Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 91, 3 March 1916 — Page 4
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, MCH. 3, 1916.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Sts. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr.
In Richmond, 10 cents a week. By one year, $5.00 six months, $2.60; one Rural Routes, In advance one year. 11.25; one montlt. 25 cents.
Entered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, as Sec - - . ond Class Mall Matter.
The Youth' of Today. Dr. J. G. Hibben, president of Princeton university, holds to the , opinion that too much luxury, even too much comfort, is a bad thing for the youth of the country. He is not alone in that belief. Others have expressed it others as prominent in a national sense as he. But a little more significance attaches to it, perhaps, when It comes from a man who makes it his business, as Dr. Hibben does, or, for that matter, as the president of any great university does, to study the needs and requirements and problems of the young men of the nation. "The great danger lies in the fact," says he, "that our young men should have on all sides of them comforts and pleasures which make them consider themselves alone. Many of our youths are indifferent to everything under heaven
Copyright, 1916, by the McClure Frank was a little lame boy. He was Hot only lame, but his back was Injured In such a manner that he could not walk and had to be wheeled about in a chair. One morning In t.he . winter Frank sat In bis chair by the window looking out at the snow piled high about the i house and walks, an" he was thinking of all the good times the well boys were having, when he saw a shadow i on the snow, and in another second a squirrel sat on the window sill outslde. ' Frank tapped on the window pane, but even that did not drive away the squirrel. "I believe he Is hungry," said Frank's mother who had come, to see his strange 'guest. "I will get him something to eat." "Here is the very thing," said Frank reaching for a dish of nuts that stood on a table beside him. "I expect we will frighten him away If we open the window." V' '." Frank's mother raised the 'window very softly, and while the squirrel kept his eyes fixed upon Frank and his mother, he did not run, and when the nuts were placed outside he began eating them as though the food had been a scarce article with him that winter. After he had eaten all the nuts he put his paws on the window pane as though looking for more, but when the nuts were put out this time he filled his cheeks until he looked as if he had the mumps, and away he ran over the snow and into the woods. The next morning Frank saw his squirrel friend running into the yard, - MY -BRlAHTASri I HAVE COMEFON followed by another squirrel.' They ran up Jo. the window where Frank was sitting, and the biggest one the visitor of the day before put his paws on the window pane t.s he did the day before and looked in as though to say: "Where is my breakfast? I have come for it.' "I am going to name him Brave," Frank told his mother. "He does not seem to be afraid of anything." "This must be his wife," said Frank's mother, "and he took the nuts home to her yesterday, I am sure." Every" morning for several days Brave and his wife came to Frank's window for their breakfast, and sometimes they would stay for a long time running about 'and jumping from the window sill to the ground and running u,..r . r.HU,;.r fH.i and hi. wife were lazy when the nuts were on the ground," said his father one night, "or they would have plenty of nuts stored away in their tree, and I think we better provide a home for them. The next day Frank's father brought i a large cage, and four posts were driv-, enMnto the ground near the window ; v hero Frank sat.- - On this was placed the cage with the door open and a dish of nuts and other food and a dish of clean water were placed inside. The next morning Brave , appeared with his wife. They did not notice the cage, but jumped up to the window sill for their breakfast. Frank had nuts for them, but not as many as usual, and after they had MskFof
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Newspaper Syndicate, New York. eaten them they looked for more, as if they knew they had not had their usual supply. When they found there were no more to be had they began to play- and Brave ran up one of the posts that held the cage. He hesitated at the door and looked in in a very snepicious manner. After a minute he went in and ran about until he came to the wheel. ' He looked It over and then put his front paws on the edge, when it moved. : He jumped back, but he tried it again and then jumped in. He was spinning around as if he had run a wheel ail his life and seemed to enjoy it greatly, when suddenly he esDie the nuts. which were in a little box, and with a jump he was' beside them. By this time his wife had found him, and together they finished the nuts and other food in short time. The next morning they . came as usual, hut went Straight to the cage for their breakfast, and all winter they did not miss a day visiting Frank. ' Some days they would stay, around the' house all day, running in and out the cage and spinning around in the wheels, for the cage had two wheels: and there were no waiting turns for Brave and his wife. Some of Frank's friends asked him why he did not' close the door when both squirrels were inside, and so keep them all the time, but Frank said: ao, i a ratner see them running about. I could not enjoy them at all if they were. locked in." Tomorrow's story "Tommie's Choice." LODGE CALENDAR. Richmond council No. 18, Jr.. O. U. A. M.. meets Monday night at 7:30 in the Vaughan hall, over 710 Main street. Fred Cordell. councilor; Josh E. Hlghley, rec. secretary. Uniform Rank, Jr., O. U. A. M. meets Tuesday night at 7:30. Theodore Whitney, captain; C. Perry, company clerk. Pride of Richmond council No. 15, Daughters of America, meets on Wednesday night at 8 o'clock. Eva Monroe, councillor; Rosetta Hosier, rec. secretary. TO ATTEND FUNERAL. A called meeting of the Eden Rebekah Lodge Number 30 of the Daughters of Rebekah Will be held Friday evening at 7i3.0 o'clock to hold services for Sister Shepherd according to announcement' by Noble Grand, Blanch Oldaker, and secretary, Luella Gordon. Vermont is estimated to have 2,000,horse power of undeveloped water power. EVERY THREE MINUTES ONE DIES IN THE U. S. The Anti-Tuberculosis Society illus tratesthe frightful toll of consumption J by extinguishing a light every three' minutes, and shows that it is the man or woman girl or boy who negiects , ',. , . . " . &f , colds, whose : blood is impure, who feels weak and languid, who is the very one to contract tuberculosis and none are immune. During changing seasons, or after sickness, blood-quality is most important, and if you and your family will take Scott's Emulsion after meals it will charge your blood with healthsustaining richness, quicken circulation, tnd strengthen both lungs and throat. 1 Scott's is free from alcohol easy to ake it cannot harm. Get a bottle to-day. Scott & Bowne. Bloom field. N.J. 15-23
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except how they can maintain their comfort and convenience. They have done or experienced nothing that would make them ready for service and sacrifice." Naturally such a statement as this invites, if it does not command, comparison between the conditions surrounding the young man of today and the young man of yesterday. "It would be difficult," some one remarked recently, "to imagine young men of our own time sacrificing themselves on the altar of principle as so many young men, north and south, did in the days of the civil war." There is nothing in this utterance to indicate that today's youth would be found wanting in the hour of trial. It says merely what Dr. Hibben says that our young men seem to be less sturdy and robust in character. Our forefathers did not find life. easy. Existence for them was a struggle. They were acquainted with hardship; they touched elbows with privation. Experience tempered them. "There must be an awakening of the old spirit of our fathers and our fathers' fathers, says Dr. Hibben, -"who did not have all the luxury which we have, but who had an integrity of spirit whicliwe do not have. Military preparedness will be of no avail in time of danger unless we have this spirit of consecration." Here are criticism and counsel, hand in -hand. Both might be pondered to advantage by parents who, in mistaken affection, make life too easy for their sons, who, in narrow selfishness, are thus saved from inconvenience and discomfort. Indianapolis News.
1 WEBSTER. I Bennie Moore, who is attending business college in Richmond, spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. ana Mr3. William Moore Misses Aita Wilcoxen, Vena Witmer, Media Brown and Marie Wills of Richmond,8 spent Saturday night at their homes here..... Mr. and Mrs. Edward Thompson were visiting in Richmond Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Irvin and daughter Ruth, of Lafayette, are' visiting Mr. and Mrs. William Bond Charles Myers, Mabel King, Noel Culbertson and Bessie Wickersham were absent from school Monday on account of sickness.. .. .Cecil Tice of Silver Point, and Glen Miller were the guests of Claude and Harry Williams Sunday John Myers attended a party given at the home of Lucile Gentry . Sunday evening Harry Null of Lyons Station, was the guest of Miss Frances Harvey Sunday evening.. . Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Palmer j visited Mr. and Mrs. John Davis near here, Sunday.. .. .Mrs. William Ryan and children, Genieve, John and Mary, were the guests of relatives in Richmond Tuesday Miss Treva ClarL from north of here,, was the guest of Miss Bernice Burnett Monday night. ...Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Williams were the guests of their daughter,,: . Mrs. Ruth Richardson at their home near Richmond Saturday.; . . .Miss Marguerite Haisley and Frank Williams at tended church at Williamsburg Sunday evening Miss Helen Harvey spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bteson Misses Loretta and Martha Weadick spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Murray in Richmond Mrs. Milton Atkinson and Mrs. Clayton Brumfiel and daughter Marcia Kathleen of Richmond, spent. Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Hendershott Mrs. Matie Nicholson of Richmond, was the guest of her mother, Mrs. Wright Witmer Wednesday. HIGH SCHOOL PLANS BIG ACT FOR CIRCUS NEW PARIS, O., March 3. The circus to be given Friday evening by the high school is attracting much attention, and a large attendance is expected. The affair will be given in the K. of P. hall, and will consist of one big' act, beside music, side shows and other features. An evening of merriment is promised, the proceeds from the sale of tickets being for the benefit of the piano fund. COMMITTEE MEETS. WASHINGTON, March 3. The House foreign affairs committee went into session this afternoon to take up the submarine question. Members did not expect to reach a definite decision today as to what would be done.
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Tan ner Daily Puzzles
THE UNHEEDED CAL1I1. Get up, get up. you sleepy head, 'tis time you were away; Can you afford to wait till noon before you start the dayT You give no heed to wifey's ,call, nor the alarm clock's ring A charge of dynamite for you, we think, would be the thing. Find hit wife. . ANSWER TO YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE. Cpside down In frame.
NEW PARIS ADOPTS GARY SCHOOL PLAN NEW PARIS, O..March 3. The Gary system of study was introduced into the schools of Jefferson township and the New Parjls schools Monday and is proving a success. The system is in vogue in Gary, Ind., and the instructors are by the method able to give more individual instruction during the study periods. Philomath Events By Gertrude McCashland. Mr. and Mrs. M. B. McCashland and Gertrude, visited Friday with Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Manley and family in Richmond.. .. .Misses Isabelle, Rachel and Jane Funk spent Sunday with Miss Okla Clevenger Miss Gladys Plessinger has accepted a position as clerk In Woolworth's five and ten cent store in Richmond Mr. and Mrs. Earl Doddridge and family had for their guests to dinner Sunday, 'Messrs. and Mesdames M. B. McCashland and Gertrude and Samuel Fisher and Darlie; Messrg. Oscar Wissler, O.-N.- Stinson and Harry Weber were afternoon callers Miss Mabel Stinson returned Tuesday after a week's visit with relatives in Centerville.. FAILS TO MURDER SO COMMITS SUICIDE ROCHESTER, Ind., March 3. Wil- ? y.fltZ.'uVf)Ii1ltifi. S"i?le .Wi-,a shot gun this morning after a futile attempt to murder his wife. He was 48 years of age. ore Throat or moatn. You, must keep the throat and moutb Mean and healthy. Any disease that attacks the canal through which must pass the food ve eat, the beverages we drink and the vary air we breathe is l serious matter. Why nearlect Sore Throat or Sore Mouth when TONSILIN& makes it so ensv for you to get relief? ION SI LINE is the remedy speci al! v prepared tor that purpose. TONSILINE does its full duty you can depend upon it. Keep a bottle in the house where you can get it quick when needed. 25c. and 50c. Hospital Size $1.00. Al) Druggists. flavor other flours are flat. is constantly making rigid
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LYRIC. Nothinc ouite so eccentric, so bizarre, so unique has produced in recent months as "Madame Cubist," at the Lyric tonight, a two-reel ultra mod era drama, feat urine Mary fuller. The play takes us into the studios of fashionable New York artists who have been influenced by the Parisian im pressionlst and cubist school. We meet a wealthy society woman who has thousands to spend upon her gowns and gratifies her desire to be unusual by wearing eccentric gowns of unusual material and pattern. No Stonach Pain, Gas, Indigestion In Five Minutes Pape's Diapepsin" Is the Only Real Stomach Regulator Known. "Really does" put bad stomachs in order " really does " overcome indigestion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness in five minutes that just that makes Pape's Diapepsin the the world. If what you eat fe7nen into stubborn lumps, you belch gas and ercutate sour, undigested food and j acid; head is dizzy and aches; breath foul ; tongue coated ; your insides filled with bile and indigestible waste, remember the moment "Pape's Diapepsin" comes in contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. It's truly astonishing almost marvelous, and the joy is its harmlessness.. A large fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin will give you a hundred dollars worth of satisfaction or your druggist hands you your money back. It's worth its weight in gold to men and women who can't get their stomachs regulated. It belongs in your home should always be kept handy in case of a sick, sour, upset stomach during the day or at night. It's the quickest, surest and most harmless stomach regulator In the world. Adv.
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CENTERVILLE, Ind., March 3. The Auxiliary of the Farmers Institute will hold their monthly, meeting In the Commercial club room next Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Mrs. E. M. Bowers will lead the discussion on Domestic Science at this meeting Mr.' and Mrs. W. B. Fouts attended the district conference and the Foreign mission meeting at the M. E. church yesterday afternoon Lark Lemon and family residing south of town, moved to their farm recently purchased north of Williamsburg today Elmer Jackson found a valuable horse dead in its stall in the barn Tuesday morning..... Ora Fouts and Del Fouts of Union City, were Sunday visitors of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Fouts of East Main street Mrs. Pfeiffer was called to Maxwell, Ind., Tuesday on account of the serious ill Best Liver and Bowel Laxative For family Use "Cascarets" regulate women, men and children without Injury. Take when bilious, headachy, for colds, bad breath, sour stomach. Instead of nasty, harsh, pills, salts, castor oil or dangerous calomel, why don't you keep Cascarets handy in your home? Cascarets act on the liver and thirty feet of bowels so gently you don't realize you have taken a cathartic, but they act thoroughly and can be depended upon when a good liver and bowel cleansing Is necessary they move the bile and poison from the bowels without griping and sweeten the stomach. You eat one ,r two at night like candy and you wake up feeling fine, the headache, biliousness, bad breath, coated tongue, sour stomach, constipation, or bad cold disappears. Mothers should . give cross, sick, feverish children a whole Cascaret any time they are harmless and safe for the little folks. Adv. . W. F. HOELSCHER OPTICIAN 6th & Main. Open Evenings. PHOTOS 7ZZ MAIN 5T RICHMOND. !N! Franklin C SUGAR" 251b. Cloth Sack I PHONE 2148 Schaefef'S Grocery
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Mrs. Mary Hennegan Opens Ladies' Gloak and Suit Parlors Mrs. Mary Hennegan for over four years head fitter at the Palais Royal, wishes to announce that she has opened a new Cloak and Suit Parlor in Rooms 404-405, the Colonial Building. New Spring samples are now ready and Mrs. Hennegan would be pleased to take your measure for your Spring Cloak or Suit, and guarantees a perfect made garment at the price you would pay for a read-made. Alterations are made at a reasonable sum. A call at any time would be most appreciated MRS. MARY HENNEGAN Rooms 404-405 Colonial Building.
ness of her mother, the result of lung fever..... Rev. Pfeiffer, pastor of tho M. E. church, is attending the district conference at Richmond this week.
Q-Ban Darkens Gray Hair Everybody Uses It Darkens Your Hair So Evenly So r Handy Harmless No Dye. By applying Q Ban Hair Color Restorer, like a shampoo, to your hair and scalp all your gray, streaked with gray, prematurely gray or faded, dry or harsh hair quickly turns to an even, beautiful dark shade. Q-Ban makes hair and scalp healthy, so every strand of your hair, wether gray or not. In a short time becomes glossy, fluffy, lustrous, soft, thick, with that even dark shimmer of beautiful radiant healthy hair Just as you like to bare your hair appear fascinating and abundant, without even a trace of gray showln, only natural evenly dark lovely hair. Q-Ban is absolutely harmless; no dye, but sold on a money-back guarantee to darken all your gray hair. Only 50c for a big 7-oz. bottle at Fihe's Drug Store, Richmond, Ind. Out-of-town folks supplied by mail. adv. To the Progressive Voters I wish to announce to the voters that I am a candidate for Treasurer of Wayne Co. on the Progressive Ticket, subject to Primary March 7, 1916. Now pass that and read this. Four years ago marked an epoch in the politics of our nation. During the last decade the voters of this nation of ours had begun to realize that our political parties had ceased to be the mouthpieces of the people, that instead of expressing their free will they had become mere machines to be guided by and to do the will of a few men. Great and honest men of our nation, at the risk of political elimination, sounded the warning. Those in control of the machine defied the will of the people with the result that the old Republican party was torn asunder and the Progressive party wa. born That that acton was the sentiment of the majority of the Republican party was most certainly attested when at the election in 1912 over 4 millions of the old party subscribed to the principles of the new party by so casting their votes. Voters. In that election I was one of those 4 millions; and so was you. I took my stand an-I told the people that I believed In those principles. I was honest then and I am honest now. I still believe in those principles and I STILL maintain my fight for their fulfilment. Progressives, four years ago you took the same step that I did. Were you honest then? If so. how can you he honest now and forsake them? Don't be too easilv deceived, rnir back to 1912 and 1914 and remember those who fought and ridiculed you so bitterly; then look at those who today by soft words and the charm of their oratory, hope to cause you to be a traitor to the principles you proclaimed, are they not the same who controlled the old machine? Progressives my plea to you Is not to much to stand for the Progressive party that it may hold office but to stand by the Progressive party that Ita principles may be assured. I ask you to go to the primary and vote for the men who stand for your faith and protect your party standing under the primary law. Show to these men who plead with you to "come back" that you have not forsaken 3'our principles, and compell them to recognize those principles in their national convention in June. You had promises and hopes In 1912. Demand a guarantee for 1916 Do this bv T)rotrt!nc vnnr nnrtv tt - n - the nrimarv so that in ras harmnnv should net prevail you may have men ct your own faith to reward with your ballot. Review the Progressive Platform. If it expresses your views stand by it like honest men. Orange D. Hall Adv.
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