Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 169, 29 June 1915 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN TELEGRAM. TUESDAY, JUNE 29, 1915
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday, b Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor St. R. G. Leeds, Edito. E. H. Harris, Mgr. Itt Richmond. 10 enU a week. By Mfl, to advance ne tmt, .00; sfac months, $t.60; one month. 45 cents, fcvnU Routes, fa advance one year, $2.00; six montkn, LSS; one month If cent.
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Mayor Baker on Police Mayor Baker of Cleveland has a most interesting and instructive article in the July Atlantic on "Law, Police and Social Problems." It ought to be generally read, especially by city councilmen and those in charge of police affairs. Mayor Baker is a man of liberal views and at the same time is a sincere friend of the public good, and his long experience in municipal affairs entitles him to a considerate hearing. His place in The Atlantic is itself a sign of his worth as a thinker. One can easily gain from the article that Mr. Baker's doctrine is that public sentiment is the only law that can be enforced, and whatever the statutes, the grand juries, the courts, the police say, the final arbitrament is what the people say. There is nothing to be gained in going back on them. It is public sentiment that makes the law and it is public sentiment that must enforce it, and the latter is the more important part of the
proposition. Hence, Mr. Baker says the intelligence and purpose of the people must be put into administration. It makes no difference how perfect the legislation, it is of little or no good if the men who are to enforce it are not men of high character. He says: A community which, for any reason, elects incompetent and untrustworthy officials and is indifferent to the kind of government it gets is quite certain to get bad government, however admirably contrived the mere machinery of administration may be. On the other hand, inconvenient and cumbersome machinery, in the hands of capable and upright men, often produces excellent results, especially when sustained by an alert and intelligent opinion. We must reprint another extract from Mayor Baker's article. It is this: "We must stop regarding policemen as mere keepers of order, and we must enlarge our view of their duties far beyond the arrest of criminals and the terrorization of the neighborhood small boy. They must be selected with reference as much to their ability to catch and spread the spirit of social advance as to their personal courage and cleverness in following the twists of the criminal." How different this doctrine from that of old hire a thief to catch a thief. We know better than that now. We should not hire thieves for anything. Nobody but a clean, upright, intelligent man should be given any public duty. To secure the right sort of men, Mr. Baker suggests a training school in connection with the police department, where young men may learn the true doctrine and practice of police duty. They cannot get it out of politics or personal favor. A police system built upon either of these considerations is a phase of public depravity. Ohio State Journal.
WHY IS IT?
BY JOHN L. 8TODDARD, Well Known American Author Residing In Austria
Hans Koll has submitted the following, written by John L. Stoddard, famous lecturer and author, residing in Austria. The article will appear in installments of which this is the first. I have received some letters lately from America, whose authors ask me why I do not write to them as formerly, and why a "difference of opinion" as regards the war should mar our friendship. I have replied as follows: To we Americans, who, through some years of residence in Germany or Austria, have learned to know and love these countries, this is no simple "difference of opinion." It is a part of our existence. You, at a distance of four thousand miles, are able to discuss the subject academically, but we are in the warring countries. We know at first hand their heroism, their exertions and their sufferings. We also know that were this war a war of conquest, the entire nation would not fight enthusiastically as it does today. We are surrounded by a multitude of sick and wounded men, who in the awful firing line have risked their lives in our defense. We see pathetic wrecks of splendid manhood youths whose limbs were frozen in the icy trenches; men whose perforated lungs will never heal, and scholars whose keen eyes have been forever darkened by splinters from American sharpnels. Many of these we knew before. Many who fought beside them will return no more. Parents also, who are proud to give their sons, yet every day await with liated breath the published list of dead and missing, are to us familiar figures. We know, what history will yet confirm, that these two empires never wished for or provoked this war. We know, however, that our enemies, including Belgium, plotted and prepared for it. We know that France, forever gnawed by the devouring ulcer of "revenge." had poured millions of francs into the bottomless treasury of Russia, that at the given moment the huge Cossack horde might sweep resistlessly through German and Austria, while the troops from envious England and complaisant Belgium should, with the millions sent from France, march equally victoriously to the Rhine. We know that many ideas which you have formed at England's instigation, such as the notion that the German people have been forced Into this war by an ambitious emperor of by a military caste, are utterly erroneous. You must yourselves today perceive this. .The English fables that Hungary
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desires to make a separate peace with Russia, that an estrangement exists between Bavarians and Prussians, and that the Germans, Austrians and Hungarians wish to dissolve their form of government and found republics, are ridiculous. Such nonsense, when presented to a well informed paper ought to be thrown into the waste basket. This is the second time in the space of fifty years that the brotherhood of north and south Germany has been sealed with blood. Even Austria, which it was thought, would crumble into its component parts at the first shock of war, displays a splendid solidarity; while the United States of Germany were never so united as today. Both love and loyalty to the aged Emperor Franz Joseph and to William II, in their respective countries, never were so strong. But still we see you drugged by the knock-out drops of British lies, and seemingly immovable in the opinions formed by you in those first fatal days, when your bewildered minds were "wax to receive and marble- to retain." To Be Continued.
PREDICT MUCH GOOD FROM DAY NURSERY
That the day nursery will have a wholesome effect next fall and winter is the prophesy of Mrs. Linton, head visiting nurse. Mrs. Linton said today that many children of school age now kept out of school to take care of the infants of the family will be enabled to attend classes. This, in turn, will keep the older childrens' time more completely filled and will eliminate the possibilities of wrong doing and wrong thinking in the idle time fcrmerly spent away from school. It is expected in this way to increase the moral and educational standards of entire families. "Of course, we will not have many children in the nursery in summer time," Mrs. Linton said, "have from two to four babies a day regularly now. This number will be increased in September. Both the visiting work and the day nursery work are light."
GLEN KARN
i i
Miss Olga Jones spent Sunday in Union City with friends. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Brown, Dr. and Mrs. Aaron Downing, Harry Downing, Ruby Downing and Fae Southard spent Sunday evening in Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Verling Reid, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rudicel and family, Essie Louck, Kenneth White, Fae Southard, Ruby and Harry Downing were in Williamsburg Sunday afternoon. Will Beetley returned to Richmond this morning after a visit with relatives. Mrs. Beetley will remain for a further visit. Mr. and Mrs. V. D. Chenoweth and daughter spent Saturday evening in Greenville. Miss Mae Horn entertained Loral Ross and wife and Stanley Downing Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Harrison of Union City visited Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Harrison last Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Tony White of Lynn, Mrs. George Showatler and daughter of Fountain City and Miss Naomi White of Converse visited Jerry H. Holmes Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Chalmer Caskey, Dorothy Bartholomew, Goldie Timmons and Alice Ross took dinner Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Caskey. V. D. Chenoweth and family visited Robert Downing Sunday. Elleman Polly and wife and James Parrish visited Mr. and Mrs. Elias Polly Sunday.
WEBSTER.
i
, 4, Communion services at the M. E. church Sunday afternoon were well attended. Prayer meeting will be held Wednesday evening. Clarence Fudge and family spent Sunday in Greensfork. Several from here attended the funeral of Addison Harris near Greensfork. Otto Lacey and family spent Sunday with Henry Brown and family near Fountain City. The Priscilla club will meet Wednesday afternoon with Miss Hazel Plank-enhorn.
TURKS HOLD FORMER MILTON MAN CAPTIVE
Morris Caldwell, Brother of Mrs. D. C. Harlan, Returns From War. CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., June 29. Morris Caldwell of Chicago is the guest of his sister, Mrs. D. C. Harlan, at East Germantown, and other relatives in Cambridge and vicinity. Mr. Caldwell has just returned from an extended European trip, and relates much of interest in reference to the countries visited and of the conditions of the countries affected by the war. While in Russia he was captured by Turks and hejd prisoner for eight days. At the conclusion of his visit in Wayne county he will go to California to visit the exposition at San Francisco, and San Diego.
World Consumption Plague of Mankind
DR. D. W. DENNIS. In the United States 100,000 die every year of consumption; something like the same rate prevails in all other countries. We are accustomed to speak in units of the present European war; Germany loses as many in a year from consumption as we do. France nearly as many. Austria nearly as many (80,000). If the consumptive armies of the world were marshaled , they would be more than a million strong much more; that is the number that will fall die in the year 1915. This number approaches the number that will perish in the war. See the pale army marching to the grave; hear the feeble voice, "destroy these microbes while they are in your power, by spitting into a paper napkin and burning the napkin and this foe will be vanquished." It is a foe everywhere; in like manner it has been in all time. Moses saw it and described it; Leviticus 26, 16th verse, a terror that "consumed the eyes"; and Deutronomy 28th chapter and 22nd verse. The Greeks describ
ed it for centurleB before Christ and the Roman father of medicine. Galen, describes It two centuries after Christ, since which time it has burdened the history of mankind. Our own Gillilan gave us an account of the antiquity of microbes; in his famous distich "Adam Had 'em." Robert Koch in 1881 discovered this particular kind; the tubercle bacillus; since which time the fight against this diseases, has been gathering volume. Shant we join the army and fight against It. Since 1881 we have been gaining ground in the fight; fewer die now than did then; for the first time we can make an intelligent fight. It is against us that it requires something like a year or even .more to effect a cure; care all the time; many tire of it; after it has passed a certain point' it is incurable; its approach is insidious.
It would be fame for Richmond if
we could lead in the fight. But we will all have to obey and keep it up for five years, as matters now stand.
Milton's Social News
TWINS CELEBRATE.
ECONOMY, Ind., June 29. Last Sunday, John Replogle of here and Jesse Replogle of Hagerstown, who are twin brothers, celebrated their thirty-eight birthday anniversary at the home of the former. A big dinner was served in honor of the occasion and stories of boyhood days were retold.
Msr. Vene Beeson was called to Connersville, Sunday by the illness of her sister, Mrs. McClure. Mrs. Hattie Heist had as guests at dinner, Sunday, Dr. and Mrs. L. M. Gentle and family of Richmond, and Mrs. J. A. Brown and son of Milton. Rutledge H. Newman and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ward accompanied by Mrs. Gerrlt Kouenhoven returned to Chicago, Saturday afternoon. Homer Newman also returned to his home at Orrville, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Hicks, Mesdames John Soden of Dayton, and W. W. Leverton spent Saturday at Losantsville with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Benton Wagner and Mrs. Will Wlssler were at Connersville
Saturday.
The entertainment committee of the
Embroidery club gave an open meet
ing at the home of Mrs. Charles Davis,
Friday evening in honor of their hus
band and friends. The committee is
composed of Mrs. Charles Davis, Mrs.
Albert Newman, Mrs. L. M. Gentle, Mrs. J. A. Brown and Mrs. Ott, Crown-
over. The party was given as an old
fashioned affair and all were dressed
to represent the old time days and in character costume. The entertainment for the evening was of like
character and as the names were call
ed each responded with a declamation
of ye olden time or a vocal or instrumental solo. Other features were charades, spin the plate and Virginia reel. A luncheon and punch was served in the dining-room. The special friends of the club were Messrs. and Mesdames Chester Coppock, L. E. Thompson, Harry Doty, Will Daniel, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Kniese and daughter of Cambridge City, Misses Lora Beeson, Margaret Gentle and brother, Robert Gentle the last two from Richmond.
Oscar Kirlin, John Kirlin, Omer Kirlin. Charles Kirlin, Ross Cramer,
Frank Connelly, Charles Davis, Fred Murley, W. H. Miller, Curtlss Little, Will Scott and Albert Kellam formed
auto parties from here to connersville
to see the ball game. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Lowry celebrat
ed their ninth wedding anniversary Sunday with a dinner. Their guests
were Mr. and Mrs. John Kellam, Mr and Mrs. C. A. Braden, Albert Kellam
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Wissler and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Filby and Mrs. Anna Dodge. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Filby, a son, Monday Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Beeson, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Kniese and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Crook, Miss Irene Crook, and their guests, Mrs. Enm pieton, rtussell Dennis and sister, formed auto parties to Dayton Sunday.
FALL BREAKS ARM AS BOYS SCUFFLE
EATON, O . June 29. Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Harris of Brooklyn, - are visiting his parents, ex-Governor and Mrs. Andrew I. Harris. Dr. and Mrs. F. M. Michael . and daughter Miss Mary, are expected to return sometime during the next ten days from an extended western trip. Herman McGee, well-known young farmer residing northeast of Eaton. Is ill with typhoid fever. One of his daughters suffered an attack of the
malady and for a time was seriously) sick. Rev. McD. Howsare is in Lima to at-' tend the annual sessions of the Ohio)
Christian conference. He will appear on the program and deliver three addresses. Charles F. Lilly and Miss Mary Ludy were married late Sunday evening by Rev. McD. Howsare at the Christian church parsonage. The bride is a daughter of James L. Ludy, northeast of Eaton. While engaged in a friendly wrestling match with Verl Bennett, William Keliher fell to the ground and suffered the fracture of a bone in his left wrist.
PASTORS PICNIC AT GLEN MILLER
Ministers with their wives and children held their annual picnic today. It was arranged to hold the outing in Glen Miller park but the inclement weather this morning decided the members to hold it in the East Main Street Friends' church in the event of rain this afternoon. A business session was held in conjunction with the picnic and officers for the ensuing year were elected.
FRIGHTENED ADL TRAMPLES ON MAN COMING TO RESCUE
GLEN KARN. 0 June 29. O. A. and H. C. Downing were in Richmond Saturday. Herschel HiU and family of New Madison spent the day Sunday with Earl Mitchell and family. Will Cummins and wife were guests of Sampson Cloyd and wife Sunday. Miss Mary Struck is visiting her mother Mrs. Skldmore, in Union City. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Klepplnger of Englemar visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Flatter Sunday. Miss Ruby Downing spent Saturday night with Opal Skinner. Mrs. Marie Milton of Whitewater, spent the week-end with her mother, Mrs. Henry Wofal. Mrs. Hattie Mason of Pittsburg. Kansas, visited Mrs. Jerry Horn Saturday. John Flatter and wife entertained the following at dinner Sunday. Mrs. Raymond Klepplnger and sons of Englemar, Marlon Tlllson, wife and daughters, Mae Horn, William Horn, Gerald Koontz, Henry Horn and Forrets Flatter and wife of Dayton. A. P. Duffy and family of New Paris, and J. H. Hoover of Eldorado, were guests of Ivan Richards and wife Sunday. The Gleaners Sunday school class meet Thursday night at the home of Ross Rudicel. Frost Thomas came Saturday for a few days visit with his parents C. A. Thomas and wife. Frank Tlllson spent Sunday with his family in Lynn. Miss Hazel Copplc spent last week with her grandparents in Laura.
HUNT CONSPIRATORS WASHINGTON, June 29 A third man today being sought by Washington police as an accomplice in the plot to murder T. Franklin Schnieder, millionaire real estate owner of this city, and Pittsburg, for which Thomas G. Forney, son-in-law of the millionaire, and George McHenry, a former
waiter, are under arrest. Headquarters detectives declare they have identified McHenry as Frank Gales, who operated under several other aliases and is recorded as number 4,652 in the Rogues' Gallery as a pickpocket and gunman. The police say he has "done time" here and in Philadelphia.
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