Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 197, 30 June 1917 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 1917.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by v .. palladium Printing Co. IHlladiuxn Building. North Ninth and Sailor Street R. G. Leeds, Editor. " E. H. Harris, Mgr. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, aa Seeond Class MaU Matter.
- Let not a man glory in this that he loves his
country; let him rather glory in this that he loves
his kind Baha CLlah.
Keeping the Movies Safe
The report of the State Fire Marshal contains
no reference to the condition in which his inspec
tors found the Richmond movie houses,' the in
ference being that the safety of the patrons who visit the theatres is assured. We are glad to note that the movie men who cater to this popular form of amusement believe in "Safety
First."
Attention, however, is called to a theatre at
- Hagerstown and one at Newcastle that were con demned because they were fire traps. The Hag
erstown house came in for condemnation because of its low ceiling, wooden booth, insufficient ex- ' its and the extreme peril to which it exposed its patrons. The show at Newcastle, it was found, was conducted in a basement. The state authorities have received the unqualified support of 'all honest movie men in the dean-op campaign which they -are conducting. Enterprising owners know that one serious tragedy in which scores of patrons lose their lives will give the industry' a set-back that .win cost them thousands of dollars in loss of patronage. . . The fire department of Richmond is zealous in its inspection of the houses. Exits and aisles are kept open and whenever the fire chief discovers a hazard exposing ' patrons to danger, prompt steps are taken to remedy the situation. . The co-operation of the movie owners and the fire department will keep the, theatres safe. '
New York and Patriotism ; A year ago you would have believed that the shrine of patriotism and the seat of American loyalty was in New York. Judged by the editorial expressions of the New York newspapers, the Middle West was lukewarm in its support of the government. ' -.-''.r: What are .the conditions today? The Middle West has put to shame the East in loyalty, in en
listments, in Red Cross relief work. When deeds not words became the issue, the East could not be seen and the West came forth with the real
expression of American patriotism.
Yesterday the New York newspapers again
called attention to the fact that New York is far behind in recruiting for the army. Only 166 re
cruits signed up yesterday, making a total of 554 for the week; Heroic measures will be adopted
to stimulate interest.
To our pride it may be said that Indiana and
the states of the Middle West gave their men and money when the nation needed it. They paid no attention to the mouthings of publicists in the East when their patriotism was attacked and
their motives of opposition impugned It is up to the East to prove that its self-ac
cepted job of being the "Patriotic Mentor" of the United States has not exposed it tq the charge of being a preacher who does not practice what he preaches. Mawkish Prison Sentiment A measure of ordinary common sense must be used in the. administration of prison discipline. Humanitarian principles must always be the guiding lines, but the substitution of sentimentality for common sense must not be tolerated. Through the confession of a prisoner in a New York house of correction it has become known that a society, exists, whose purpose it is to supply convicts with the names of girls with whom they may enter into correspondence. A long commentary on this form of erratic sentimentalism is unnecessary. Let the authorities break up the society at once. Enough temptations beset our girls and young women without subjecting them to the dangers that lurk in indiscriminate correspondence with jail-birds. -
THREE IVOuEtl ARE ATTACKED BY MAN; ONE MEETS DEATH
LACONIA, N. H., June SO. Miss Elizabeth Suess, assistant matron, and Miss Dorothy Davis, a teacher at the slate school tor feeble-minded here, were suffering today from wounds on the head and nervous shocks, received when their companion. Miss Alice Black "Richards, head teacher at the school, was murdered in a cottage on the shore of Lake WInnisquam last night. Morris P. Bradford, who had been with the women and gave himself up to the police, is held at the police station and will be given a hearing today. A hunting knife bearing a spot resembling blood, was found in the cottage. According to the brief statements obtainable from Miss Suess and Miss Davis the three women had accepted Bradford's invitation to take supper with him at the cottage which is on the school grounds. There Bradford attacked them, they declared. ' He bound all 3 hand and foot, cut Miss Richards' throat, struck the other two over the head and cut their hair off. After he left, one of the young women managed to free herself and released her companions, but Miss Rich
ards had succumbed to her wounds.
KING-KHYBER RIFLES ,j4.. Romance of jfclvntortQ JGy TALBOT MUNDY
1916 Br Tn
King, trembled perhaps as a racehorse trembles at the starting gate, though he .was weary enough to tremble from fatigue. The Hills, that numb the hearts of many men, had ' not cowed him, for he loved them and Is love there is no fear. Heat and cold and hunger were all In the day's , work; thirst was an incident; and the whistle of lead In the wind had never meant more to him than work ahead to do. But a greyhound trembles In the
leash. Abol ler trembles when word goes down the speaking-tube from the bridge for "all she's got." And so the
! mild-looking hakim Kurram Khan, walking gingerly across hot rocks, donning cheap, imitation shell-rimmed spectacles to help him look the part, trembled even more than the legweary horse he led. Bat that passed. He was all in hand when he led his men up over a rough stone causeway to a door in the bottom of a high battlemented wall and waited for somebody to open It. The great teak door looked as if it had been stolen from some Hindu temple, and he wondered how and when they could have brought it there across those savage intervening miles. With its six-inch teak planks and bronze bolts its weight must be guessed at in tons yet a horse can hardly
carry a man along any of the trails that lead to Khinjan! The wood bore the marks of seige and fracture and repair. The walls were new-built, of age-old stona. The last expedition out of India had leveled every bit of those defenses flat with the valley, but KhinJan's devils had re-erected them, as ants rebuild a rifled nest. The door was swung open after a time, pulled by a rope, manipulated from above by unseen hands. Inside was another blind wall, twenty feet behind the first. To the right a low barricade blocked he passage and provided a safe vantage point from which it could be swept by a hail of lead; but to the left a path ran unobstructed for more than a hundred yards between the walls, to where the way was blocked by another teak door, set in unscalable black rock. High above the door was a ledge of rock that crossed like a bridge from wall to wall, with a parapet of stone built upon it, pierced for rifle-fire. As they approached this second door a Rangar turban, not unlike King's own, appeared above the parapet on the ledge and a voice he recognized hailed bin good-humoredly. "Salaam alelkouml" "And upon thee be peace!" King answered in the Pashtu tongue, for the Hills are polite, whatever the other principles. Rewa Ounga's face beamed, down on him, wreathed In smiles that seemed to Include mockery as well as tri-
Every Sunday
EXCURSION Pennsylvania Lines SIjIO Round Trio from Richmond -
rrmntm Train Leaves 4:40 A. M,
umph. , Looking up at him at an angle that made his neck ache and dazzled his eyes, King could not be sure, but it seemed to him that the smile said, "Here you are. my man, and aren't you in for it?" He more than half suspected he was intended to understand that. But the Rangar's conversation took another line. "By jove!". he chuckled. "She expected you. She guessed you are a hound who can . hunt well on a dry scent, and she dared bet you will come In spite of all odds. But she didn't expect you In Rangar dress! No, by jove! You jolly well will take the wind out of her sails!" King made no answer. For one thing, the word "hound" even in English, is not essentially a compliment
But he had a better reason than that j
"Did you find the way easily? the Rangar asked; but King kept silence. "Is he parched? Have they cut his tongue out on the road?" The question was in Pashtu, directed at Ismail and the others, but King answered It. "Ohras to that," he said, salaaming in the fastidious manner of a native gentleman, "I know no other tongue than Pashtu and my own Rajasthani. My name Is Kurram Khan. I ask admittance." He held up his wrist to show the gold bracelet, and high over his head the Rangar laughed like a bell.' "Shabash!" he laughed. "Well done. Enter, Kurram Khan, and be welcome, thou and thy men. Be welcome in her name!" Somebody pulled a rope and the door yawned wide, giving on a kind of courtyard whose high walls allowed no view of anything but hot blue sky. King hurried under the arch and looked up, but on the courtyard side of the door the wall rose sheer and blank, and there was no sign of win
dow . or stairs, or of any means of reaching the ledge from which the Rangar had addressed him. What he did see, as he faced that way, was that each of his men salammed low and covered his face with both hands as he entered. "Whom do ye salute?" he asked. Ismail stared back at him almost insolently, as one who. would rebuke a fooL '.Y;,y . ... . . ... "Is this not her nest these days?" he answered. "It Is well to "bow low. She is not as other women. She is she! See yonder!" . To be continued
Movies won over Shakespeare In vote of Yale seniors.
DONT HURT A BIT! Lift your old, torturous oerns and calluses right off ; . with the fingers.
This tiny bottle hold the wonder of wonders. It contains an almost magical drug discovered by a Cincinnati
man. It is called freezone. It Is a compound made from ether. Apply a few drops of this
freezone upon a tender, aching com or a hardened
callus. Instantly the sore
ness disappears and short
ly yon will find the corn or
callus so shriveled and loose that you just life it off with the fingers. Yon feel no pain or soreness when applying freesone or afterwards. It doesn's even Irritate the skin.
Just ask in any drag store for a small bottle of freezone. This will cost but a few cents but will positively rid your poor, suffering feet of every bard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, or the tough calluses on bottom of feet Genuine freezone has a yellow label. Look for yellow label.
The double-service tooth paste,
keeps teeth clean AND GUMS HEALTHY.
I am uaiag Scone - maymmlt.
I find
Appreciations from dentists who have personally proven Senreco. Names on request
BlrmtnrkajB, Alabama, Mar. SO, 1S17. Cum hav Improved wonderfully. Roehester, N. Y., Feb. 7, HIT.
a treat help In mjr werlu
Cbleace, I1U., Mar. 10, 1S17. . . ' Ind hr twelve month' amnul nee and from my obeemtlen of reeulta obam4 from tneuee of Senreco that "oft, ponr rniu which fall to respond to other treatment have at onoe (hewn marked improvement.
Philadelphia, Fa., Jan. S2. It! 7.
gum bf reducing InfiamatioB.
Columbus, Ohio, Oct. 20, 191. I find Senreee very beneficial. Chicago, Ills., April 7, 1S17.
I ana using your assailant tooth parte In my home and the other member of
r wauir mm unu- oia-urao ravorwe roi
Am well pleased with Senr
Buffalo, N. Y., Oct. IS, IMS.
are my patient.
New York City, Mai. 17, 1917.
la the beet tooth pasta la use this day.
Try this remarkable dentifice yourself. Get a tube of Senreco at year druggists or toilet counter today. Costs only 25c for large 2 oz. tube.
SUFFRAGE SPEECHES
. AT FORUM SUNDAY
Different "phases of woman suffrage
will be discussed at the regular For
um meeting, Sunday afternon in the high school auditorium at 2:30 o'clock.
The speakers for the afternoon will
be Mrs. M. F. Johnston, Mrs. W. O. Lewis, Miss Florence King, William
Dudley Foulke and Timothy , Nicholson.
After the talks, a general discus
sion will follow..
The world's principal jade mine is
In Burma, where the privilege of min
ing the stone has been in the posses
sion of one Indian tribe for many
generations.
THOUGHTS TO THINK ,. ABOUT. . Good nature Is God Nature. No one is ever strengthened by pleading for sympathy. It you give It, you receive it Whatever you' promise to do, remember that "it is up to you" to deliver the goods. A promise is the rehearsal for a performance. If you wait for somebody, to ask you that which you 'have to sell, you will wait longer than if you use a Palladium Want Ad to announce that you have it for sale. .
FOUNTAIN CITY FOLKS , BOOST CHAUTAUQUA; . , AUTO CRASH IN RICHMOND
WILLIAMSBURG, IND. y
Mr. and Mrs. Mance Hough and Dr. and Mrs. Sigglef of Indianapolis, took supper. Tuesday "evening .with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd BelL....The young married people's class of, the Friends' church had a picnic in Blane Williams' woods Wednesday... Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bell and Louise Hammond and .Herbert - Lyons were at Floyd Bell's Wednesday.. .The Ladies' Aid of the Friends' church are -going to have "Guss Day" at Mrs. Lee Chamness' Thursday afternoon. .'.Miss Winifred Compton went to Richmond Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. Victor St Meyer of this place attended the. funeral of Miss . Leota Pettibone . at Richmond Monday afternon.: . . . Mrs. Ella Potter is spending a few days at Richmond.. .Miss Sadie Kelley returned home from Richmond Wednesday Mrs. Martha Oler Is so improved In her condition that the nurse has gone to Mr. Frank Coffman's to wait on Mrs. Coffman.. .Mrs. Frank Tillson of Lynn, a very good speaker, will be at the M. E. church Sunday morning at the Sunday school period Everyone invited.... The Progressive Ladies' Aid of the M. E. church met with Mrs. Omar Pierce Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Brock of Grensfork was present She favored them with a few vocal selections. The Aid will meet with Mrs. Louis Ulmer July 11th.
FOUNTAIN CITY. June 80. Thursday afternoon the Fountain City Chautauqua Boosters made a trip to nearby towns to advertise the Chautauqua for July 8, 9, 10. The towns visited were Whitewater, Bethel, Hollansburg, O Richmond, Webster and .Williamsburg. Thirty-five . automobiles were in the crowd with two drum corps. The machine driven by John Powell was In an-accident In Richmond near Fort Wayne avenue. An automobile going south ran Into his machine and the front of Powell's machine was damaged. - RED CR0S8 PROGRAM IN WILLIAMSBURG SCHOOL
A special Red Cross program will be given by the Williamsburg Methodist Sunday school, Sunday morning. The Sunday school orchestra will furnish the music. A Sunday school picnic will be held at Funk's lake Friday. July 6. Committees are now making plans for the day's entertainment
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
Do you desire quick and accurate leuse servict? If so, remember Jenkins can supply that kind of service. Bring your broken lenses for duplication.
C. M. JENKINS, Optometrist
SUrilER TIES Beautiful New Patterns. . The finest Silk Ties we ever offered at : i - 50c and 65c LIHTENFELS , In the Westcott
SUNDAY SPECIAL FRUIT CUSTARD Sanitary Ice Cream Co. 24 North 7th 8t Phone 2471
ASK FOR AUTLUBO "That Good OilMade by the Moore Oil Co. For sale by Jones Hdw. Co. and Irvln Reed & Son, In 1 to 6 gaL lots. Buy It by the barrel. H. S. MALTBY Local Agent. ' Phone 4772
Tvd VJfcas' 03 Diy Ifcd ?zM Rash C.i fccc. Coticura Costing Only $1.25.
"When mv brother was about two
weeks old we noticed a red rash breaking out on his face which we took to be
a baby rash. It became more liriuting and even painful. It caused him to scratch due to the itching and thusirritated him till he lost his rest at night The trouble
' 'A lady advised Cuti-
cura Soap and Ointment and I wrote for a free sample. I then purchased more and we used about three cakes of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticnra Ointment and now he is healed." (Signed) Miss Beatrice Bertram, Marion Wise., July 14, 1916. Cutkura Soap and Ointment are not only wonderful healers bat arc also wonderful preventives 61 skin and scalp troubles if used exclusively. The Soap, for daily use in the toilet, deanses and purifies, the Ointment soothes and heals any little irrhations, roughness, pimples, etc For Free Staple Each by Baton Mall address post-card: "Cutkma. Dept. R, Boston." Sold everywhere.
EXCURSION CI II CI U N ATI
Via
SUNDAY, JULY 1ST Round Trip , Leaves Richmond 8:32 a. m. Leaves South Richmond 8;S7 m, m, Returning Leaves Cincinnati - 7:00 p. m. C A. BLAIR Home TeL 2062. Ticket Agt
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
USDS
BRIEF DESCRIPTION- Four-cylinder engine, cast In block, powerful and economical; three-speed transmission.;
heat-treated alloy steel. Worm drive, using Timken-David Brown worm and gear embodied In rear axle. Axles of heavy
tlon with Tlmken roller bearings throughout ' Frame of pressed steel with heavy cross members. Extra long springs made of
spring steel. Sturdy wood wheels with steel rims. Two sets of brakes acting on rear wheels. Heat-treated alloy steals need tm
all vital parts, providing a margin of strength and durability to insane good service and long life. Remarkable soonoiny tm consumption, tire expense and maintenance cost is assured.
The regular chassis equipment includes seat,1 front fenders; , solid. tires, 92x3 Inches front and 32x4 Inches re
lights and tail light; electric horn; generator and storage pattery-xrf 80-ampere hour capacity; full set of tools. 32x4 snob matic tires with demountable rims on all four wheels, $30.00 extra. .
The new Maxwell One-Ton Truck, here announced is the first truck to be built in the great volume necessary to make a low price possible. ; This truck has been in the processes of development for two years. During that time we experimented, tested, made - changes v and finally drove the finished product , over 30,000 miles of city and country roads. We know therefore, that the Maxwell Truck is mature, efficient, exceedingly sturdy and in every other way fit to bear the Maxwell name. Timken-David Brown Worm and Gear is used for final drive. Worm drive has the advantages of smoothness and silence in operation. Moreover,
this drive, through greatly reduced rricHon, tran mits the motor power with maximum economy. v
Through our nation-wide dealer organization covering 3,000 cities and towns, we are able to render a service to truck owners that is absolutely, without parallel in the motor truck industry. Alert dealers in towns where we are not represented should consider the tremendous market for this low-priced Maxwell Truck. Business concerns, large and small, and of every description, can operate these trucks with better results and at less expense than any other form of equipment For these reasons, and others too numerous to" cite within this space, the Maxwell One-Ton Truck " will fill a long existing and immense field.
Chassis and Box Body tlb Tlr with Cab and Windshield ............ GWO!
F. 0. B. FACTORY
Chassis and Express Body wi t h Integral Cab. Side Certains and Windshield
F. 0. B. FACTORY
Tie
413-415 MAIN STREET
M(ECmia
Um (Co
RICHMOND, IND.
O
PHONE1079
4:66
A. M. and 6:50 A. M.
