Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 163, 22 May 1917 — Page 4

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PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM

AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. n . . Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H Harris, Mgr.

Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Sec

ond Class Mail Mauer.

Think About This

It has iust about Rotten so in this country

that a little boy is considered patriotic when he 'doesn't leave anything on his plate for "manners." Dallas News.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. TUESDAY, MAY 22, 1917

French Ship Struck

Wayne County Roads County Superintendent of Highways, Jones has done real constructive work in maintaining the roads of this county. His ability is recognized outside of the county boundaries. The New Castle Times editorially the. other day comn.H fum roads with the following comment:

"ThP road from New Castle to Richmond by

wav of Hatrerstown, shows what can be done

th rrftVf1 -ind work in the making of first

class highways. From here to Hagerstown the mH is more or less worn in the tracks and has

some ruts, but from Hagerstown to Richmond is as smooth as a floor every mile, with.no ruts and a perfect crown so that a vehicle does not need follow the wheel tracks in order to get a good

surface.

No paved road in the United States is any

smoother or better than this strip 01 grayei roaa f mm Hatrerstown to Richmond, and we cite it as

a model of what can be accomplished on a much traveled road. No highway in Henry county, excepting the. National road, is traveled as much as this road from Hagerstown to Richmond, and yet it in in as nearly, perfect condition as could be made. So long as it is kept this way it is far superior to either macadam or paving. Henry county, roads can.be made as good as this strip, as we have the hume material and as much money to work with. .But they lack a whole lot of coming up to. the Wnyne county standard, and . the sooner we chanL ' our methods and adopt those of4he neighboring county, the better roads we shall have. "The Silent Voice"

Advertising has been a great factor in making life worth living, declares Edward Mott Woolley

' in the June number of the Scnbner. He discuss

es the much mooted question whether advertising increases the cost of living and proves that many of the real comforts of life which all of us enjoy have been made possible through advertising publicity. . ' '

"One of the common indictments otoubbi s"". ; vertising is that it increases the cost of living. Voluminous arguments pro and con have bee n add need, but in reality the proposition seems simple. The real test is this- 'Are the people generally more prosperous now th thty were ?n the age before advertising began? Do we havmore money In our pockets, bigger deposits in the bank, higher salaries, better homes, more pleasures, brret1sUCa1mrt?'that in spots advertising may increase the general tendency to spend money. But would we go back to the days of salt pork, when we heated our homes with open fireplaces, had no running water and used tal-

tive household appliances, me o-ciri, -r, oo' no Mir oYm mmnanion on winters evenings r

And would we be better off financially if we did revert to

these things? . , .

"It would not be difficult to catalogue thousand factors in our daily lives that could be traced to advertising but which we now take for granted. The

phonograph, the self-playing piano, anu tue juwiu

so far as the great mass oi peuyie wv,v. . -----been made possible by advertising. The automobile, typewriter, calculating-machine, pneumatic cleaner, sewing-machine, and a multifarious array of things would have to be included in such a catalogue. .mT .f ha matter from a broad view-

TH0UGHTS TO THINK ABOUT Look before you leap, think before , you speak; . look and leap, think and speak, "he who hesitates is lost." The golden ' rule measures business better than the wooden yard stick. The "dull" season should not be allowed to stop your advertisingadvertising stimulates a slow business the weaker your business the more you should give of the advertising stimulant. Read Want Ads page In today's Palladium. '

Masonic Calendar

Tuesday, May 22 Richmond Lodge

Vrt. 196. F. & A. SI. uauea mtjeuus,

work in Fellow Craft Degree

Wednesday, May 23 Webb Lodge.

No 24. F. & A. M. Called meeuns,

work In the Entered Apprentice De-

noint when we reckon the effect of advertising on the e . Commencing at 6 o'clock. Lunch- . .... rm -l nAMviKntaa trt t n A PVTTa Vfl.- I

cost or living, n Myeruius .i.. era at 6:30.

Friday, May 25 King Solomon's

Ch.tr. No. 4. R. A. M. Called meet-

it Drirtnincr contributes to the extrava

gance of the people in Individual Instances, we must also

rtmit that advertising nas maae n c0""0 v-

people to possess the money they spend.

Before Sub Appears; Patrol Opens Fire

PARIS, May 22. The French steam

er eoloert, wnlch was torpeaoea in the Mediterranean on April 30, was on her way to Salonika when she was

sunk. The ship was struck by a tor

pedo below the water line and the engine room was immediately flooded.

There was no sign of a submarine as the ship began to sink rapidly by the

stern. , The crew promptly took up

their stations but the bows canted up

at such an angle that it was almost

impossible to lower the boats.

The Colbert sank In tve . minutes and after she had disappeared the sub

marine emorged and, as is their custom, her commnder asked the name,

description and destination of her victim. Before he could get his information a French patrol boat " appeared

and opened fire. After four shots had

been fired the U-boat submerged just

as t sea plane appeared on the hori

zon.

The patrol, boat was a trawler and

gave valued assistance in rescuing the men from the Colbert.

LYNN, IND.

Misses Florence. Saucer and Freda

Hansley visited over Sunday with Mr.

and Mrs. Karl Kayser at Indianapolis.

Mr. and Mrs. Ed Baxter and son

Kenneth, motored to Ludlow Falls. O..

Sunday Miss Dora Hill entertained

a nartv of Muncie friends for the wee

end..... Mr. and Mrs. Jesse owens oi Rreenvllle. O.. soent Sunday with

Henry Hawkins and family Mr. and

Mrs. Harry Young of Richmond, and

Arthur Halslev of Columbus. O.. were

the Sunday guests of ves Hill and

family Miss Jennie Eckerle was

called to HuntsviUe, Ind., on account

of the serious Illness of her sister, Mrs

Os Bly.....Glen Tillson of Richmond,

spent Sunday with his parents. Mr.

and Mrs. Will Tillson.

CONVICTED BOMBER'S

WIFE BEFORE BAR

SAN FRANCISCO. May 22. Mrs.

Rena Mooney, wife of Thomas J. Moon

ey, who is under sentence of death for

murder growing out of the preparedness day bomb explosion here on July

22. 1916. when ten prisoners were ed or fatally wounded, was placed on

trial today In the superior courc on ui same charge. Mrs. Mooney. a music teacher, is one of five persons indicted for murder as a result of the ex

plosion and is the third to be tried.

OLDEST MASON IN OHIO EATON, O., May 22. Dennis Ley-

ellen. probably the oldest Mason In Ohio, reached his ninety-second birth

day anniversary Monday. He is con

fined to his bed at his home. In West

Deem street, so no- special observance was made of the occasion. Almost 60 years ago he was made a Mason at Camden, this county. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY

. . I i, ra- on,! Mnst Excellent

A review of some of the successes that have i:

been accomplished by advertising is set forth as

follows:. -J George Eastman, In 1878,' was

THIRTEEN SURVIVORS LAND

a bank clerk, with a

. . . u.. rt f hit maRnxisracium wiui

noDDy ior pmnugrav"- ,Va mot. en from

LONDON, May 22. Thirteen survlv-

the Norwegian steamsnip

. n nnf) nnA ftf t Vl r

7.1LFyJ.toyM at least Madura have reached land. Their ves

""""ES "'r, ; i wa, helld and sunk by a German

wnnm wrlelev. Jr.. who was a traveling submarine. Two men were killed by

salesman Now he is said to spend $2,000,000 a year or Bhell fire and seven were wounded. . . QT1 TViHariev camDaiens we

rrl6.., .tnnnia nronortions. The or- a small town in Ohio has given Its

dinary best-seller in fiction has a circulation of perhaps citizens permission to raise pigs, pro100 000 while the Wrlgley 'Mother Goose Book went to vidlng they get the consent of their - i Vi a 'Cncar Men' tn 3 K00.000. : npichhorn. . '

i rtuu.iMH; ueuuic ouu -v .

"The American Chicle Company this year has an advertising appropriation of one and one-half million dollars. "Not so many years ago Eldridge R. Johnson was a machinist at Camden. N. J. Afterward he bought the little shop where he had worked on a crude tajking-

machine, and this developed imo ine great vicu umpany whose advertising runs well over $2,000,000 a year. "A century ago there was a little soap-factory in New York owned by a Morgan family. For more than a lifetime this business attained no t particular prominence, but

one day the family physician suggesiea me commuanuji

P I. I MAYH)!

SPECIALIST

Will Be at The

Cannon Thunder Hours Without Ceasing Says Diary of French Infantryman

Dr. Joinies'

Lainiiinnieinift (Commonly Known as Beaver Oil.)

of two Latin words as a trade-name., sapono oecame ai- B,, Czj fi,A nn most a national Institution, with three or four hundred Tnumphailtly fclOOa tne leSl-

thousand dollars a year to win ior i, uu n.uv OI lime adventures of this company add some of the brightest color to the romance of advertising. Thus we have 'Spot- Spiegel started to manufacture

less Town.' . this wonderful remedy over nity "In 1879 Jacob Ritty, a merchant in Dayton, O., in- years ago. it has been continuously .t the .n-h rpeister. John H. Patterson then had a n , mgrir.t. ever since, with the de

'CUICU . . . ... . , VI. v" . w

small country store and was naving irouDie seeping uib mand steadily increasing, until now n

amiint9. When he neard oi me casn reRisici uo LCiC- i8 consirtered a nousenoio necessny

eranhed for two and arterward nougni ice dubihoto. uu ln thousands of homes tnrougnout rnis . ' i l i 1 1T(h nrmtn I . ,

Frpderick F. peaDOdy was a Bcaoai-iencuei i mmurau jjj many roreign counmes.

but rural life did not please him and he went to Chicago. Remedies, like other things, come At the very beginning advertising entered his career, for and go Dut only those with merit will

he looked In the classmen pages or me mc-ago iwyero permanently remain. and found a job at seven dollars a week. Among other jjr. Jones Liniment annihilates pain things he sold collars; and today he is president of the reduces inflammation and does the

ereatest collar concern in tne worm. . work tne patient neeos 10 nave none.

it is -me sareiy ririsi iiuiuueui, iur cery emergency jheumatism, neuralgia, sore muscles, stiff neck, sore and aching feet, enlarged veins and all pains that can be reached by external application.

Spurn 'substitutions, look for tne Beaver trade mark. None genuine without it. Adv.

Hotter

RICHMOND, MONDAY, MAY 28 And Every Four Weeks Thereafter.

FRENCH FRONT, May 21. (Correspondence of The Associated Press) Two pages from the diary of a French soldier who was a member of an infantry unit during the attack on the German lines in Champagne, which

began on April 16 this year, wm bb.c to demonstrate the feeling of confidence of the French troops in their power to beat the Germans. The extract reads: . ,. "4-45 a. m. A pale light whitens slightly the sky heavy with clouds. Since yesterday evening at six o clock cannon have thundered uninterrupted- . ly, the sound resembling the rolling of a giant drum. All night wind and rain. A shower has just stopped. The communication trench is full of water

and we sink into mud up to tne anaies. Soldiers Wear Steel Helms. "5:30 a. m. At the colonel's post. He chats with hia adjutant and two captains, cheerful smiling young men, already wearing their steel helmets, their belts and equipment, with ironshod walking sticks in their hands, ready to start Outside the day breaks until little by little the wan light cn.iii over the Erey plain. The two

captains leave to join their companies after taking leave of the colonel, who - shakes hands with them, remarking "All right! Go on! 1 will join you out there." "5:45 a. m.- In the Jumplng-off parallel. In the growing light the men ure stooping in the mud at the bottom of the trench, or leaning with their hacks against the sides. Some ace sleeping with their helmets drawn

over their faces. Others calmly smoke cigarettes. Many of them are youngsters and their bronzed faces look quite

boyish while they sleep. Two of them,

in order to be warmer, cuddle up to

gether. Everybody Ready to Fight. 5:55 a. m Everybody is afoot, rifles In hands, with bayonets fixed. Buckles are tightened and haversacks adjusted. ' "Far away, the sky clears and orange rays pierce the clouds, which have turned to pearl-grey. In spite of the Incessant roar of the cannon, a nightingale is singing just in front. "The plain ln front of us gradually loses itself In the mist out of which flash from all points fugitive flames caused by the bursting of shells. "6:00 a. m. "Forward ! " Noiselessly, without a whisper, the men clamber

nnt of h trench onto the plain. The

first out assist their comrades by givine them their rifle butts to hold to.

Then at a quick pace they advance with their bayonets pointed toward the

boche trenches. There is no shout-

nv nrt pvpfi of words of command. In

small groups widely separated meyj

go on without a shade of hesitation. Each man knows where he is to go to and makes directly for his object

Fragments Hurtle Through Air. "The machine-guns crackle, bullets

whistle by, shells burst around with a terrible tearing sound, emitting black smoke from which screeching fragments of steel hurtle through the air.

But the waves of men always advance,

not stopping even whennhey come

hatch en ' of barbed wire en

tanglements which have not been brok-' en up hy tb.e French artillery. .These they go round and take up their alignment on the other side. Then they disappear from view.' "6:30 a.m. The first wounded men

h?an to arrve and at the same time

Roma prisoners, sraunt and covered

with mud.

"In the meantime the position has

been won." . r

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 donht If vonr case la cnrahle. If not I will not accept your money and

promise to do anything for you. The best reference I could give as to profes

sional 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 yon ftv Onlv nn visit Is reemlred. We do no cutting. All signs dlsap-

rear in a few davs or a few weeks.

" BLOOD POISON, SKIN DISEASES We will give you treatment that

will ln a few days or weeks cure all rash and sores. STRICTURE. KIDNEY. BLADDER. BLADDER TROUBLES Are sclen

ttriMUv trMtfA hv us. Our methods 4mmediately benefit you.

PI' ES, FISTULA We can cure you so quickly and so easily that you

will be surprised.- We will give you just the result and cure you aro looic1 n cr rVr

RUPTURE TREATED After an examination 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

xtfi

We recommend

HIGH STANDARD

LIQUID PAINT because we know it will give you lasting satisfaction. We sell Lowe Brothers paint because quality is our hobby and this paint has the quality that exactly fits our ideaof high standard merchandise. If you are planning to paint, let us tell you about High Standard - the investment paint. Haner & Fahlsing Painters and Decorators 423 Main St. Phone 1336

X Trtnart This for a Bad t

Cough It's Fine t

Ckraplr Kaallr Made, Dora the Work Quickly.

but

TVm fint-fti ronch avruD that money

can buy, costing only about one-fifth as much at ready-made preparations, can easily be made up at home. The way it takes hold and conquers distressing couirhs. throat and chest colds will

really make vou enthusiastic about it.

supply you with

60 cents woruu

Any drucsist can

914 annM of Pinex 5C

Pour this into a pint bottle and fill the hnttln with slain granulated sugar

syrup. Shake thoroughly and it is ready for use. The total cost is about 64 cents and gives you a full pinta family supply of a most effectual,

pleasant tasting remedy. It keeps per

It's trulT astonishing how quickly it tia. nenetratinff throuch every air

passage of the throat and lungs loosens

nd raises me pniegm, aootaea anu ileitis the Inflamed or swollen throat membranes, and gradually, but surely the nnnvinir throat tickle and dreaded

rough will disappear entirely. Nothing better for bronohitis, spasmodic croup.

whooping cough or broncniai asinma. Nn. la a. anarial and hicrhlv concen

' trated compound of genuine Norway Mtrt- combined with guaiacol

.a i. knnwn th world over for its

nmmna healint effect on the throat

r- Zr , ,

Avoid disappointment bv "king your

srucrist for s ounces oi i-inex w

1 full directions and aonT accept uy

t thing else. A guarantee oi oa Isfaciion or money promptly refunded . roea with this preparation. The PmeX

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY

INTERURBAN Time Tables

Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern Traction Co. . (Effective February 1,1917)

CARS ARRIVE A. M. 6.64

WEST A

BOUND M.

6.10 7.40 Li ' 8.10 9.40 D-L 10.10 11.43 Li P. M. 12.10 1.40 C-L 2.10 - 3.40 Li 4.10 ' 6.40Li 6.10 7.40 L. 9.00 O 10.00 O 11.00 C-B lr Limited. IV L,

7.45 9.20 9.55 Li 11.20 11.25 C-Li P. M. 1.20 r 1.55 Li 3.20 3.25 D-I 5.20 5.55 It 7.20 7.55 L 9.20 9.55 L 12.00

-Dayton Limited,

I .,M,M,,,Ma,,,,a,aiaaaaaaMaMMaiaaMaaaaaM ; Always I Is .-bre Economical 1

C-L Columbian Limited

G Greenfield only C-B-Cambridge City only

You'll enjoy the really clean feeling that follows the regular use of

The toothpaste that really cleans.

gums

Scnreco keeps the mouth and

healthy makes teeth glisten. Personally used and prescribed by hundreds of dentists. Large sized tubes 25c, any druggist or toilet counter. Sample 4c in stamps. SENRECO Masonic Tempi. Cincinnati, Ohio

W1

(This is advertisement No. 4 in a series of six on the question of greater economy in the use of bread.) "Potatoes are $1.00 a peck or $3.75 a bushel," the vegetable dealer tells you, and when he does so, gives you proof that bulk buying is more economical. Small purchases absorb too much of the cost of doing business. The five-cent loaf is a small purchase. It must absorb too much of the cost of doing business

Because of greater bulk you get better flavor in the Ten or Fifteen Cent Loaf, less crust because there is but two heels instead of four or six, as for two or three five-cent loaves. The bigger loaf dries more slowly and has better keeping qualities.

Buy the biggest loaf you can and

help eliminate food waste.

J2t

mi

Practice Economy by Baying Bread in Larger Sizes Greater nse of bread ln the tig sizes Is advisable at tbe present price of bread as compared with other foods. But. waste must be avoided. The food situation is serious. Bumper crops' will help.' but can hardly make things better. While there Is war. waste is a crime against the hungry.

wm

Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind,

jJlSJ

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