Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 24, 9 December 1916 — Page 4
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, DEC. 9, 1916
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every Eveninc Except Sunday, Dy Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Ruildinsr. North Ninth and Sailor Sts. R. G. Leeds,. Editor. E. H. Harris. Mgr.
Entered at tho Post Ofico at Richmond. Indiana, as Seo ond Class Mail Matter.
Can War Buy Peace? Viscount Bryce believes the European war will bring about permanent peace. Out of the mass of shattered limbs, broken bodies, orphaned children, heart broken mothers, the English statesman sees rising a day when peace shall dwell on earth and good will among men. How the defeat Of the Hohenzoller family, the eradication of so-called German militarism, and the restoration of Alsacc-Loraine will inaugurate an era of universal peace is a consummation we cannot see. And on the other hand, how the defeat of the Allies, the establishment of an independent Poland, and the realization of Germany's national ambitions will make war impossible, is another conclusion we cannot draw from the termination of this war. , We believe men will fight so long as they feel provoked to fight. No real man will tamely submit to anattack on principles and institutions he believes holy and inviolate. He will draw the sword in defense of his rights and principles so long as manhood is still counted a virtue. The only way in which wars can be prevented is by eradicating the cause of wars. The Pittsburg Ledger in a discussion of the Viscount Bryce's recent address at London shares the same view. It says : "Why this war, any more than any other war, should be the first step in permanent peace is somewhat mysterious to anyone who has not become agitated by the influence of millions of minds crazed by the lust for war. But that, it seems from his address in London last night, appears to be what he expects. He asks if all this is to count for nothing. ' If all this waste of blood and money shall go for naught, as if the destruction of life and property had any part in answer
ing the question. Is all this suffering to have been in vain? is one of his anxious queries, to which there is only one answer. ' '
"If -this war lasts long enough and burns arid j shoots away all the causes for war, international greeds, international jealousies, international necessities, all built upon the foundation of pre
judiced parochial nationalism he may get his wish there may be no more wars. ,If it doesn't have that effect, there will be wars and wars until a regenerated society puts an end to them. "Viscount Bryce may be certain of one thing which he knows when not so much affected by the nationalism insanity that so long as the world nourishes the causes of wars we shall have wars, however destructive of life and property. Nations will have wars so long as they keep war's causes to the front, just as certainly as Viscount Bryce would be to get wet if he
were thrown into deep water. Ridding world of the cause of war will rid us of war.
the
Why General Hughes Stepped Down General Sam Hughes, Canadian minister of Militia and Defense, a bluff soldier with no diplomatic qualities, has been, driven out of office by British government influences. General Hughes is the man who made Canada's aid to England effective. He is the man who had charge of the recruiting and of the preparing of the contingent that were sent across the Atlantic. But withal he has stood sturdily for Canadian rights. He believes Canada ought to have some right to say about the disposition of her troops. During the first year of the war, Canada had practically no control over her forces. Last year they spent nine months in the trenches. Canada feels that Great Britain has let the Canadian soldiers bear the brunt of the fighting while the British contingents were kept at less dangerous work. And that also may account for the falling off of recruiting in Canada. After the first flush of patriotic desire to help the mother country, enthusiasm beggan to drag. Too many Canadian regiments were wiped out. Australia has had the same experience. Too many of her sons are buried in the trenches at Gallipoli to make conscription popular in Australia. England's colonies have done more for her than she has done for them in this war.
Copyright 1915, by the McCluro Newspaper Syndicate, New York.
would lse the store and how the boys
John's father died when he was 15 years old, and when the funeral was over and the business of his father's small store looked over it was found there was nothing left for John and his mother but a debt of several thousand dollars, which the house they lived in and the store together would not pay. John was in high school and wanted very much to go to college, but this he put out of his' mind and thought a-i hard and wisely as he could how he could take care of hlB mother and clear the debt, as his father intended to do. He went to the men to whom hli father owed the money and asked 'them to Rive him all the time they could, that he intended to pay every dollar and penny that his father had owed. All but one man said they would not only give him time; but they would take small payments, and at a low rate of interest as well. Mr. Grantly, the man who would not grant the time John asked for. laughed at him when he told him his plan. "Why, what do you know about business?" he asked. "You are not out of school; you will never make that store pav anyway, and I will loss my money if I don't sell it. No, I can't think of helping you that way, but I will give you a place in my store at $3 a week" John declined the offer, telling Mr. Orantloy that he could not live on that amount of money and that he had to take care of his mother as well. "Oh! well, you are young and fool ish," replied Mr. Grantly, "and you don't know when you are well off. You better take the place I offer and let the store go." "But the men my. father owed the money to. what of them? None of you would get what he owed to you if the house and store were sold. If you will only wait I will pay you every penny," pleaded John. Hut Mr. Grantly said no; he would offer the other creditors a sum for the store and house, and if they were wise they would take it and then he would put his son Tcm in the store and try to get enough to pay him. John thought he saw through the scheme Mr. Grantly had in mind and thnt was that he felt sure the store would pay and wanted it for his son and wished to turn John out. Kor the next month John worked night and day tryin? to persuade the other creditors to help him and not nell the store to Mr. Grantly, and at last one man raid he would pay Mr. Grantly his money and let John run the store for a year; if it did not pay then he would close it and sell the horse as well. To this John was willing to agree, and the matter was closed as far as Mr. Grantly went. Oh, how John did work! He did the work of two men, his mother helping ail she could, but the hard work fell on John's young shoulders. I could tell you a long story of how it looked for a few months as if he
shows how boys can win out iD the face of many difficulties if only thev will try and are willing to work and also put up with discomforts. You cannot win if you sit down and expect someone else to do the hard work; you must fight it out yourself, and . usually success will crown your efforts, but honestly, above all. is the "best policy."
GREECE HOLDS BOYS FOR FUTURE SERVICE
he knew laughed at him because he could not play ball or go fishing and wore old clothes, but all these John counted as nothing when at last the tide turned and business began to
come, and the strangest part was that I their military service, the Greek
uraimy, who niiu a store in ine next town, came, in before the year j was out and offered to pay all the i
debts and take the store off his hands, j ment by the parents or guardians of But John told him no-that if it any minor male chUd wno leaves was worth that much it must be worth ! . ... . ,ono moro or he would not. make that of- Greece- A youth born m 1898 must fer. deposit, or his parents must deposit At the end of the year he was able for him $120; one born in 1899, $100;
10 pay me interest and a little on the
ATHENS, Dec. 9. CKving to the great Increase in the emigration of minors t the United States, who have not reached the age to perform
gov
ernment has increased the amount of deposit to be made with the govern-
principal, and the next year he paid
much more, but at the' end of five years John had cleared the debt and had some money in the bank. He hired a boy to help him and would not let his mother come in the store to work after that. John studied nights and while he could never go to college because of his business he managed to educate himself and took the examinations that were given to his class as they went along each year. Mr. Grantley's son, who was about John's age, did not turn out as he had expected; he would" not go to school, and when his father took him In the store he would not work. John's business grew so that he had to enlarge his store, and after a while he had the biggest store outside the city stores. Mr. Grantly grew old and was not able to attend to his business and the store was closed and in after years he told John he was sorry he was so hard on him and wished his son had shown just a little of his grit and desire to work. This is not much of a story, but it
in 1900, $90; 1902, $70; and 1903, $60. Without this deposit being made it is impossible for any male Greek of the age indicated to secure a ticket on a foreign bound vessel.
THE GOLD OF BY ARTHUR B. REEVE
THE GODS (A Mystery of the Ineas Solved by Craig Kennedy, Scientific Detective)
Whitney, all cf them crossed by steps from Norton, "Well, what do yon think of that?" r heard Mm nrotier. To be continued
With this parting reminder he turned toward the School of Mines while we debouched off toward the Chemistry Building. "The de Mocb.es are nobody's tools," I remarked. "That young man seems to have a pretty definite idea of what he wants to do." "At least he puts it so before us," was all that Kennedy - would grant. "He seems to be as" well informed of what passed at that visit to the Senora as though he had been there too." We had scarcely opened the labora
tory door when the ringing of the tele-t
phone told us that some one had been trying to get in touch for some time. "It was Norton," said Kennedy, hanging up the receiver. "I Jmagine he wants to know what happened after we left him and went up to see Whitney." . That was, in fact, just what Norton wanted, a.s well as to make clear to us how he felt on the subject. 'Really, Kennedy," he remarked, "it must be fine to feel that your chair in the University is endowed rather than subsidized. You saw how Whitney acted, you say. Why, he makes me feel as , if I were his hired man, instead of head of the University's expedition. I'm glad it's over. Still, if you could find that dagger and have it returned it might look better for me. You have no clue, I suppose?" "I'm getting closer to one," replied Craig confidently, though on what he could base any optimism I could not see. The same idea seemed to be in Norton's mind. "You think you will have something tangible soon?" he asked eagerly. . "I've had more slender threads than these to work on," reassured Kennedy. "Besides, I'm getting very little help from any of you. You yourself, Norton, at the start left me a good deal in the dark over the history of the dagger." "I couldn't do otherwise," he defended. "You understand now, I guess, how I have always been tied, hand and foot, by the Whitney influence. You'll find that I can be of more service now." "Just how did you get possession of the dagger?" asked Kennedy, and there flashed over me the recollection cf the story told by the Senora, as well as the letter which we had purloined. , "Just picked it up from an Indian who had an abnormal dislike to work. They said he was crazy, and I guess perhaps he was. At any rate, he later drowned himself in the lake, I have heard." "Could he have been made insane, do you think?" ruminated Craig. "It's possible that he was the victim of somebody, I understand. The insanity might; bave been real enough without the cause being natural." "That's an Interesting story," re
turned Norton. "Offhand, I can't seem to recall much about the fellow, although some one else might have known him very well." Evidently he either did not know the tale as well as the Senora, or was not prepared to take us entirely into his confidence. "Who is Haggerty?" asked Craig, thinking of the name signed to the letter we had read. . "An agent of Whitney and his associates, who manages things in Lima,'' explained Norton. "Why?" .
"Nothing only I have heard the
name and wondered what his connection might be. I understand better now." Kennedy seemed to be anxious to get to work on something, and, after a few minutes, Norton left us. . No sooner had the door closed than he took the glass-bell jar off his microscope and drew from a table drawer several scraps of paper on which I recognized the marks left by the carbon sheets. He set to work on another of those painstaking tasks of examination, and I retired to my typewriter, which I had moved into the next room, in order to leave Kennedy without anything that might distract attention from his work.
RUPTURE Sufferers?
I fll
J
Spend One Cent
to Send
Your
Name
It May Mean
Your CURE
I claim to have the most dimple, yet the most wonderful, most comfortable, most bone 1 Iclal rupture appliance ever invented. It haa produced results heretofore unheard of. I want to tell you how and why, want to show you how to Lock your rupture so it can't come down, and w to obtain greater comfort, greater bne fit than yoa have ever known since you wero ruptured. I want to send you my illustrated Rupture Book FREE I want you to know why and how the wonderful Schulllng ftsipturo Lock produces
astonisning results, want you to know what it ha done end Is doing tor Others what it
For RIieEimallsm lest It Yourself For 30 Days
AND
filL BLOOD TROUBLES
IsendthisLockontrlaL I let von nut It man
wosrittostit run,jump,pull,tuK.lift,strain. squirm, cough, eneeze and eo for yourself. I want tosend you my book, particulars of my trial oner, letters from scores of people who say the Sehulllnc Rupture Lock has actually cured their ruptures, and full information, fro. Send mo your name and address plainly written, send it now, today you'll thank me later, euro u you're born. Address: Director SCHILLING RUPTURE INSTITUTE
HT ALL DRUG STORES
I icy r.;u; p'.v w;J3.'; mdisnapcu ' ha. k Eauba
While the mule will continue to be the standard draft animal in the south a gradual substitution of heavy horses on the farms is going on.
Danger Signal If the fire bell should ring would you run and stop it or go and help to put out the fire? It is much the same way with a cough. A cough is a danger signal as much as a fire bell. You should no more try to suppress It than to stop a fire bell when it is ringing, but should cure the disease that
is causing the coughing. This can nearly always be done by taking Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Many have used it with the most beneficial results. It is especially valuable for the persistent cough that so often , follows a bad cold or an attack of the grip. Mrs. Thomas Beeching, An- j drews, Ind., 'Writes: "During the win-; ter my husband takes cold easily and 1 coughs and coughs. Chamberlain's ! Couh Remedy is the best medicine j for breaking up these attacks and you j cannot get him to take any other.' Obtainable everywhere. Adv.
Break a Child's Cold By Giving Syrup of Figs Cleanses the Little Liver and Bowels and They Get Well Quick. When your child suffers from a cold don't wait: give the little stomach, liver and bowels a gentle, thorough cleasing at once. When cross, peevish, listless, pale, d ;esn't sleep, eat or act np.turally; if breath is bad, stomach sour, give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours all the clogged-uD, constipated waste, sour bile and undigested ' food will gently move out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again. If your child coughs, snuffles and has caught cold or is feverish or has sore throat give a goor dose of "California Syrup of Pigs" to evacuate the bowels no difference what other treatment is given. Sick children needn't be coaxed to take this harmless "fruit laxative." Millions of mothers keep it handy because they know its action on the stomach, liver and bowels h prompt and sure. They also know a little given today caves a sick child tomorrtw. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," which contains directions for babies, children of all ages and for crown-ups plainly ol the bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here. Get the genuine, luade by "California Fig Syrup Com-r--.ny." Adv.
One after another he examined the sheets which he had mark&, starting with a hand-lens and then using one more powerful. At the top of the table lay the specially prepared paper on which he. had caught and preserved the marks In the dust of the Egyptian sarcophagus in the Museum. Besides these things, I noticed that he had Innumerable photographs, many of which were labelled with the stamp of the bureau in the Paris Palais de Justice, over which Bertillon had presided. One after another he looked at the carbon prints, comparing them point by point with the specially prepared copy cf the shoe-prints in the sarcophagus. It was, after all, a comparatively simple job. We had the prints of de Moche and Lockwood, as well as
Suffering and Surgerycan be avoided by using
PILE REMEDY Relieve yourself of this ailment at home. Easy to use and thoroughly dependable. Sold only by ub, 50c and $1.00. Thistlethwaite's Drug Stores, Richmond. Ind.
C-fl
TAKE EVERY PRECAUTION AGAINST A SPELL OF INDIGESTION BILIOUSNESS CONSTIPATION COLDS, GRIPPE OR MALARIA RESORT TO BOSTETTER'S Stomach Bitters AT THE FIRST SIGN OF TROUBLE
In
USE COOPER'S BLEND Cofifiee COOPER'S GROCERY
PR
W
O 1LMO SPECIALIST
MAY
Will Be at Tho
Favorite
Economical and Durable
714 So. 9 St.
Phone 1685
ArllMgtoo Hotel RICHMOND, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 13. And Every Four Weeks Thereafter.
)
Dr. Mayo has treated a number of cases of cancer without the knife. Dr. Mayo has treated successfully all forms of Chronic Diseases that are curable, such as Diseases of the Brain, Heart, Lungs, Throat, Eye and Ear, Stomach, Liver, Kidneys, Bladder, Blood Poison. Rectum, Catarrh. Rupture, Eczema. Epilepsy, Dropsy. Female Diseases. Nervous Debility. Functional Weakness. Etc. MEN A speedy, permanent and lasting cure Is what I give you beyond a doubt if your case is curable. If not, I will not accept your money and promise to do anything for you. The best reference I could give as to professional reliability is the many cured, satisfied patients I dismiss. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO DISEASES PECULIAR TO WOMEN I will give the POOREST man a chance, as well as the RICH, to receive a cure from me at a SMALL COST. There is no one too POOR to get my best advice FREE. VARICOCELE AND HYDROCELE Our one treatment cure is what you fhould have. Only one visit is required. We do no cutting. All signs disappear in a few days or a few weeks. BLOOD POISON, SKIN DISEASES We will give you treatment that
will in a few days or weeks cure all rash and soree. ! STRICTURE, KIDNEY, BLADDER, BLADDER TROUBLES Are scienI tifically treated by us. Our methods immediately benefit you. i PILES, FISTULA We can cure you so quickly and so easily that you i will be surprised. We will give you just the result and cure you are look
ing for. RUPTURE TREATED After an examinat'on we will tell you Just what we can do for you. If we cannot benefit or cure you, we will frankly and honestly tell you so. Call on or address W. R. MAYO, M. D. 843 North Delaware Street. Indianapolis, Indiana
iH mil GfO"c ff M mm w !u-p7722-czzi I IIL lul'mtril I -'L',,V-iX I -.Mi I - I - fjjlj
I
Gome Here! for expert efficient Battery Charging and Repairing This Is a Direct Prest-O-Lite Service Station. Here you will find the equipment and mechanics to give your battery the proper attention it needs.
i
Expert Inspection, Hydrometer Reading, required Distilled Water given here absolutely FREE OF CHARGE
There is a Prest-O-Lite Battery of the correct size for your cai" We sell them.
McConaha's Garage
THE McCONAHA COMPANY
Oldest Established HOU36
Not only a better tattery but backed by Prest-O-Lite Service
3 i
Automobile
Phone 1480 f
Richmond's
418 Main.
VA
m
m
See'us for Automobile Repairs, Storage, Primers, Motor Weave Robes,
j Gargoyle Mobiloils, Goodyear Tires and in fact anything your aufbmo-
I p. Ill
1 M 1
H j bile needs.
i a
McConaha's Garage
THE McCONAHA COMPANY
418-420 MAIN STREET.
PHONE 1480
DENTISTRY Good Teeth are an absolute necessity and we make their possession possible. All our work is practically painless. Highest Grade Plates $3.00 to $8.00 Best Gold Crowns .. .$3.00 to $4.00 Best Bridge Work ..$3.00 to $4.00 Best Gold Fillings $1.00 up. Best Silver Fillings.. 50 cents up We Extract Teeth Painlessly. NEW YORK Dental Parlor
Over Union National Eank. 8th and Main Streets. Elevator Entrance on South 8th street. Stair entrance on Main street. Hours: 8 to 5:307 to 8 P. M. on Tues., Thurs. & Sat Sunday 9 tn 12.
Tonight, if yoa will closely examine your teeth after brushing them, you will make a surprising discovery. Though you have been cleaning your teeth regularly, you will find an accumulation of tartar on the enamel and bits of food de posit hiding between the crevices. Your dentifrice baa not beea REALLY CLEANING! Los3 of teeth is usually due to one of two conditions Pyorrhea or Decay both of which ordinarily develop only in the moutl. where germ-laden tartar is present. CLEAN your teeth REALLY CLEAN them! Senreco, a den. tal specialist's formula will do it. Senreco embodies specially prepared, soluble granulc3 unusually effective ia cleaning away food deposits. Moreover, it is pertio ularly destructive to the trern of Pyorrhea.
Go to your dealer today and get a tube of Senreco keep your teeth REALLY CLEAN and protect your, self against Pyorrhea and decay. Send 4c to Senreco 304 Walnut St Cincinnati, Ohio, for trial package.
"PREPAREDNESS See rout dentiae twice yearV -" Vac Senreco twice daily Tkt tooth poaU that REALLY CLEANS
