chest. At the first appearance, more than $90 was given. The fund now contains $110. The chest will appear again on the third Sunday in December. ; Rev. C. Raymond Isley preached at the morning service. W. D. Rankin; state missionary of the American Sunday school union, gave an educational address at the evening service, on the needs of parts of Southern Indiana for more Sunday schools. Dr. Rankin establishes Sunday schools where they are needed and makes addresses to keep up the interest in the work of the Sunday School union. Special prices on Coats. Large assortment of sizes and colors. All this season's models. All this week, Knollcnberg's Store. CHURCH BUYS FLOUR The opening of a Belgian relief fund yesterday at the First Christian church resulted In the donation of : enough money to buy seven barrels of flour. Rev. L. E. Murray announced today that he will send the money to the fund started by an Indianapolis newspaper for the relief of the starving Belgians. HEAR ADDRESS. The Jefferson Township Farmer's association met Friday at the west school house to hear a talk by a member of one of the big livestock commission houses of Indianapolis. The hog cholera situation also came up for discussion. "CASCABEIS" ALWAYS STRAIGHTEN YOU UP To-night! Clean your bowels end Headaches, Colds, and Sour Stomach. Get a 10-cent box now. You men and women who can't get feeling ight who have headache, . . . -1 . . . 1 A 1 r.h an.f w ara hS1. 'J - V " , ........... V-... L ........ , .. - - ious, nervous and upset, bothered with a sick, grassy, disordered stomach, or have backache and feel worn out. Are you keeping your bowels clean with Cascarets, or merely forcing a passageway every fsw days with salts, artie nHls nr castor nil? Cascarets work while you sleep; cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested, fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the constipated waste matter and poison in the bowels. A Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning a 10-cent box from any drug store will keep your stomach sweet; liver and bowels regular, and head clear for months. Don't forget the children. They love Cascarets because they taste good never gripe or sicken. Adv. 0

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BOARD INSPECTS

(Continued from Page One.) heavy property damages on both aides of the block from the bridge to South Fifth street. At this location, too, piers of special construction would be required. The river bed does not run at right angles to the line the bridge would take. In order not to unduly block the channel and endanger the Starr Piano company's factory, but a block above, from back water in case of a flood, the piers would have to be placed horizontally to the flow offthe river. This would bring them askuw of the bridge line and would necessitate their being made extra long. .q'f The South L street site found very little favor with any' of the party, as it was regarded as being entirely too far south to be practical to the needs of the city at this time. The cheapest bridge could be built here, as the concrete work would be very much reduced by using the large amount of dirt close by with which to make large fill approaches on either side of of the river. This small saving, however, it was felt would not counter balance the unavailability of a location so far south. A Compromise Location. The South G street site, which was originally selected by the county bridge engineer as the one at which the least expensive bridge, considering its availibility for the citizens living south on both sides of the river, could be built, was very carefully considered, as it is looked upon as the compromise location, as far as the two improvement associations are concerned, and as the most economical site from the standpoint of the taxpayers of the entire county, as well as being the most advantageous from the view of utility. Only two Mocks south of E street, it is so located that the approach to the briclfic, as far as the C. & O. is concerned, would be under the viaduct already constructed over South Fifth street, thus eliminating all expense of avoiding a dangerous grade crossing, The property damage would be smallest at this site as only two small lots would have to be bought for the east, approach, on only one of which are there any improvements, and these are AMUSEMENTS PROGRAM ovingPictures TONIGHT M C A O PHOTO-PLAYS TONIGHT The False Guardian. a 2 act picture drama of Kalem, featuring the famous leading woman, Alice Hollister. TONIGHT The Yellow Streak (In 2 Reels.) "The Stronger Love Crusade Against "Dope" Has Become Nation Wide And Become Convinced See ike Brim Terror at the MURRAY This Week at the Enormity of This Evil. Incredible as it may sound to many a great traffic has grown up in the sale of cocaine and herouin to school children, especially in New York and other large cities. These drugs quickly reduce children to physical and moral wrecks and bring their lives to an early end if they persist in the habit. It is using mild langugage to characterize such a ''commerce as "awful." Heroin has lately become more common than cocaine as an intoxicant among the school children of New York, because its dangerous character is not so well known and because there was more legal hindrance to the free sale of the second drug. Heroin is a derivative of opium and is declared by medical men to be fully as injurious as cocaine. Dr. llarvoy Y. Wiley, the ireat crusader against the abuse of dangerous? drugs, stated in ;i recent article in Good Housekeeping magazine, that in Philadelphia, colored men had been selling as much as $"U.n0 worth a day of cheap cocaine to the children of one school. The purpose of Dr. Wiley's r.rtiele was to urge a stricter enforcement of the provisions of the pure food and drug act against this traffic. During the tvir.l of the "gunmen" it came out that the trade in heroin among the school children cf the city was one of the resources of the criminal classes. The use of these drugs is also an Important factor in causing young boys to become gangsters and criminals. Thus the drug evil works ruin in every direction. An important step has now been taken to check this evil in ?.- York. A law has been pass? :i 1 y the Legislature and signed 1 Oov. Glynn which makes it a crime to furnish heroin or other dangerous drugs for improper purposes. This measure supplements the anti-cocaine law which was already in force in Xew York. See the wonderful picture at the MUMMAY showing the evils of this drug, talk about it and give yrnrr support to the suppression of this evil.

but an old house and barn. For the west approach Wst G street is already laid off, eliminating all expense from that side for this purpose. The river bed at this point is at absolute right angles to the line the bridge would take. This would allow the cheapest pier construction and the best from the point of not interfering with the property of the Starr Piano company by unduly blocking the river channel as at the South E street site. Would Reduce Coat. Furthermore, the cost of a bridge at this point could be reduced as its height could be materially lessened because of the ease with which approaches with slight grades could be excavated to meet it. At the conclusion of the trip the party went to the Starr Piano company's grounds, where Mr. Gennett showed the commissioners the expensive concrete flood wall the company had constructed around the entire plant, as well as the elaborate pumping system to take care of the surface drainage of the area embraced in the walled-in grounds. The protecting wall rises eighteen inches above the 1913 flood level. As a result of their investigation and the earnest desire to push all needed public work as a means of providing work for the unemployed, the commissioners will meet again early this week for further deliberation on the bridge proposition. It is believed they will definitely decide on the South G street site, and that with the co-opera-

Your Baby's tender "tummy" will Find THIS the BEST for "every ill Now 15c for 3-oz bottle (used to be 25c) 25c for 7-oz bottle (used to be 50c) THEATORIUM Tomorrow and every Tuesday War Pictures Beginning tomorrow and each Tuesday hereafter we will show in addition to one regular service1 the latest War pictures, Current Events, Latest Styles. Remember Tomorrow.

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Yon Ge! AH lite Above IN THE Clothes We Make A dandy good line of Overcoatings, all the new woolens, made exclusively to your measure at only $15,00 and Up A Wis Line of Ready-made Suits and Overcoats priced at only $10.03 to 15.00 No better values in the city. Keep Warm These Cold Days See Us For HEAVY UNDERWEAR, SWEATERS and COATS All Reasonably Priced. SOL FRMML 820 MAIN ST. "We Give S. & H. Trading Stamps."

tion of the county council, yie bridge plans will be ordered completed and bids asked at as early a date as possible.

HEMO is a concentrated powdered drink of great nourishment that builds blood and body tissues. YOU KNOW beef juice is especially nourishing. You know the Iron of vegetables and meats builds blood. You know malt is an Excellent tonic. You know the benefits of celebrated Waukesha water. HEMO is all this and more more than a medicine because its hemo - globin builds without drugs more than a malt tonic because it is "double malted" and contains no alcohol more than prime beef because it is ready to use energy, malt tonic, pure sweet milk and celebrated Wau k e s h a water all processed to a powdered form. Thats why HEMO builds digestion, builds blood, builds nerve force, builds rounded bodies. All that is necessary to make a delicious drink Is to add water. It tastes like malted milk, but is more delicious and more nourishing. 50c at all drug stores. Ask your today for a FREE sample and st e f or yourself just what XEM'J is Thompson's Mailed druggist Food Co. passes Waukesha, Wis.

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