Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 306, 10 November 1916 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, NOV, 10, 1916
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday, Dy 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 Seo ond Class Mali Matter.
v On Stealing Corn News dispatches from the northern part of Wayne county state that thieves are stealing corn. The correspondent adds that the high price of corn is believed to be the motive actuating the thefts, leaving the 'inference that in other years when corn was bringing a low price it was not valuable enough to steal. . It may be added before dismissing the subject that if shoes and clothes continue to increase in price, persons with perverted moral standards may be tempted to ransack barns and sheds for discarded apparel that may become a valuable possession before the era of high prices passes. A pair of bid shoes and an old suit are worth considerably more t to , the , average man than they were two years ago. ; Some of them even may be redeemed from garrets and closets, and restored to their original use if the High Cost of Living keeps on increasing. v Readers Out In The Country. ' Figures submitted to the local post office 'Show that 52,427 periodicals were distributed oh the four rural routes out of Richmond in the month of October. These figures are astounding. They prove that the rural residents - of Wayne
tcounty keep themselves supplied with reading
matter. Out of , the 52,427 pieces, quite a large
proportion undoubtedly could be classes under
newspapers. In this, however, must be included a large number of magazines. .The. report is a distinct compliment to the persons who reside in the country where they do not have ready access to a public reading room or library. And yet when we stop to think about these figures, they are only a true index of Hoosier attainment and Hoosier culture. If Indiana is the
nome oi auinors. ine siaie must oi necessity oe
liievhome of readers. One can hardly expect
literary greatness without ! a 1 large complement of men and women who enjoy reading good literature. And one must also remember that among the counties of Indiana, old Wayne has quite a reputation as a literary center which its inhabitants must sustain at all costs.
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Man Stuff t, America has borrowed the term of "efficiency" from Germany and is overworking the loan. Appalled at Germany's growing commercial supremacy before the war, American business men traced it back to efficiency in factory, sales department and transportation. The word "efficiency" was used to cover the whole problem. Because the Germans are analytical, close students and methodical, the Americans concluded that scientific analysis of every problem pertaining to business solved the riddle. What they overlooked in their judgement of German success was "man stuff." You can analyze the factors of a sale, put them on paper, tell them to a salesman,, but that will not make him a "salesman". "You can study a factory, systematize all its operations, and perfect a working organization, but' that does not produce an "efficient" factory. You can reduce the operations of a manufacturing plant or mercantile concern to a set of figures, but that will not assure efficiency in production or in sales. Figures and statistics are only guides and facts from which you can deduce certain conclusions. , If the Germans had stopped at merely gathering statistics, they would not have become the commercial leaders of the worlcl. Your analytical German, with a mass of statistics before him,
did not overlook "man stuff" in his conclusions
even if his critics do accuse him of stifling individuality and of making the individual a mere cog in a big machine. He believed that back of every big industrial success were men with ideasi men who had the "stuff" to make the article and deliver the goods. V ; If American business men hope to become the world's greatest traders 'they must add to their conception of the term "efficiency" the potential and vital factor of "man stuff, for no system is greater than the men in the system, and if these men are not possessed of intellectual traits and spiritual qualities, the system carries within itself the germs of decay. :
VILLA USES HIS OWN Ml TO KEEP MOVEMENTS SECRET IN LATEST CUNNING RUSE
- Copyright, 1916, by the McClure
THE SOLDIER'S DREAM Johnnie was a little wooden soldier, and he was not bo small, either. He was as large as an ordinary doll and be wore the most gorgeously pointed clothes and carried a gun. I do not suppose Johnnie would like to hear his rifle called a gun, but that is what it looked like. Johnnie wore a red coat with long tails and a pair of yellow trousers with red stripes down the side and little straps of red held them in place by being fastened under his black shoes. On his bead he wore a huge fur cap with a strap under his chin, and altogether he was a very gay looking
u. rrtd- aoy sac i d oaAfa sr hi a&
fellow, and what was more, Johnnie Iknew that he attracted the attention of all the toys In the playroom. But Johnnie had a fault he was : rain and he looked with disdain upon anyone who did not wear . bright, handsome clothes like his. In the same playroom there lived a boy doll dressed in a suit of blue and white striped goods that was faded and old-looking and the boy doll's hat had no crown; he was not well dressed, you see, and for this Johnnie looked with disdain upon the poor little fellow. "Why don't you get some new clothes?" asked Johnnie, one day. . Poor little boy doll hung his head. He knew he looked Bhabby and untidy. "I haven't any jother clothes," he answered. "I never bad any others." Little Boy Doll looked with envy upon Johnnie and tried to get beside him whenever he could, but if chance threw him near him, Johnnie would look very stern and move away.
Newspaper Syndicate, New York. "I wish you would keep your distance," he said to the boy doll one day. "A man in my position cannot afford to be in the company of uch a shabby-looking fellow as you are." And poor Little Boy Doll dropped on the floor in the corner and cried very softly, for he did not want Johnnie to know he cried, because a soldier, of course, never cries. One day the little mistress of the playroom .came in and played there all day and boy doll was taken up from the corner and put in a row with the other dolls to play school. "Oh, Johnnie Soldier, I wish you could take off your big hat," said the little mistress. "I believe I will ask father to whittle it off and then I
will dress you in a suit of clothes like Boy Doll's. I never play soldiers. Only boys play with soldier dolls." Perhaps Johnnie was not frightened. He was, I can tell you, even if he was a soldier boy. He was terribly frightened. : v..- V""-'; '. . When, night came Johnnie was still trembling for fear-his little mistress, would take him down stairs to her father, but she didn't and he fell asleep at last with the dreadful thing still in his little wooden head. . . And Johnnie dreamed about it, and this is what he dreamed: A big, fierce-looking man with -a sharp knife cut off his beautiful cap with one swing of his terrible arm and then Johnnie felt the gun pulled out of his grasp. " ,r He was plunged into a basin of water and scrubbed, and off came all his gorgeous' clothes, making the water look muddy. " But the next thing was worse than anything. Johnnie had never thought of how he was dressed in Boy Doll's
clothes even to the crownless hat. Then the fierce-locking man went out and left hfm sitting in front of the
FIELD . . HEADQUARTERS, Punitive Expedition, Mexico,, by. motor truck train to Columbus, N M.i Nov. 10 Pancho Villa has found new way to mystify his enemies, the Carranzi6tas, and deceive them as to his .personal movements. ; Mexicans arriving here from the country to the south in which Villa's, bandits are operating, have brought the story to, headquarters of the guerilla's newest strategy. The arrivals say .Villa has instructed all his subordinate commanders to spread the news through the country that he Is with their particular ban'd. As there are less than & dozen bands, varying In length from fifty to three hundred men and operating in different portions of western , Chihuahua, the scheme effectually conceals Villa's whereabouts. - . - " , Say Villa with Band!; One group of bandits, for Instance, ridea into Temesachic after dark and takes all the provisions to be found in the village. As they go about their looting, each bandit tells the frightened townspeople-that Villa himself is with them. None of the natives is bold enough 'to go out and see for himself ' whether the statement is true. . : . . ... At the same time another band of raiders is robbing a village fifty miles south of Temesachic. These bandits tell the villagers the same story. This may be repeated in half a dozen towns the same night. Result: Next day General Trevino at Chihuahua City, or General Pershing here, Is notified that Villa has been in six widely separated villages - on the same night And the chances are that he has really not been in any of them. Besides protecting Villa from dls-
French doll's mirror and Johnnie saw himself. Oh, it was terrible; and he cried and put his hands over his eyes to shut out the terrible reflection. "Oh, dear!". Oh, dear," he wailed; "how can I bear it? I won't; 111 jump out of the window." Bang! Every- toy in the playroom jumped and looked about. - "Oh," said the French doll, who was quicker to see things than any of the others, "it is Johnnie Soldier; he fell off the window Bill." "Are you hurt?" she asked. "No," replied Johnnie faintly, for he was not sure he had been dreaming, and he did not want to attract attention until he was sure. "I am glad you are not hurt, Johnnie," said French Doll, "but let that be a lesson to you, for sometimes people as proud as you are take falls and ao hurt themselves. Think it 6ver Johnnie." Johnnie did think it over, and when he found he still wore his bright, fine-looking clothes and his big fur hat he decided to treat poor little Boy Doll kinder and never again to sneer at him. Tomorrow's story "The Green Dragon."
A;k for and Get
"Something Good to Eat"
And if you haven't had some already, you have missed a treat Holland Rusk is an imported idea. It comes from Holland, brought here by the same Dutch family the Arendshorsts who made it for three centuries in Vriezenveen, Holland. There is nothing in the country just like it Nothing so appetizing and tasty so adaptable. It is the lightest, most nourishing and
sausiaciory imng tor Drcaktast or lunch. Look for the Windmill on the Package
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covery, this ruse adds strength to the bandit groups using it . The very name of the outlaw is enough to terrorize the peaceful villagers who hear it and all Idea of resistance to the looters, who may be less than fifty strong, disappears. The few male civilians who ventore ont of their homes to get a look at the bandit, chieftain are promptly made , prisoners by the raiders and carried oft to serve under Villa or face the firing equad. General Pershing remarked today that this strategem is the main cause of the numerous conflicting reports of Villa's movements which reach the border.' Reports Are Unreliable There is no such thing," said the general, "as an absolutely reliable and accurate report of Villa's whereabouts. There are times, of course, when ' Mexicans who have - actually seen Villa in a certain place make known the fact, but by the time the information travels two hundred miles overland to me, it is almost certain Villa is somewhere else. It works the same way, I imagine, in reaching General Trevino." Although Carransistas and Vllllstas have clashed several times in the last two weeks, none of the former can say positively that they have seen Villa, But they have always thought
Try This For a Cold It's Fine
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' With practically one accord said: !',.'"; "Senreeo appeals to me more than any dentifrice I have ever seen." "I cannot scy too much for Senreeo. it's one of the best t hue and." "I can recommend Senreeo a the beet." "Mmkee the teeth glisten and is free from injurious ingredients, including pumice end grit." "I am in deed glad to get a tooth paste that does the oorh." "Congratulate you on formulating a dentifrice that gives one a nets idea of mouth cleanliness, etc." ilhese quotations are from thm dentists' reports. Originals on file at our office.) With such endorsements from the men mho fmowt why not go to your dealer today and get a tube of SENRECO 25c. Keep your teeth REALLY. CLEAN, and protect yourself against Pyorrhea and decay. A copy of the folder, "The Most General Disease in the World" together with a liberal trial sise tube of SENRECO mill be mailed you for 4c in stamps. The Sentanel Remedies Co., Inc. Dept. B, Masonic Temple, Cincinnati, Ohio.
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be was in personal command of every engagement This may account for the bandits coming away victorious on nearly every occasion. "The fox has lost none of bis cunning, and his bite is more deadly than ever," is the way the Mexicans describe Villa. ;
For preserving painting a German has patented a process which consists of inclosing them in tight glass-front cases filled with nitrogen., - r
THROWN FROM AUTO
T
EATON, O.. Nov. 10. Lee 'Parks. Dixon township farmer. Is confined to his home by the effects of Injuries received when he was thrown from an automobile. The accident resulated when Parks ran Into a cow. His right arm was broken in two places and be suffered minor bruises about the head and shoulders. ' - - 1 1 PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
10 o jjf , s ' SB for ( JrJ . 5c ) A . ' x ' " tr CHICLE -:J 7 , p CAMPY COATED CUM
Keep Chiclets on Your Desk Now for better business. Keep a box of new white Adams Chiclets on your desk: They'll keep you trim and tranquil in the busiest hours. A cooling, cleansing taste of mint makes the mouth feel clean and the breath sweet A blessing after meals, between cigars, after dictation. Candy first not too much f -then gum. Verve and vim in every munch Chiclets keep you on your toes on hottest days. 10 for 5 cents. AMERICAN CHICLE COMPANY
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ASH ivSlaii?kft
OUR REGULAR SATURDAY SALE Good Meat and Low Prices go hand In hand at this market If you want good, fresh meats, that you can always depend upon, here Is a market where you can be sure of them and at prices Lower than the rest. ' "
ELGIN CREAMERY BUTTER 38c
OLEOMARGARINE Moxlev's Superior, 2 lbs..... 46c 45c B. B. Special, 2 lbs. 45c COFFEE Special Steel Cut, 30c quality, at 23c lb. 2 large or 4 small packages Golden Egg Brand Macaroni, Spaghetti, Noodles 15c CHEESE Full Cream Cheese 25c lb. SMOKED MEATS No. 1 Sugar Cured Hams. 20c lb. No. 1 Sugar Cured Shoulders ;....17c lb. No. 1 Sugar Cured Breakfast Bacon ................23c lb. Sweet Pickled Bean Pork.... 15c
FRESH FISH Halibut Steaks ........20c lb. Baltimore Oysters 35c qt
MEATS Prime Rib Roast.. ....... .;15o Chuck' Roasts. ....... ...15c lb. Rump Roasts ..........15c lb. Pot Roasts ...... .15c lb. Boiling Beef .........1.10c lb. Round or Sirloin Steaks.. 18c lb. Small Club Steaks....... 18e lb. Porterhouse Steaks .....20c lb. Fresh Pork Shoulders, whole 16c lb. Pork Loin Roasts.... ...19c lb. Loin or Rib Pork Chops.... 20c Fresh Sliced Liver....... 5c lb. SAUSAGE Fresh Breakfast Sausage 12'2c pound. . , Freeh Hamburger .....12'ie lb. Frankfurter Sausage ...14c lb. Smoked Country Sausage. 14c lb. Garlic Sausage 14c lb. Bologna Sausage 14c lb. Summer Sausage 23c lb. Liver Sausage 12c lb.
25c High Grade Catsup, 20c Per Bott,
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15 South Seventh Street
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