Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 188, 20 June 1917 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 1917
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by .' Palladium Printing Co. ,; Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Street. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr. Entered at the Post Office aRichwond. Indiana, as Second Class Mail Matter.
; "One can salute the flag without loving it shout for it without devotion to it and even fight for it without feeling the inspiration of the immortal principles it represents. Patriotism is a thing of the spirit. It is the still small voice of duty summoning to service, which is the only incontestable credential of love." John Wesley Hill. Why You Must Help Get this picture let it sink in. Then sit down and determine what you are going to do about it. It's happening" every day, every hour, every minute when the 'big battles are on. It took him just as he went over the trench parapet took him full in his bare and muscular throat. It was hardly bigger than one of those rubber erasers tinned to the end of lead pencils. But with the driving power of high energy powder behind its steel jacketed nose, it was an altogether competent and devilishly capable agent of destruction. He lay quite still a few yards ahead of the trench, where his rush had carried him. The
morning drew toward noon. . With night came the beginning of his torment. First it was thirst, then fever, then delirium. Always his spilling wound burned and throbbed. Even on the second night, .with the rain beating down upon him, it glowed like a kiln. By the third, day his agony spoke in screams. A stretcher party found him and trundled him away, down through the line of Red Cross units, from dressing station to field base, eventually to Paris. He was French, but he was fighting our fight. He was French but a few months from now his counterpart may be an American. There are bullets enough for all. He may be a boy you know, perhaps a neighbor's boy, even our own fighting our fight. Will you help him, when our fight has broken him, to fight
his ? Will you help him when his young body and vivid force are spent and shattered, to retrieve what he may? Every man, woman and child in the state of Indiana can give this aid by subscribing to the American Red Cross this week, to raise $25,000 for Red Cross work here at home and across the sea. The American Red Cross is the wounded soldier's truest ally. It is his minister and guardian. It is his hope. . If you can only spare a dollar give it. But make it five, ten, fifty or a hundred dollars if you are able. No limit is placed on the individual subscriptions. The appeal of the American Red Cross is put up to all the people give what you can. If you can't go you can give. Those going are giving immeasurably more. Some must go but all must give. Red Cross Bulletin.
Map of Ypres Battle Ground
THIRD MAN WANTED IN KEET MURDER CASE IS HELD IN HUTCHINSON, KAS.
SPRINGFIELD, Mo., June 19. With the arrest of Vick Carter, reported from Hutchinson, Kans., today, the authorities haie in custody all three men against whom warrants were issued charging them with having murdered Baby Lloyd Keet, whose body was found in a well on the Crenshaw farm, ten days after the baby was abducted. The two other men, Claude Piersol and Cletus Adams, were removed last night from the county jail at Kansas City to St. Louis.
On The Boards
The blows of Field Marshal Haig, following his smash against Crown Prince Rupprecht that resulted in the British capture of the Wystchaete Messines ridge last week, are forcing the entire German line to the east. The English attacked east of Messines (1) and also continued their drive astride the Ypres Comine3 Canal (2). As a result of the recent operations German front trenches have been occupied on a line between the Lys and Klein Zlllebeke (3).
The final performance of "The Little Girl That God Forgot," will be given at the Murray this evening. This play has caught on with Richmond theatregoers judging from the large attend&0CC The Otis Oliver Players will offer "The Divorce Quecticn" for three days starting Thursday. As the title indicates the story deals with the divorce evil and uses as subjects two children of divorced parents who are thrown upon ,th3 mercies of the world at an early'age. The play has enjoyed long runs in all the large cities.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
1 !( !liUJUfcl
in I
f ft
Safe
Milk
or Infants
Invalids
.Substitutes
Cwt YOU
SunePnca
A Nutritious Diet for All Ages. Keep Horlick's Always on Hand Quick Lunch; Homo or Office.
Masonic Calendar
Wednesday, June 20 Webb Lodge, No. 24, F. & A. M. Stated meeting. Thursday. June 21 Webb and Richmond Lodges. Members and wives, joint meeting Indiana Masonic home. Cay program begins at 7:30 p. m. Social at 9 p. m.
I
WEBSTER, IND.
Andrew Steveson of Richmond spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. pnd Mrs. Moody Lamb of this place...
Mrs. Delpha Hollingsworth and Miss I
Letha Harvey spent Saturday evening with Mrs. John Plankenhorn Mrs. rMnM.n s. A M- r.Anpva Tliilline
James uiuw u auu wio. ucwis
spent Wecnesuay afternoon in Kicnmond....Mr. and Mrs. Howard Starr and son. Donald, and daughter, Marjorle, spent Saturday in Richmond,... Mrs. Morris McCoy and children of Richmond spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Miller and family Mrs. :mma Unthank of Richmond spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Dem. . . .Misses Frances Harvey, Juanita Hendershott, Bessie Wickersham, Meda Brown and Alta Wilcoxen and Messrs. Glen Miller, Carl Thompson 8 nd John Miller of Richmond spent the week-end with their parents of this place. .. .Miss Esther Brown and Mrs. Louisa Demaree and son, Claude, sient Saturday In Richmond Mr. A. R. Feemster and Mr. Smith of Camrldi'p. City visited the former's son, .ir. Maxwell Feemeter, who is farming f!ie Feemster farm west cf Webster, Wednesday Clifford Oler of near C'ampbellstown was calling on friends and relatives here last Sunday Mrs. Lizzie Jarret spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Jessup.
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a
SAYS
MOST ALL GIRLS AND COYS LIKE
P0STT0ASTIES
Ik THE CIST IN
If you want a Jeffery Six at $1465, place your order at once
The price of this Car must advance
Here Is a car In which there is fery Six at $1,465, is the best at least $1,700 of actual value. motor car value in America.
If the material required in the manufacture of a Jeffery Six were purchased today, the car could not be built for $1,700. In fixing the price on a Jeffery Six in 1916 the car was under, priced, and now, with the sharp advance in materials, the Jef-
If you are considering the purchase of a motor car at anywhere near the price of $1,465, do not fail to carefully investigate the Jeffery Six. Ask your local dealer for a demonstration, but do It soon. The price of the Jeffery Six must inevitably advance.
MR. FRANK C. GEERS 421 S. 13th St. Phone 2446 JONES & McCONNELL v DISTRIBUTORS 200 N. MAIN DAYTON, OHIO
MAKING GARBAGE CAN OF STOMACH POOR BUSINESS DR. J. N. HURTY
INDIANAPOLIS, June 20. Many business failures are caused by Irrational eating, and abuse of the stomach is one method of suicide, Dr. J. N. Hurty, state health commissioner, says. Discussing the subject of rational eating he said: "The Biblical utterance, "He who save his life shall lose it,' is not a paradox. Neither is it a paradox to say, 'He who eats for pleasure shall achieve pain.' Nor yet is it a paradox to declare, 'He who lives to eat shall not live to eat. "Wrong eating of wrong foods does the human race more harm than alcoholic intemperance. Standing in the doorway of a dining room of a great sanitarium w,here 600 invalids were at their noonday lunch the superintendent said, 'These are all valiant but vanquished knights of the dining table.'
Continuing he asserted, Tf I can only
inauce tnem to want to eat rationally they will get well.' Garbage Can Don't Pay. "It was rather interesting to know that that Intelligent bunch all well educated and possessed of means should be in a hospital simply because they had long practiced irrational eating. The superintendent further said, 'Very many business failures are caused by irrational eating. Surely making a garbage can of one's stomach
does not pay. Why do we do it? 1st
it because we don't know. If so, we better had know, for the penalty for not knowing is weakness, invalidism and death; yes, and sometimes insanity between the invalidism and death. You can't eat your cake and keep it too. Neither can you ruin your stomach and keep it also.' " , "To all this, some who are bent on suicide by stomach abuse will say, 'Oh, you are a crank.' They give this answer because they are weak in will and self-indul l ent. We all have heard dyspeptics say, 'Why don't I want to eat rationally?' By not wanting to eat rationally and by not doing so, they simply prove their unfitness and nature slowly and painfully pushes them off the dock. Food Poverty Is Help. Dr. J. Rilus Eastman, of Indianapolis, who . returned recently from Austria where for a year he was engaged in
Moderator Chapman Accused by Paper Rev. J. Wilbur Chapman, evangelist and moderator of the Northern Presbyterian church, is accused of personal favoritism in bringing about the election of Rev. Acquilla Webb, of Louisville, to the executive committee of the church. The charge la made in an article head "No More Elections Like This,"
published in this week's issue of the Continent, a church paper. Favoritism is against the rules of the Presbyter
ian church. Dr. Chapman is a native of Wayne
county, and is well known in Rich
mond.
war hospital work says that gastric and intestinal disorders have decreased greatly in that country since the people have been forced to eat moderately and simple coarse foods. He further says that coffee could not be obtained at all, and most likely the absence of this drug helped some. "The time surely is ripe for Americans to stop all irrational eating. If they will not they simply are chumps to complain of stomach trouble and the high cost of living."
The Bloom of Berries in your cheeks you can get it by cutting out the heavy, expensive foods of Winter that clog the liver and burden the kidneys. Here is a dish that will clear the skin and give you the bounding buoyancy of youth-Shredded Wheat and Strawberries. All the body -building material in the whole wheat grain, combined with berries or
other fruits.
ohio Man hangs himself in ft. wayne jail
FORT WAYNE, Ind., June 19. Thomas J. Steed, 46 ymss old, Lima, Ohio, was found hanging dead In his cell in the Allen county jail here this morning. He had torn a strip from his bed sheet with which he made a noose and suspended himself from the bar above bis cell door. Steed was arrested on an interurban car at New Haven, six miles east of here Sunday morning, on suspicion of being the man who had criminally assaulted a 14-year-old girl at Wapaknoetta, Ohio, last week and for whom
un.oflvis -J-, iUJTI" HEADACHE. HEADflfillE M""1
a posse had been scouring the country Saturday. Steed was being held here for identification by his alleged victim.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAV
tydetrEldr pit.' If yarn m that nice ewl Antf nke jar kn( aesM jmr re. na tikr By advice
NEWBRtVS HERPICIDE
Applications t U better barber shops Guarantaad by Thm HerplcMa Co. Sold Everywhere
Notice Loyal Order of Moose Last Week Before the Big Class. June 24, Sunday afternoon. Get busy on new applicants. Special meeting will be announced later. Booster Committee
Made at Niagara Falls, N. Y.
L
LOYALTY First to country, then to home. To cheer those who cannot serve as you serve but whose hearts are with you your photograph.
PHOTOS
722 MAIN St RICHMOND. INOt
Motherhood Writes
Olt's Signature With Trembling Hand at
The Bottom of The
Noble Commision the Red Gross Carries To The Field
of WAR
J o
Our country confronts the long-dreaded crisis. The patient efforts of statesmanship the long-sufferance of a free people slow to wrath because conscious of their strength all the thought of men and all the prayers of women that from America this cup might pass have proved unavailing to find a way to remain in peaoe with honor. The decision has been in righteousness, and with immovable conviction of the justice of the cause, to draw the sword which still to leave sheathed would be death to self-respect and treason to human liberty. America has seen that there are some things worse than war, and her sons are going forth to battle for the preservation of our country from a despotic militarism that aim3 at world-domination, and for the security of democratic freedom throughout the earth. The Red Cross confronts the great emergency of this national and world-wide crisis with a record at home and under alien skies that makes up a noble epic. Though our armies be as yet unready to voice with fullness of prepared power America's appeal to the God of Battles, the Red Cross is ready. It is organized, it is prepared, it needs only the enlargement of its ranks and of the provision for the support of its work required by the enormous enlargement of the demands for its sen-ice that has come with our country's entrance into the world-war for liberty and humanity against their ruthless and unscrupulous foes. The Red Cross confronts , that emergency with an appeal that convinces heart and mind with a call that must and will be answered swiftly and with unstinting generosity by all who love their country and humafaity. i Motherhood writes its signature with trembling hand at the bottom of the noble commission the Red Cross carries to the field of war. Wifehood and Sisterhood, the other members of that human trinity that watches, waits and hopes, have set there bravely their seals. Childhood's mark is there as well. And all Womanhood that "kisses the cross with lips that quiver" has blessed and sanctified the scroll. Its love follows in the Red Cross its men whom it sends forth to fight and if need be to die, knowing that there they will die most nobly for women's honor and for all other men's freedom. Above the lurid lights of the battle field's horror the Red Cross lifts the flag of love and hope. The wounded soldier sees its flag and knows that succor waits from home, half a world away. Its sole mission is to serve and save. Its only enemy is' human pain. When the battle ends its combat begins. It ministers to the suffering; it takes the last message of the dying. In its ministry universal womanhood finds its preserving work, divinely committed from the beginning of Time and never ending.
The Red Cross today, In a world divided as never before in contention between causes Eternally Right and Eternally Wrong, still knows no boundary or division of nation, race or creed. Its helping hand is extended also to those who are fighting, deceived and blind with causeless hate, for the cause that we Americans know is Eternally Wrong, When the battle is done, to the Red Cross the victims are no longer fighters for Right or for Wrong. They are just Buffering Men, equal in humanity, equally to be aided. Thus the Red Cross today seems to symbolize that unity of humanity that endures through all the hells that the iniquitous ambitions of rulers have made in the earth, and which will return when Righteousness has compelled Wickedness to peace. The Red Cross brings to its high mission organization, efficiency, enthusiasm. Science and the universal religion of aid to suffering are conjoined in its activities. Today after having long served America in peace, and all the world in war and peace, it answers the call to serve America in war with all the world. Its vow is aid to all suffering mankind ; its creed is Action. The need for Red Cross service has never before in all human history been so great. The thousands that are going to the front the hundreds of thousands that may go, since in this war there can be no end save in victory for the Righteous Cause will require its service. So will their dependents here at home. The Red Cross hears the summons and calls upon all the American people to hear it. President Wilson, himself, is President of the Red Cross and asks that one million men and women enroll their names as subscribers to the Red Cross at $1, $2, 5, $10, $100, $1,000, $10,000 or $100,000. , He does not ask that you do anything else but pay your subscription and then if you wi6h to secure 10, 25. or 100 new subscribers, do so If you wish. No further service in the field or elsewhere will be required. In this hour of the nation's and all the world's need, every American who loves his country and his fellow men asks: "What can I do? Where can I help?" For stalwart youth the path of duty is plain. Our country and humanity need Men to fight and die for them. Yet of our 100,000,000 only a small fraction now and but a tithe at most, or worst, can thus serve. For all who cannot enlist to seek "the great prize of death in battle" or who are not needed in those ranks, as yet, there is another enlistment. It is under the banner of the Red Cross. Enlisting there all, old or young, man, woman or tender child, can proudly say: "I too am serving humanity and my country." "I too am deserving well of the Republic." Do this by becoming a supporter of the Red Cross. Send your cash or your check today $5. $10, $100, $1,000, $10,000 or $100,000 give to your very utmost.
Note: This advertisement is donated to The American Red Cross by the following Richmond
I merchants : .
The McConaha Co., The Grand Leader, Roy W. Dennis, J. Morris Jones, Raymond Lichtenfels,
Martin's Music Shop, Sol Frankel, Walk Over Boot Shop, McConaha' Garage, Ccrae-Fehinan Shoe Co., Second National Bank, Omer Whelan, Ackerman, Carl Young, The Starr Piano Co.
i co-a FLAKES
