Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 191, 29 June 1916 — Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1916

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SCN'-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.

'Entered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, as Second Class Mail Matter.

THE PALLADIUM AND VACATIONS Subscribers of the Palladim learing the city during the summer months should arrange to haTe the Palladium follow them. Addresses will be changed as frequently as may be required without extra charge. Orders may be given to any carrier of the Palladium or sent to The Palladium circulation department. Subscriptions less than one month are payable In advance at time subscription is given. Subscriptions must be entered for a definite period. The Palladium can not be .responsible for errors made if instructions are given over the telephone.

The First Troop Train Richmond greeted the first1 troop train that has passed through the city bound for the Mexican frontier. The event aroused latent patriotism. Citizens gave the guardsmen a welcome which made them feel that the cify is not overlooking the service they are giving their country. The members of the National Guard are bringing greater sacrifices than many of us appreciate. Thousands of them have removed themselves from the wages they received while at work. Their families are forced to meet living expenses while the head is off on duty and drawing a very small stipend. Few of the thousands of married men in the National Guard that are not forced to worry about how their families will make ends meet. Jobs will be held open for the men who have gone to the frontier, but in most cases their pay has stopped, and the chances for advancement will go to the man who stays at home. So the little token of appreciation which the

The Forum

'.Articles contributed for (his column must not in excess of four hundred wc:-ds. The Identity of all contr" "ars must be known to tho editor. Articles will be printed in the order received. The following editorial of the Ft. "Wayne News has been submitted for publication: "Yesterday the United States Fenate added to the appropriations bill an item of 57,500 for the benefit of the widow of the late Senator Shively of Indiana. This action was taken on the motion of Senator Kern, the same eminent patriot, jt will be recalled, who publicly and repeatedlycharged several years ago that Senator Shlvely's election was secured by bribery and by fraud and that he was the direct beneficiary .of legislative corruption. "Mr3. Shively, it is understood, is a woman of considerable means and it Is difficult for the people of this country to understand just why she 6hould lie made the recipient of governmental bounty. Her husband never rendered service for this money and, indeed, it may be said without prejudice to his good intentions that during the greater part of the time he was a senator he did not serve his constituents. He was fin invalid and for a long period beiore his demise he was helpless. Why, Ihcrefore, should his heirs, who are reputed to be comparatively wealthy, lie granted a sum equivalent to a year's salary for a senator? We confess that we do not see it and the action appears all the more incongruous and inconsistent when it follows within a few hours the senate's flat refusal to grant fifty dollars a month to the support of the dependents of soldiers called to risk their lives fighting in Mexico. "Mrs. Shively, living in comfort, Is jdven $7,500 for a service never performed or attempted. "The Widow Malone and her children are refused a meager sum to compensate them for the loss of support occasioned by the call of her eldest Fon, her bread winner, to the defense of the nation's honor. "There U something about it. that seems cruelly and damnably unjust, inl tho News Is inclined to believe t h;t the country will so view it. We proudly assort that our government draws no distinctions and that all men are equal under the flag yet here is tho evidence before us to the contrary. "Reward without service for tho !"well-to-do. ! "Denial of compensation for those 'assuming the. highest service of patriots." ECZEMA VANISHES IN FEW DAYS Mighty Powerful Antiseptic Prescription Stops Itching Instantly, and by Its Use Ulcers, Boils, Abeesses and Carbuncles Are Quickly Healed. Now that tens of thousands know that Moone's Emerald Oil will reduce ugly, dangerous varicose veins to normal, we want them to know that this wonderfully effective agent will dry up eczema eruptions in a few days and cause the scales to drop off and disappear. It acts the same way with any skin disease, such as barbers' itch, salt rheum, redness and inflammatory skin troubles. So powerful and penetrating Is Moone's Emerald Oil that piles are absorbed; fioitem and wens are made to disappear and abeesses, bolls, carbuncles, ulcers and open sores tin? healed In a few days. Moone's Emerald Oil is not a ratent medicine, but Is a surgeon's prescription that for years has been successfully used in private and hospital practice. All pharmacists dispense a nmall bottle for r.O cents and complete directions for home use eomo with each bottle. Leo If. Flh fells a largo quantity or Moone'a Emerald V)!l. Adv.

Authors Carve With H M Paint With Sweep of

Iliff Criticises Trend of

By EDGAR ILIFF. Oh, to have read tales in the hanging gardens of Babylon when books were made of clay and every book was a brick! To have lost one's self in eome old story of that female Bluebeard, Semiramis, and yet had a subconscious feeling all the time that you held a brickbat to throw at the first son of a Babylonian who asked you if "you'd-ever-read-when-knighthood-was-in-flower." And to hit the Mesopotamian square In the jaw and to cry out so loudly that Belshazzar paused in his feast between his cup and his lip, thinking the handwriting on the wall was about due yes, to cry out, "No! Nor have I read 'Three Weeks,' or even one week, but I've had the smallpox." Or to have read Daphnis and Chloe from Parthenon, cooled by the soft air of Aegean seas and a lingering taste of Hyblis honey on your lips. No need to seek small books one could carry to the fire, as Dr. Sam Johnson puts it. Just to crawl backward and read, only to be interrupted by a royal peacock strutting to be seen, or "to be distracted by the flutter of Aspasia's gown as she passed like a dream Aspasia, the maid of Miletus; the intellectual and beautiful; the crown jewel of Pericles's heart; the patroness of Phidias; the perceptress of Socrates; the friend of Anaxagoras; the companion of Zeno, Plato and Protagoras. To Know Charles Lamb. Or to have chummed with Charles Lamb; quaffed his brown ale, smoked his long white pipes, laughed with him and laughed a his sallies of wit and to have seen his "ragged regiment of books" Charlie, who confessed that he had no repugnances and could read anything from the Bible to Jonathan I Wilk; only it hurt him to reach down a volume expecting to find "a pleasant play book' and open an essay on population, or to seek a Farquhar or Steele and get Adam Smith on "The Wealth of Nations." One of the strange things about authors is that they are forever complaining of the multiplicity of books, but go right on making more. Solomon had the complaint badly; said there would be no end in the making of them, but he didn't know about "books in running brooks," and "books in woman's looks" and that "books are made from books." and "books breed books." Deplores Many Books. Sir Thomas Browne in his "Religlo Medici," published in the seventeenth century, deplored the vast number of books in the world; "swarms and millions of them." he said, "begotten only to distract and abuse the weaker judgment of scholars." He had no patience with those who sighed over the loss of some lines of Cicero or lamented the destruction of the Alexandrian library; said he could look upon the ashes of the Vatican with composure if only Solomon's proverbs were left. He thought a general synod should be established to reduce learning to a few solid authors and burn all else. The world has been kinder to Sir Thomas than ho was to the few fragments of ancient Hteratu.ro that came down to his time; thousands of priceless gems of Greece and Rome have perished; the tragedies of the sublime Aeschylus como to us in scraps only; we see the literature of Greece only in part and through a glass darkly, but Sir Thomas etill remains with his sour face and disturbed epigastrium. Book Reviewers Active. The censor, the oxpurgator and the lightning calculator called the book reviewer have been very useful because they have called attention to the best and noblest in literature by their condemnation and damned to utter oblivion the worthless and Insipid by their Imbecllft praise. The modern readlnir world and a host of sune J novel-venders owe a debt of gratitude.

city paid may have 'made some of the boys feel less keenly the sacrifice they are bringing. We have a deep-seated respect for the men of the National Guard. They may not be highly efficient soldiers, but they are down right, good, flag-loving American patriots. We believe in respecting the loyalty that has prompted them to drill for years, and the greater loyalty which prompted them to answer the president's call.

"There's Our Country" The other evening a member of the Chinese colony of this city attended the transcontinental telephone demonstration. When the motion picture operator threw a picture of the United States on the screen, the Chinaman remarked, "There's a picture of OUR country." The remark of the Chinaman , is not without its bearing these days when the hyphenate is a burning question and a man has to prove that he is an American before he is accepted as such. The picture did not suggest to the Chinaman to remark to his neighbor, "There's a picture of YOUR country!" or, "There's a picture of the United States." This Chinaman evidently has made himself an adopted son of this country and he looks upon the United States as his country, his fatherland, his nation. One often reads these days that America has lost her potent charm of amalgamating races and making them Americans. Some of us almost have been forced to believe that a German remains a German, a Briton a Briton, a Greek a Greek, a Swede a Swede, even after he has spent two decades in this country. The remark of the!

Chinaman may go to show that after all thousands of aliens become Americans, look upon this country as THEIR country, and in fact are as loyal and patriotic, if not more so, than some of the alleged patriots with whom denunciation of men of alien parentage as traitors has become a common practice.

Meat Ax Broom Fiction a to the Vatican Congregation of the Index for condemning the novels of Antonio Fogazzaro. The three stories, "The Patriot," "The Sinner," and "The Saint," are the greatest in Italian literature since Manzoni's "Betrothed," and "Jeanne Dessalle," Is the creation of a master hand. The prohibition of these books was the grand salaam that introduced them to the world's intelligent readers. If we look over the book reviews of 1800 to 1840, we shall find that the books praised are now utterly forgotten, and the books spat upon are now in the front room on the center table with the family Bible, haying becme "works" that are supposed to give tone and color to all homes making any pretentions to the modern "uplift.' The old book reviewer was not any more fallible than his modern successors. He trimmed and tacked his sails to the orthodoxy in literature as well as in religion, politics and medicine. Scott Still Lives. Let us draw a few nineteenth century instances. There is our old and valued friend, Sir Walter Scott. The censors, synods, boards and machine reviewers denounced the Waverley novels as "books that ministered to a depraved taste of excitement and created sympathy for the vicious and infamous solely because friends in stories are so daring." Thus you see that Rob Roy and Count Robert of Paris were condemned as a sort of Jesse James gang, and many a boy was destined to end his days on the gallows because of their influence. It was prophesied that "not twenty lines of Scott's poetry would reach posterity; they have no relation to anything." Fortunately the public is a sort of Texas broncho and balks at being tethered by self-constituted sheep herders. Over 145,000 copies of Scott's novels were sold in 1822 and 10,000 copies of "Rob Roy" went off in one week in London. Scott's revenue from his books up to 1S26 was $60,000 a year. He wrote rapidly and not always with historical accuracy, but as a portrayer of character, without the modern psychological stunt, he stands unrivaled. His books have passed into that mysterious realm of "standard works" whatever that means. They are "books that no gentleman's library should be without" Lays Down Rules. George Brandes, the eminent Danish critic, lays it down as the. law of modem literature of every country that an author must give offense to at least one generation of his contemporaries, and be considered unmoved by it if he is not to seem tiresome and narrow-minded to the readers of the period succeeding his own. If this is true, what hope is there for the high tides of present day novels? Everything is praised to the highest notch of ridiculous euphuism. CANT LOSE HAIR Twenty Years from Today a Baldheaded Man Will Be an Unusual Sight. One of the most prominent druggists) of America made a statement a few weeks ago which has caused a great deal of discussion among scientists in the medical press. He said: "if the new hair grower, Mlldredina Hair Remedy, increases its fales as It has during the past year, it will be used by nearly every man, woman and child In America within eight years. "When Mlldredina Hair Remedy la used almost universally, dandruff will disappear and with its departure baldness, itching scalp, splitting hair and all scalp diseases will follow and twenty years from now a bald hend will be a rarity." Sample at for 10c to pay postage. Mail orders filled by Mildred Louise Co., Boston, Mas,i. For sale by A. G, Luken & Co. Adv,

Jl aimer Daily P

THE ENGLISH NURSE. A noble part in this sad war you've played. By putting guarded ease and comfort by, And at tho front havo given valued aid. As many a wounded lad can testify. Find a wounded soldier, ANSWER TO YESTERDAYS PUZZLE. -TT left corner down under rr-

None give offense. Each one is hailed as the long-looked-for great American novel! Review Reproduced. Here is a sample book review taken j from a late literary magazine: "This book has all the spontaneousness of the joy and gladness of life; it is all so moving and picturesque, so sane and lovely, so irresistible, so charming. It gives the exhilarating illusion of the rush and swirl of the mad flight of life, the breathless onward plunge through infinite space, the fascination of the limitles and the lawness. The hero finds his strict virtue set upon by the hot winds and gusts of passion, by emotions all new and overpowering; the lascivious stars are against him. It is a story of a naked soul struggling in the toil of compelling emotion, with all the impulses toward soft wrong-doing draging at his soul." For heaven's sake, Bowdlerize the book reviewer! Get thee to a crematory! Another one says: "Here Is a rare book, light as a cream puff, sparkling as a brook; so sharp, crisp, vivid, tense and rattling that the story grips you from the very first chapter. After one has read this all-compeiling ro mance one feels as though one had just walked through some sweetsmelling aromatic garden." Hypnotized by such classic language you buy the book, read it, and feel as if you had just stepped out' in the back yard and some one had turned a hose of eau de cologne upon you. What more do you want for your money? These parvenu novelists are violating the eternal law. They are not uttering what they feel or telling what they see. They are taking counsel with the public, are guided by its prejudices, its ignorance, its vulgar and sentimental tastes, its untruthfulness. Like Emerson's preacher, you can't tell from what they say whether they have ever loved or hated, wept or laughed, dreamed or had the hope deferred that maketh the heart sick, trod the hot pavemetns of tragic sorrow or sailed under the starry skies of good fortune, married, had children and bore the silent manliness of grief, or ever had any common human experiences. They carve their characters with a meat ax, paint with a broom, thrash ideas with a patent separator; you laugh at their tragedy,

Chronic, Nervous and Special Diseases

Will Be At Hotel Westcott Richmond, Ind. On Saturday and Sunday July 1 and 2

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is direct from NEW YORK CITY -here he has hud the advantage of traininpr in tho largest Hospitals which are dnrotd to the treatment of Chronic Diseases and Disorders. In addition he is a graduate of one of tho largest General Hospitals in New York City, as well as being: a duly craduated and licensed physician in the Stato of Indiana. This training combined with a number of years experience and practice has served to make Dr. Fruth thoroughly proficient and expert in the treatment of all Ion standing and persistent Chronic Diseases. His methods of treatment are the latest and most modern known to science and which in his own enormous experience have been absolutely successful. Every patient who consults this Specialist is given a thorough and exact explanation of their condition, and incurable conditions or diseases for which nothing can be dune are not accepted for treatment. Dr. Fruth Succeeds Where Others Have Failed If you havesuffered for months or years with a Chronie Affliction, you owe It to your own best interests to consult a Specialist who has fitted himself by years of etudr, training: and experience to treat you correctly and therefor successfully. Do not delay but arrange ta see Dr. Fruth at your very earliest opportunity, for tho earlier any disease is properly treated the more assurance that it will bo promptly and permanently cured. The Following Diseases, Disorders. Conditions and Ailments aro ....... Scientifically and Successfully Treated

Eye, Far, Nose and Throat Including Catarrh, culargod and il mussed tonsils, a.iouulds, sours and polypi of the nose. doafne.su, rlnclnif in the ear, lnflama tlou of tho eyes aud granulated lids. Diseases of the Heart and Blood Vessels, which cause palpitation or flattering of the heart, blnonoM of the Hps and nails, shortness of breath, cough, and swelling of the logs and ankles. Diseases of the Lungs and Air Passages, prolonged cough, progresotvo loss of wolght, and strength, afternoon fever, tilght sweats, and spitting of blood moans tuberculosis or consumption. Do not be In doubt but loam the trutn by an examination. Diseases of the Stomach and Intestines, r iving rl'O to pain, nauwa and Tomlt. ng, gas formation, dlaorrhoen and cos. tiveness. ami prolonged attacks of dys pepsia and Indigestion. Diseases of the Kidneys and Urinary Or ' , pans, pel euro hit perfected simple tents which absolutely prove or disprove the pretence) of khlnny Inflnmntions, chief fj among which Is r.rijtlit's liwo. There 3 need bo no doubt If properly examined, S Diseases of the Rectum, Omnrn and fUtuIn nnd p ies cured without tho knife or dutentlon from business or work. Gall Stones and Goiter or "fit? Neck,' sac coiKiuiiy ucuioa wiiuout operation. Do yoti suffer with liartnrliM, rpitfpy nr "lit," I'nralynl, neuralgia, "uU.inoM," rlioumntLm, luuihsgo, 'hraii, skin mm, blocit disorders, deposits lit thi urine, Intlnmatlon cf the blnd'lor, r ot'irrrsTno and rtlslrootiing disordorsof which you (to not kuuw the tiunio or

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cry over their comedies, and see the necessity for airships to escape a world run mad. An acquaintance who said that better things could be written now than Shakespeare's verse because of our improved machinery, expressed the spirit of th age. We are trying hard to mechanize the free spirit of man. SMALL GIRLS RUN AWAY LAFAYETTE, June 29. Mary and Helen Hickman, 12 and 8 years of age, respectively, ran away from home because they were scolded. They were found later and were glad to get hack home. A CRUCIAL TEST. If one can love a maiden still The while Ehe eats corn from the cob That love will surely last until Old Time himself has lost his Job. Children Who Are Sickly Mothers who value their own comfort and the welfare, of their children, should never be without a box of Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, for use throughout the season. They Break up Colds, Relieve Feverishness, Constipation, Teething Disorders, Headache and Stomach Troubles. Used by Mothers for 2S years. THESE POWDERS NEVER FAIL. Sold by all Drug Stores, 25c. Don't accept any substitute.. Sample mailed FREE. Address, Mother Gray Co., Le Roy, N. Y. Adv. Two Days Only Office Hours: 8:00 a. m. to 8 :00 p. m. daily Returning Every Week, or 28 Days.

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nature? If yon do, give, them your Immediate) attention. For satisfactory treatment can bo given you. Nervous Debility Ate yon tired tnornlncrs: nervous and do. spondent: no ambition lifeless; defee tivo memory; easily fatigued; excitable and Irritable; eyes eunten, red and blurred; dreams and losses; mentally slow and sluggish. If so your condition dem.tnris attention and you are la coed of advice and troatxaent Private Diseases of Men and Women a Par tlcular Speciality, including all di3 enscs peculiar to both sexes, tiring In tho majority of cases new sod original methods which hove proven completely efficient and satisfactory. A special treatment for men which will bo rx. plained peronnlly to those who aro Interested or are In uoed of same. surgical Cases, such a Vnrlcoeclo, Hydro. celo and J'.upture, given special atton t:oa. 606 odmlnlstnred for Mood diseases by a now and improved meiooa, causing llttlo or ' to incotironlcnce. All Consultation Is Absolute! rv. and Y' Confidential, and carries with H aboo. lately tin obiluatlon to tnho trnntment. Advice and coDiploto explanation s-.d expert opinion of y-ur condition, wim a thorough c am Inn! ion la froo and ol fll times gladly extended tfaoso wb are nh?rit"L roeltlve.lv no patients treated fiy mall, and nil rti'Mrr tr liM.' T-aUou tuutt present litem sc'.vco la percon.

REV. ULMER GIVES TEMPERANCE TALK

CHESTER, Ind.. June 29. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mitchell and daughter. Mildred, were Sunday guests of relatives at Hollaasburg, O Mr. and Mrs. Caleb Duke visited the latter uncle at New Castle Sunday Mr. Herbert Webster of Greencastle spent the week end with his brother, James Webster and family of this place Bert Morris of Indianapolis ,has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Martin... ..Frank Huffman and family of near New Paris were Sunday guests of Scott Lichty and family. Give Temperance Talk. Rev. Ulmer gave a temperance lecture at the M. E. church here Sundav evening. He used for his subject '"The Trail of the Serpent." Mrs. Davis of Richmond is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Will Wesler Rufus Newman and family were Sunday guests of Harry Newman and family A Tom Thumb wedding will be given at the M. E. church here next Friday evening, June 30. The public is invited to attend Mr. and Mrs. George Roadenberg of Richmond visited Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kendall on Sunday evening. VIEW STREET PAVING. OXFORD, O., June 28. Members of the village council epent yesterday in Connersville, Ind., inspecting street paving. They came home enthusiastic over cement for paving purposes, but whether that material will be adopted Ar High street in Oxford, is not as yet known. f GREENSFORK. IND. GREENFORK, Ind., June 29. Mrs Mor Ramsey and daughter, Ellen of Muncie are visiting at the home of Emma Lamb Miss Tennie Hatfield has returned to her home after spending a few days with Muncie friends. ....Miss Isabelle Kirnzk is the guest of Mrs. Daisy Kirnzk at her country home north. of town Miss Jenette Lamb is in Chicago taking music lessons for a few weeks Mr. and Mrs. Harry Beck were the guests of Mrs. Beck's mother, Mrs. Stickleman, on Sunday. About 100 Bpecies of oysters have been classified by scientists. .rTn.-i-'.5 'im.Ts.' to 'it nil!

Invite the general public to become members of the association and to begin making payments July 1st or as soon thereafter as possible. The association during its existence has not lost one dollar and has accumulated a very substantial reserve fund for contingent losses, as well as owning its own home, and i3 in proportion to its size one of the strong associations of the state. No fines to depositing members. No charge made for pass books. No commissions charged to borrowers. Borrowing members share in dividends equal with depositors in proportion to payments made on loan. Depositing members' withdrawals paid on demand. Safety deposit boxes in a good vault for rent at reasonable rates. Consultation Room for the Benefit of Patrons, Free of Charge Weekly dues, 25c on each $100 share. A safe and secure place for the investment of savings. Central location easy of access; reliable and prompt service. Interest rate to borrowers, twelve cents per share, payable weekly. COME AND JOIN US AND LET US HELP YOU. JOHN F. DAVENPORT, President iv;j JOHN J. HARRINGTON, Vice President SAMUEL W. GAAR, Treasurer " JESSE II. BROOKS, Secretary JNO. F. CRONIN, Assistant Sec'y WM. II. KELLY, Attorney

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SCRATCHED 10 YEARS I HEALED IN (TSE WEEK Finally Cured By Using One Dollar Bottle cf Amolox. One bottle of Amolox cured ne. For ten years I suffered with eczema of , the scalp, my head being covered with scales and scabs. I tried everything recommended and everything advertised without relief until I bought a tH iwtiA rf AmnloT. It relieved the itch-

ing at once and one bottle entirely cured my eczema. I heartily and cheerfully recommend it to all sufferers of this horrible disease. " -T James W. Seward. Brazil. Ind. Amolox ointment will quickly remove pimples on the face, blackheads and clear up a muddy complexion. Trial size, 50c. Bad cases of eczema, psoriasis, salt rheum, tetter, lasting for years, require both Amolox solution and ointment to effect a cure. Recommended and guaranteed by A. G. Luken. Adv. MODERN DENTISTRY ; Good teeth are an absolute nece ' sity and we make their possession possible. All our work practical! painless: Highest Grade Plate HM to $SM Best Gold Crowns... $3.00 to $4.00 Best Bridge) Work $3.00 to $1.00 Best Gold Filling $1.00 up Best Silver Filling 50c up We Extract Teeth Painlessly New York Dental Parlor Over Union National Bank, Eighth and Main streets. Elevator entrance on South Eighth St. Stair entrance on Main street. USE COOPER'S BLEND Co! fee COOPER'S GROCERY t

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