Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 202, 6 July 1917 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
.HE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1917
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SCN.TBLEORAM
Publiahed 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 Pott Office at Richmond. Indiana, as Sec ond Class Mall Matter.
"In order that the man may be the noble creaUire he can be in peace or war he must have the approval, encouragement, smile and practical aid of woman." Rev. Russell H. Con well.
Democracy for the Fatherland There is talk again of "democratizing" Germany. Delbrueck is for it. Harnack is for it. Quite a clique of Teuton notables join them in demanding a general, direct, secret ballot. Vorwaerts calls their pronunciamento a "historic " document." The Tageblatt calls it a "welcome sign of public sentiment." But what democracy is there in letting Ger- ' mans vote freely for members of the German reichstag while the reichstag has no power to control the nation's destinies? Instead of merely "democratizing" a futile ballot that will remain as futile after "democratization," let them demo
cratize ' the German . government throughout. Nothing leas is worth considering. As long as a German senate appointed by German dukes, grand dukes, and 'kings' can -with the emperor's consent, dismiss the lower house, the lower house will be only a debating society, and a timid debating society at that. Until Germany has a cabinet responsible to the parliament,. instead of a chancellor responsible to the kaiser alone, there will be no effective democratization of Germany. . It will not do to say that all this is none of our business. As inhabitants of the earth's surface we have a right to demand a German government with which we can make peace and with which we can maintain, peace. If the German emperor has imperially appointed ministers, and the German military caste are to retain the prerogative of declaring war without so much as consulting the German people, then we shall be at the mercy of an armed despotism, aggressive, dangerous, and devoid of conscience. The outlook is insufferable. It is not improved by sham projects for "democratization." Let the Germans propose the real thing, back, up the proposal in earnest, and prepare to see it through, and democracies the world over will applaud them. Then arid then only can the war near its end, save by a crushing defeat of Germany and its governmental reconstruction at the hands of its conquerors. Chicago Tribune.
KING-khYber rifles
Sf Romance ofjrfclv&nlurQ
JSy Tl!LBOT Mundy
Cawiwif 1716 Bv Tw
Ca.
Americans Will Dig Trenches With This
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' --w.. U.S. WBYCH Ol.V.S. American troops In France are to be fully supplied with all the most modern implements of warfare. The ; photograph shows a Yankee trench digger at the Officers' Training Camp at Fort Benjamin Harrison, near Ind- ; ianapolls. It Is designed after the ones used by the French on the western frost and can scoop out trenches in ; the erth with amazing speed and precision.
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CAMPBELLSTOWN, 0.
Wheat cutting will be begun in this locality Thursday Lawrence Kirk- ; patrlck, wife and and son, are visiting her parents, Joe Cooper and family 'Helen Pioneer of Richmond, is visiting her grandparents, Monroe Campbell Jtnd wife Fred Swisher i3 under Jthe doctor's cars from the effects of a ;flre cracker shooting him in the eye. Z. ... Mrs. Cena Campbell of Eaton, is spending this week with her daughter, ;Mrs. O. T. Aydelotte Miss Cleo I Brown of Hillsboro, visited her cousin "Ed Ervin and family the past week.
ECONOMY, IND.
The military spirit was in evidence "Wednesday morning and assumed a 'high pitch when Frank Swain, Billy tMcCann and Guy Mendenhall, with ".drums and fifes, marched through the !town...Mr. and Mrs. Link Morrison, IMr. and Mrs. Everet Clark and children, Mr. and Mrs. Jce Morrison and ;chlldren, spent the Fourth at Ander;son...Mr. and Mrs. John Dennis left ;Thursday morning for their home in 'New York... Mrs. Luie Albertson left Thursday for Minnesota where she "will visit relatives at Minneapolis for 'several weeks... Mr. and Mrs. Johnny 'Eowman and children were out of -town picknlcklng on the Fourth About llOjOOO worth oi hogs was 6hip. ped out from here' Thursday Mr. 'and Mrs. Earl Stanley returned to tlndianapolls today.. .Hurlie Lontz and 'family, Hagerstown, were here on the ; Fourth. t HARALAMBIS APPOINTED
organized fire department, the mayor; appealed to El Paso for help. An autcmobile hose company responded, being, the first fire company to cross the border to Juarez in three years. The' loss was estimated at $100,003 geld. j
ENTERS THREE CREWS
ST. LOUIS, July G As a result cf victories in tlfe" Southwestern Amateur Iiowing association regatta, the Century Boat club entered its eight, four and pair-oared crews in the Northwestern Rowing association regatta, which Is to be decided in Dulutii, Minn., July 14, 15 nud 16. The Century club will be the only St. Loui3 organization represented in the Duluth meet.
WELTERS TO CLASH
MINNEAPOLIS, July 6. Johnny Griffiths, the Akron, 0.,-welterweight,
and Johnny Tillman of Minneapolis
are to meet here in a ten-round contest July 11. The weight is to be 142 pounds. Tillman is getting himself in the best possible condition, as he figures jt victory will boost his stock.
THOUGHTS TO THINK ABOUT No trvo men look the same or thick the same.
If you must follow a leader, find out where he is going arid satisfy yourself that he really is a leader before you start out.
The evil doer has a hard read to travel; there are so many who travel the road that it is beaten down hard and does not show the- foot-prints of Good.
Take the sign down from over your door and send it into over lO.OCO homes every day in the year. That's what you do if you let a Palladium Want Ad Taker tell the story of your business to the readers of the Palladium. Phone 2S34.
The road they followed was a fold in the natural rock; rising and curving like a ribbon, but lending on the average . downward. It looked to be about two miles to the point where it
Lcarved at the chasm's end and swept f . . -3 . J j 1 , . i J
iuuiiu ana uownwara, 10 oe tosi id a fissure in the cliff. They soon began to pass the mouths of caves. Some were above the road, now and then at crazy heights above it, reached by artificial steps hewn out of the stpne. Others were below,
j (.iicu iivui iuc I oau uj ujcauo vi I ladders, that trembled and swayed
over the dizzying waterfall. Most of the caves, were inhabited, for armed men and sullen women came to their entrances to stare. Ears grow, accustomed to the sound of water sooner than almost anything. It was not long before King's ears could catch the patter of his men's feet following, and the shod clink of the mule. He could hear when Ismail whispered: "Be brave, Jittle hakim! She loves fearless men." As the track descended caves became more numerous. In one there were horses, for as they passed there came a whiff of unclean stables, and litter of fodder was all about the entrance. - The mouths of other caves were sealed with great wax disks, strangely stamped, affixed to stout wooden doors. One cave smelt as if oil were stored in it. and King wondered whence the oilwas brought for the sirkar knows to a pint and an ounce what products travel up and down the Khyber. At last the guide halted, in the middle of a short steep Slope where the path was less than six feet wide and a narrow cave mouth gave directly on to it. "Be content to rest here!" he said, pointing. "Thy cave?" asked King. "Nay. God's. I am the caretaker!" (The Hills are very pious and polite, between the acts of robbing and shedding blood.) "Allah, then, reward thee, brother!" answered King. "Allah give sight to
thy blind eye! Allah give thee chil
dren! Allah give thee peace, and to all thy house!" ( The guide salaamed, half-mackingly, half-wondering at such eloquence, pausing in the passage to point into the side-caves that debouched to either hand. There was a niche cf a place where a man might lie on guard near the entrance; another cave in which horses could be stabled, with plenty of fodder piled up ready; another beyond that for servants and baggage, with a fireplace and cooking pots; and at the last at the rear of all a great cavern full of eerie gloom, that opened oat from the end of the passage like a bottle at the end of a long neck. Peering about him into vastness, King became aware of frame bgds, placed at intervals in a row, each with c mat beside It. And there were several brass basins and ewers for water. Also there were some little bronze lamps; the guide lit three of them, and King took up one to ex-i amine it. As he did so, involuntarily his hand almost went to his bosom, where the ftrange knife still reposed that he had taken from the would-be murdered in the train to Delhi. There was no gold on the lamp; but the handle by which he lifted it had been cast, the devils of the Himalayas only knew how many centuries j
ago. In the form of a woman dancing; her size, and her shape, and the art with which she bad been fashioned, were the same as the handle of the knife. Watching him as a wolf eyes another one, the strange guide found his tongue. "How many such hast thou ever seen?" be asked. "None!" answered King, and the giude cackled at him, like a hen that has laid an egg. "There be many strange things in Khinjan, but few strangers!" he remarked ; and then, as if that were enough for any man to say on any occasion, he turned on his heel and stalked out of the caver. It wns the last King ever saw of him. He followed him down the passage to the entrance and watched him until his back disappeared round the first bend but the man never turned his head once. He did not even look over the edge of the road, down into the amazing waterfall, nor up to the round disk of sky. King turned back and looked into the other caves saw the weary horse and mule fed, watered and bedded down took note of the running water that rushed out of a rock fissure
Griffiths is regarded as one of the best v elterweights-in the country.
ATHENS, July 6. It is an'nounccd that General Haralambls, who was war minister in the cabinet of Premier Zaimis, will be appointed chief ;of General staff. The officers of the i national defense army will be received Jby King Alexander on Thursday. 'Prince Nicholas, brother of former ?Klng Constantine, and his family, have sailed for Italy on the yacht Amphiy trite. . AMERICANS ENTER MEXICO ' JUAREZ. Mexico, July 6. An Amerlean fire comprfny crossed into Mexico hast night and put out a fire which , was beyond control. As Juarez has no
Ice-Mint Brings Joy To Tired, Aching Feet If .warra days and modern foot-wear
have given you aching, burning, swollen feet, corns, or painful calluses, here is real foot-comfort for you at last From the cooling, dewy mint-beds of old Japan come the fresh, soothing ingredients that in just a few weeks have made Ice-Mint the most popular foot remedy in America. Rub a little Ice-Mint on any tender corn or callus. Instantly the soreness disappears, and shortly the corn or callus will loosen so that it can be lilted out easily with the fingers.
is a clean, creamy, snow-white, non-poisonous substance and does not inflame or even irritate the most tender skin. There is no pain and not one bit of soreness while applying Ice-Mint, or afterwards. It acts so gently, so magically, that you will never
again run tne nsK ot Diooa-poisonmg oy cutting a corn. Hard corns, soft corns, corns between the toes, also toughened calluses soon loosen and come oft under the remarkable influence of Ice-Mint. No matter what you have tried or how many times you have been disappointed, you will revel in the cooling, soothing comfort that Ice-Mint brings. Try it! Ask your druggist today for a small jar of Ice-Mint and learn tor yourself what solid fctomtort really is. You'll like it immensely.
iOiiegWosienAwaitiQg The Great Crisis
Of all the vital times Jn life, the birth of a baby is the climax of nature's - most wonderful evolution. After a period of anxious waiting, the hour ar
rives for the advent cf a new life. Nature mu3t be aided during this waiting period If the pain and danger of the crisis is to be avoided.
Three renera.tifna have foiinfl erAt. re.
Ilef from tho' many discomforts of approaching' motherhood, by the safe, timehonorod massage, "Mother's Friend". It gently softens every fibre, cord, tenSon and ligament. Tha drawn eRln beSDmes soft ar.d elastic. Tension and Btrain upon the expanding abdominal muscles is relieved when baby arrives; morning sickness or nausea usually is not felt and the crisis is passed with, infinitely less pain end danger. "Mother's Friend" has been used by expectant . mothers with the greatest success for ever forty years. Get a bottlo from the druggist tcday and write the BradflcM Regulator Co., Dept. E, 205 X,araar Building, Atlanta, Ca, for a valuable book brimful of useful lnformntion. The book will be mailed io you without charge. Do not by any means neglect to begin the use of "Moth cr's Friend"; the preparation is ur. doubtedly it real and wonderful aid to naturn In her work.
DR. FRUTH Specialist, in Chronic Nervous and Special Diseases
Monday JULY 9th Will Be At HOTEL WESTGOTT
Is Direct from New York City and will be at Hotel Westcott, Richmond, Ind., on Monday One day Only, July 9th, 1917, returning every 28 days. ( Offioe Hours: 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. ! Vr. Froth Is aa eminently successful Spe-H-list iu the treatment aad diag-ncmiii of aU long Standing and resistant' Chronic Diseases and Disorders. He has a long-establUbed and well merited reputation, as the resnlt of his large practice and xtsssivo Hospital experience, which has made him so proficient that he can name and locate yoar disease In a (aw nsiaatos. Dr. Prath served as ao Intern or Hospital Doc
tor In on ot the largest Hospitals of New York City of which ha ia a graduate. Ho baa successfully treated many ot the moat difBcolt cases ot Chronic Diseases ot man anA women. That is troy his reparation has spread. why be baa cooliaaed bis vMts year attar year, while other 4octora bavo made a few visits and stopped. Dr. Fnith treats Diseases of (be Eye Bar. Nose. Throat. Lungs. Heart. Blood, Skin; Kervas. Unr, Stomach, Intestines, KJdneys ao madder. Consumption m an early stage. Ca tarrb, Rmglnc In Bars and Deafness. Paralysis Kacralcda, Epflapsy. Sick Headache. Goitre Eczema, Scrofula. Appendicitis. Gravel. Rhet natlam. of Joints aad mosclea. Also treats leeaae of women scientifically. P1XSS CVB.KD WITHOUT KTflFE. Fissure. Fistula and other rectal diseases treated without sozsioal oporation. Saratfeal Cms mmd Rmptare Gives Special Atteatieau TTEBVOCS DEBILITY. Are you nervous and dosponent; easily eactted tintl irritable; wpalc and debilitated; tired mora . isfK; without ambitioa, enetiry or strength; life IMS. easily fatigued; distrustful, and without confidence In yoarseii? Have you sunken, re I or blurred eyes, piirfpio on your face; weal; back, or deposit ia urine? . j PRIVATE IVISEASKS A. SPECIALTY. Cases of loar standing; especially desired. 7roag treatment Anl iaoocrect diagnosis bavs rffcea resttitad ia the worst affliction. Varied cele. Hydrocele. Blood Poison, Syphilis. Unasfr ural Discharges. Weakness, Ktnmisstons, ) e!i!ity. Nervousness. Dizzlooss. aad Defecliva M eraory, which ruin body Rnd mind. It is hichly important yon obtain the services of a physician who has establish! a eood reputation tor treatin? these diseases. Dr. Pratb has made years ofstndv of Pt! vate Diseases of men and women, lie know rnd sses the most scientific methods of treating (hem. Hundreds of women softer untold tgarj with diseases which have been nosrleted or ua skillfully treated. VONDEBFCL CUBES rare been made by hiw. Yoa should consa'l film if you have any Chronic Dieeaso. A Spc la'.ist who has made a lifetime study of im 1 diseases is certainly prepared ta give yon t: best results, and if yoa are sick, you need scientific treatment. Dr. Pruth spares no effort to care his patients, ile knows that croocl results moan as mncli 1 1 Sim as to the patient. Most of hi Dew paricnH come through the recomaiendatioa of otixri wuom he has treated. Co?iliatiea and Examiaartoa Free mod UtaiidejBlial.
and gurgled out ot sight down another one examined the servants cave and saw that they had been amply proTided with blankets. There was nothing lacking that the most exacting traveler could have demanded at such a distance from civilization. There was more than the most exacting would have dared expect. To be continued
MAN KILLED BY CAR
PORT WAYNE, Ind., July 6. In attempting to flag an Inter-urban car at midnight at Alton, a suburb ot Garrett, north of here, William Depew, 70. was hit and Instantly killed. He had stooped down to light a match when the car bora down upon him. .
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PATHE RECORDS Ross Drug Store
AUTLUBO "THAT GOOD OIL" Made by the Moore Oil Co. A purs Penn. FILTERED Oil. (Not bJeached with Sulphuric Acid.) For sale Hdw. Co., Irvin Reed & Son, E. R. Draver In 1 to E gal. lots. H.S.MALTBY Local Agent ' Phone 4772.
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Stand behind Hoover!
i
N this national food crisis, Good House
keeping pledges its heartiest support
to Mr. Hoover and his aids in the fight that they are making for our food supply. His problem is to save useless waste in the nation. Our problem has been and is today to save useless waste in the individual family. His work will parallel, in many ways, the big constructive work that our own laboratories in Washington and New York have been doingwork that is focused now in July Good Housekeeping. In "What to Eat in Wartime,- in "Wartime Breads," in "What to Make with Sour Milk," in "Tested Recipes for Every Meal," in Dr. Wiley's "Booze or Bread" in all the nine up-building food articles you will find a concrete personal answer of real and timely value for your own family. What Mr. Hoover must do in general for the country we are doing for the family the family which, like yours, is eager now to help the Allies go on fighting, to keep this country from facing Germany alone, to serve and save while serving.
July issue now on sale everywhere 15 cents
HOU
KEEPING
forJUIX
Sss2Sl
to
Round Trip from
NIAGARA FALLS EXCURSION
TaT1VirilliaftTt II
(VI UNU
Tuesday July 10, 1917 U
Ticksts Gocd Returning until July 22, Inclusive, via OHIO ELECTRIC RAILWAY To Toledo, D. & C, and C. & B. Boat Lines to Buffalo. For full information and reservation of berths, see agent or address: J. S. WATERS, District Passenger Agent, Dayton, Ohio. W. S. Whitney, General Passenger Agent, Springfield, O. Later Excursions July 24, 31 and August 14th.
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HJsoafl' sio3
1 Ford Coupe (1913 model) price $350.00 1 Chevrolet with closed top, (1916 model) price $450.00 1 Westcott Touring (1913 model) price. .$350.00 I Overland Touring (1915 model), price. $500.00 These cars are guaranteed to be in good condition, and with the steadily rising prices of new cars, are real bargains for anyone. The TALCOT T -OVERLW Co. Phone 2411. Corner 12th and Main
