Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 207, 12 July 1917 — Page 10
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1917 PAGE TEN Disarmament Is Demand Made by German Socialists at Stockholm "Shells Bursting In Air"
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- This interesting photograph shows big German shells bursting in the Belgian city of Nieuport, a nd f irtng the town. Sport ha-T been under bombardment several times and is almost as frequent a target for the German big guns as Rheims. (Belgian official photo.) .
Q KHYBER RIFLES
jrf r Romance ofclvniurQ TALBOT MUNDY
C in
191 Br Tna Bosas-1
He threw his head back and howled until the mountain walls rang with the song, and other men in far-off caves took It up and howled it back at him. When he left off singing at last, to drink from a water-bottle, that surely had been looted from a British soldier, King decided to be done with overtures and make the next move in the game. "Didst thou ever sing for her?" he asked, and the man turned round to state at him as If he were mad. . King saw then a blood-soaked bandage on the right of his neck, not very far from the Jugular. "When -she sings we .are silent! When she Is silent it is good to wait
a 'while and see! be answered. "Hah IT'-said King. "Was that vound got In the-Khyber the other day?" u . "Nay. Here In Khinjan. I had my thumb In an man's eye, and the bastard bit me! May devils do worse to him where he has gone! I threw him into Earth's Drink!" ' "A good place for ones enemies! laughed King. "Aye!" "A man told me last night," said King, drawing on Imagination without any compunction at all." that the ight in the Khyber was because a Jihad Is launched already." "That man lied!" said the guard, shifting position uneasily, as if afraid to talk too much. "So I told him!" answered King. "I told him there never will be another Jihad." ' "Then art thou a' greater liar than he." the guard answered hotly. "There will be a Jihad when she is ready, such an one as never yet was. India shall bleed for all the fat years she has lain unplundered! Not- a throat of an unbeliever in the world shall be left unslit! No Jihad? Thou liar! Get in out of my sight!" So Kine retired Into the cave, with
-rtmethinsr new to think about. Was
she planning the Jihad!- Or pretending to plan one? Every once in a "while the guard leaned far Into the cave mouth and hurled adjectives at him. the mildest of which was a well
if information. If his temper was the
temper of the Hills, it was easy to
read disappointment ror a jinaa mai should have been already- but had
hnori nnntrirmed.
When they changed the guard again hp npw man tiroved surly. There
was no getting a word out of him. He showed dirty yellow teeth in a
wolfish snarl, and hi3 only answer
was a lifted rifle and a crooked fore
flnepr. Kine let him alone and paced
the cave for hours. He was squatting
on his bed-end in the dark, like a spectacled image of Buddha, when the first of the three men came on guard
eealn and at last Ismail came for
him holding a pitchy torch that filled the dim passage full of acrid smoke nH made both of them cough. Is
mail was red-eyed with it . "Come!" he growled, "pome, little hakim!" Then he turned on his heel at once, as if afraid of being twitted with desertion. He seemed to want to get outside, where he could keep out of range of words, yet not to wish to seem unfriendly. But King made no effort to speak to him, following in silence out on to the dark ledge above the waterfall and noticing that the guard with the boils was back again on duty. He grinned evilly out of a shadow as King passed. "Make an end!" he advised, 6pitr ting over the cliff Into thunderous darkness to illustrate the suggestion. "Jump, hakim, before a worse thing happens." .. .. To add further point he kicked a loose stone over the edge, and the movement caused him to bend his neck and so Inadvertently to' hurt hjs boils. He cursed, and there was pity in King's voice when he spoke next. "Do they hurt thee?" "Aye. like the devil! Khinjan is a place of plagues!" "I could heal them," King said, passing on, and the man stared hard. ."Come!" boomed Ismail through the darkness, shaking the torch to make it burn better and beckoning impatiently, and King -hurried after him. leaving behind a savage at the cave
mouth who fingered his sores and wondered, muttering, leaning on a rifle, muttering and muttering again as if he had seen a new light. Instead of waiting for King to catch up, Ismail began to lead the way at great speed along a path that descended gradually until it curved round the end of the chasm and plunged into where the darkness grew opaque. .In the tunnel the torch's smoke cast weird shadows on walls and roof, and the fitful light only confused, so that Ismail slowed down and let him come up close. To be continued
WHITEWATER, IND.
WAGES MAY GO UP.
LONDON,' July: 12. If the demand
for a ten shilling . advance in the wages of half a million semi-skilled and unskilled workers in the engineering Industry, jwhich Is now being considered, by the t!ommittee of Production, is conceded, the employers will have to pay an additional 13,000,000 pounds sterling a year In wages.
STOCKHOLM. July 12. Immediate conclusion of peace conditions, which
shall include the establishment of an
international convention to bring
about general disarmament, is the de
mand of the international proletariat, according to German minority social
ists, who have-Just issued a lengthy
memorandum.
F.rrvnnmir. isnlaiifm of States is COn-'
demned, the memorandum continues,
and obligatory international amuration should be installed. Equal rights of all inhabitants of any country, regardless of nationality, race or religion is an imperative necessity. Other recommendations are : Secret treaties must be abolished. People Must Say. Modifications of frontiers must depend on the consent of the populations concerned ana must not be effected by violence. Annexations and indemnities ' shall be fixed on the basis of the right of nations to decide their own destinies. Re-establishment of Serbia as an independent autonomous state Is necessary. -. The aspirations of the Polish people toward national unity is understood but to concede right of autonomy to Russian Poland and refuse it to Prussian and Austrian-Poland Is irreconcil
able with the right of nations to decide their own destinies. . It is Impossible to refuse Belgium complete political Independence and complte economical autonomy. The Belgian people should receive reparation and damages due to war, particularly the restitution of economic losses, this having nothing In common with war indemnities which Is condemned.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Blose and fam
ily, Mr. and Mrs. George Banks, Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Hunt and family motored to Fort Benjamin Harrison Sundav and visited Harlev Banks.". .Miss
Hazel Hinshaw spent the week-end with her friend Miss Maryam Woods.
Mr. and Mrs. Hershell Brown were
the guests of relatives at Fort Wayne Sunday Thomas S. Pyle formerly of this place, moved Wednesday from Portland to his property on South Twelfth street. Richmond Mr. and Mra nrnur Hnnnock and family, were
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Cop-
pock and family Sunday. . . .Mrs. suae Jordan is visiting relatives at Richmnnd Mr and Mrs. Clarence Pyle
of Fort Wayne spent Monday with Mr.
and Mrs. Cleve Pyle George Moore and Ray Knoll are working on the
Friendship church, east or town Mr. and Mrs. Walter Williams of Hollansburg, are spending some time
with Mr. and Mrs. N. E. .Davis ana family Rev. Mr. Schoefield of Indianapolis, occupied the pulpit at the Christian church Sunday Mrs.
Thnmnn Smith returned nome alter
a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Harry
Chenoweth at Richmond, ana reports a fine granddaughter at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chenoweth A reception was given at Laurel Hall Mon
day evening honoring wmiam nnoaes, a Whitewater boy who enlisted in ToTMiafv TT la stationed at Colum
bus, Ohio, and is second claronetist In the band.... Miss Lucile Robinson
returned home Sunday after a week's
visit with her sister in Newcastle, ma
The best so-called Japanese "rice" r,nr for cigarettes is made from
flax and hemp waste.
1.00K for the
Dovil
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HAGERSTOWN, IND.
i
Mr. and Mrs. Clem Smith of Newcastle, were guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Wlnslow and other relatives here..... Elizabeth ; Templin of Portland, arrived Thursday from Losantsvllle. where she had been the guest for several weeks of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Templin. She is now the en fiat of her crandnarpnts. Mr. and
Mrs. John Retz Ray Bagford, who formerly lived here and who now has a position as expressman, his run be
ing from" Columbus to St. Louis, and vhn with his famllr resides at f!nlm-
bus, Ohio, was the guest of his par
ents nere, air. ana Mrs. James $agfnrd. Mnndar and Tnesdav. . . .Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Abel and son, Dwaln, went to Alexandria Saturday to be guests
or Air. ADei s relatives . . . . u. a. uavis and family left in an automobile yesterday for Carrollton. Ky., where they
win De guests or inenas.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
u io a m "iMiLrs
Russians. Dursuine retreatine Teutons, reach the river Lukya, be
tween (1) and (2), taking the town of Tezupot and the villages of Clezov, Pavelche, Rybno and Stavylysic. , Tallcz (3), gateway to Lemberg, seems doomed to fall. Brusiloff is holding his positions at Brzezany and Koniuchy (4). Lemberg is at (5). ,
-
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