Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 234, 13 August 1917 — Page 7

THE 1UCHM0ND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, AUG. 13, 1917

PAGE SEVEx

MASONS LAY CORNER STONE

T CAMBRIDGE

Old Stone Placed in 1859 Reset in New Temple by B. L. Stratton. -

CAMBRIDGE CITY. Aug. 13. The corner stone of the new Masonic Temple was laid here today. No special service marked the event, only raem- . bers of Cambridge lodge No. 5 and visiting brethren being present. The ceremony was under direction of B. L. Gtratton, W. M., deputized by the grand master of the state to have charge of the work. The- corner store taken from the old building erected in 1859, together with its contents, .to which were added records and. data to complete the history of the local lodge and chapter to the present time, was replaced. Mr. Srat- - ton was assisted by the officers of the lodge. At the Chautauqua, Saturday afternoon and night, the Chicago Concert rtists formed the musical attraction. Mr. and Mrs. C. Rucker Adams talked an health studies, "Health Attained and Maintained." In the evening, , Maude Willis gave a dramatic recital. "On Sunday, the musical part of the i rogram was by Ellis Brooks' Chicago band. At 3 o'clock. Dr. James R. Howerton spoke on "The New Patriotism." Th attendance is large. Frederick M. Hosier of this place rmd Forest McKee of Dublin have been chosen for the new Officers' Training Camp at Indianapolis. Mr. Hosier has had three years military experience, having served through the SpanishAmerican war. Personal Mention. Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Romer left Sunday for Celina, Ohio, to visit relatives. Tey go thence to Cleveland to be the guests for ten days of Mr. and Mrs. Mat Kreusch. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Albert Weed of Franklin, Indiana, are the guests of rM. and Mrs. Joseph Weigle and other relatives here Mrs. Oscar Cooley and son, Glenn,

have gone to Cedar Grove for a tend

davs" visit with friends and relatives.. ..Prof. W. J. Bowden has purchased the Kaufman property on Main street, In which he has lived for several years, the consideration being $1,200. . .Mrs. William Ballanger returned to ner home in Flint, Mich., Friday after a visit of several weeks with relatives tiere and at Dublin Mrs. George P. Farly of Pittsburgh, Pa., is being entertained this week by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Weigle. . . .Harry Ault and family of Chicago came Sunday to spend two weeks with relatives here and at Newcastle. . . .Miss Jennie Scott, a former resident of this place, but now of f hiladelphia. Pa., has been spending a few days with Cambridge City friends.

ONCE IN LIMELIGHT

FREEDOM

Mrs. Bessie M. Hollie, Who Already Has Suit for Separate Maintenance Pending, Ask Court in New Bill to Free Her Foreveir From Dentist, Who, She Says, Refused to Even Provide Her With a Home.

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SEIZE SEDITIOUS LITERATURE

LONDON, Aug. 13. Tons of seditious literature, printed in many languages and intended for circulation in neutral countries, have been seized her and condemned by a prize court as part of a-gigantic scheme on tho part of the Germans to spread thenpropaganda to the four corners of the earth. The seizures were found in the mails cf the steamships Oranje, Rembrandt and Goentoer. More than 1,500 bags, containing thousands of pamphlets, were removed from the vessels by the British authorities.

USE DISCARDED BOTTLES

Twenty-three years ago the country was startled and amused by the announcement issued from Massillon, Ohio, that one Jacob S. Coxey was Hbout to descend oS Washington, D. C, with an "Army of the Commonwealth" to voice a strenuous protest against government policies which Coxey felt were obnoxious. Jacob Coxey soon became known as "General Coxey" and his "Army of the Commonwealth" as the "hobo army." Coxey was pictured as a ragged, unkept, uncouth vagabond, who was the joke of the age, but, rotwiUistanding the ridicule, "Coxey's Army" left Massillon for its memorial march on the capital. Footsore and weary, but filled with the same spirit which prompted their leader, "Coxey's Army" arrived in Washington, only to be met by a troop of mounted police who proceeded to dispel any illusions the patriots might have had concerning the bucccss of their venture. Coxey was arrested and put iu jail for no more serious crime than trespassing on tho grass in Capitol park. Carl Brown, his second in command, received like treatment, and the remnants of the army of invasion were scattered to the four winds. Coxey was soon after released, and in the years that followed he earned his Jiving through the medium of manufacturing. In 1915, he became an active participant in the Ohio Senatorial . race, taking for his platform a large merchant marine and adequate coast defenses. FARMERS MAKE MUNITIONS

INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 13 Use discarded bottles in packing preserves and other fruits, is the advice given by Dr. H. E. Barnard, state food and drug commissioner in a statement issued today. He said: "Discarded bottles of every shape and form make splendid packages for preserved foods. If tin cans cannot be bought at the grocery store, or wide mouth glass bottles are hard to get and expensive, any clean bottle may be used safely."

recently describing the work done by the Navy. In six months of last year only one in a thousand ships passing through Dovel patrol had been sunk or damaged.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY

King pricked his ears and allowed himself to grin, for In common with many hundred other men who had been lieutenants at the time, he would once have given an ear and an eye to know the truth of that affair. The grin transformed his whole appearance until Yasmini beamed on him. "I'm listening. Princess ! " he reminded her.. "Well- he came the Prince of Germany the borrower!" "Borrower of what, Princess?" "Of wit! Of brains! Of platitudes! Of reputation! There came a crowd with him of 6uch clumsy plunderers, asking such rude questions, that even the sirkar could not shut its ears and eyes! "I did not know all about sahibs in those days. I thought that, ajthough this man is what he. Is, yet he is a prince, and perhaps I can fire him with my genius. I could have taught him the native tongues. I thought he had ambition, but. I learned that he is only greedy. You see, I was foolish, not knowing yet that in good time if I am patient by man will come to me! But I .learned all about Germans --all! : . "I offered him India first, then Asia, then the world even as I now offer them to you. The sirkar sent him to see me dance, and he 'stayed to hear me talk. When I saw at last that he has the head and heart of a hyena I told him lies. But he, being drunk, told me truths that I have remembered. Later he sent two of his officers to ask me questions, and they were little better than he, although a little better mannered. I told them lies, too, and they told me lies, but they told me much that was true. ' 'Then the prince came again, a last time. And I was weary of him. The sirkar was very weary of him, too. He offered me money to go to Germany and dance for the kaiser in Berlin. He said I will iDe shown there much that will be to my advantage. I refused.1 He made me other offers. So I spat in his face and threw food at him: "He complained to the sirkar against, sending one of , his high officers to -demand that I, be whipped. So I told the sirkar some not much, indeed, but enough of the things he and his officers had told me. And the sirkar said . at once that there was both cholera and bubonic plague, and he must go home! "I have heard three men told me that he said he will never rest until I have been whipped! But I have heard that his officers laughed behind his back. And ever since that time there have always been Germans in communication with me. I have had more money from Bej-lin than would bribe the viceroy's council, and I have not once been in the dark'about Germany's plans--although they have adways thought I am in the dark. "I went on looking for my man studying all, Germans, English, Turks, French and there was. a Frenchman whom I nearly chose and an American, a man " who used the strangest swords, who laughed at me. I studied Hindu. Muslim, Christian, every goodlooking fighting man who came my way, knowing well that all creeds are one when the gods have named their choice. "There came that old Bull-with-a-beard, Muhammad Anim, and for a time I thought he is the' man, for he

is a man whatever else he is. ;But I tired of him. called him Bull-with-a-beard, and the Hills took it up and stuck. He still thinks he is the mSn, haying more strength to hope and more will to will wrongly than any man I ever met, except a German. I have even been sure sometimes that Muhammad Anim isa German; yet now I am not sure. "From all the men I met and watched I have learned all they knew. And I have never neglected to tell the sirkar sufficient of what men have told me, to keep the sirkar pleased with ! . Nor have I ever played Germany's game no, no! I have talked with the prince of Germany, and I understand" too well ! Who sups with a bear may get good roots to eat, but must endure pigs' feet in the trough! Pigs' bides make good saddles; I have used the Germans, as they think they have used toe! I have used them ruthlessly." To be continued

TO BUILD SHIPS

Death of Husband Causes Woman

to Organize Legion of Death

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Alan Garrett Anderson, who succeeds. Sir. Eric Campbell Geddes as controller of naval construction. He has an intimate knowledge of shipping and. railways -

NEW YORK, Aug. 13. It was the death of her husband which prompted Ensign Vera Butchkareff to enlist in the- Russian army and eventually to organize the Women's Legion of Death, of which she is commander and which achieved fame In a recent battle . with the Germans according to facts received by the Russian Information Bureau heje. According to this information, Vera Butchkareff is a young country woman who went to Petrograd from her native village In the province of Tomsk. Having learned in May, 1015? that her husband was dead on the German frontier, she made up her mind to continue the task which her husband began, and enlisted in the 25th Reserve Corps of Tomsk. Enlisted As Regular; After a comparatively short training ,she went to the front with a company that was to fill the ranks. Colonel Stublndorf enlisted her as a regular in the 28th Polotzk Regiment, 2nd Army. For three months. Vera Butchkareff fought with a rifle and on March 8, 1916, was wounded in the les under heavy artillery fire in a battlel which took place on Lako Naroca. The wound notwithstanding, she remained at the front with her comrades who captured two lines of trenches and one thousand prisoners. ' On March 9, after the commander and the captain were killed, she led Ihe soldiers in an attack which resulted in victory for the Russians. Wounded Three Times.

Afterward she went to the Austrian front, and was wounded in her arm, while taking part in a counter-charge near the Doubova Korchma. Nevertheless, she retained her position in the army. But in the next charge she was wounded severely by a fragment of a shell. She was taken to the hospital where she remained for four months. Immediately upon recovery, she went to Petrograd and saw M. Rodzianko, President of the Duma, to obtain permission to form a woman's company which is to leave for the front at once. We will set an example to

the men soldiers, many of whom misunderstood the mean of liberty. It is enough to point to tb desertions, to the fraternization and to all the undesirable phenomena that are responsible ' for the disorganization of our forces. I will sacrifice my life for my country and I am sure that I will find followers among women. Woman's mission is not only to give life to man but it. Is also up to us women to teach men how to defend the new-born freedom."

rrussian rrince is Under Interdiction

OXFORD WOMAN'S COLLEGE EXPECTS MANY STUDENTS

OXFORD, O., Aug. 13. Dr. Jane Scherzer, president of the Oxford College for Women, announces that preparation has been made for the largest enrollment in its, history; and that additional halls of residence have been secured to take care of, the overflow. The normal capacity Is 200. Parents have been showing their patriotism by keeping their daughters at their studies as usual, in order to meet the country's special war needs for trained and efficient leadership now and when the war is ended, Dr. Sherzer said. ? The Board of Trustees also announces the appointment of Lawrence Maxwell, an attorney of Cincinnati, to its board, and the retention of the Fiscal Service Corporation of Chicago to direct their $250,000 endowment and building campaign which is being staged among its alumnae and friends throughout the middle west.

The national standard coin of Sweden is the crown, which is worth about twenty-seven cents of our money.

The natural mounds of Oklahoma are ruins of dome-shaped, timber-framed dwellings whose inhabitants had a denser population than any later tribes and possessed high skill in pottery and stone.- Theypassed away at least 600 years ago. . -

BERLIN, Aug. 10. (via London) Aug. 11. According to an announcement In the official gazette, the youngest son of Prince Fredricb. Leopold of Prussia, who bears the same name as his father, has ben placed under interdiction by the Count Von Eulenburg, the minister of the royal house. The prince, who is 22 years old, is charged with extravagance and has

ueeu piacea unaer me guaxaiautsuip of Captain Von Heyden, his military escort. .'' The prince has been an art student at the Royal academy of Munich under the tutelage of Karl Von Marr, who was born and lived in Milwaukee for many years before becoming a naturalized German. He received the usual military training but failed to qualify for active service owing to a defective heart. - His art r rod nets have been exhib

ited in Berlin and elicited favorable comment The case has legal entanglements. The action of the royal minister will be fought in a special court assigned for such a purpose. . The prince attracted much attention some vonra ttcn hv ninnlnp rinwn nnrl kill.

ing a little girl at Potsdam where his motor speeding was the cause of much complaint. 1

Too Much Food in Summer means clogged liver and sluggish brain; too little food means flabby muscles and starved nerves. The man on the job must keep his brain clear and his muscles responsive. The way to do this is to eat Shredded Wheat Biscuit, the food that contains everything in the whole wheat grain prepared in a digestible form, including the outer bran coat which is so useful in keeping the alimentary canal clean and healthy. Two or three of these crisp, little brown loaves of whole wheat with milk make a nourishing, strengthening meal. Ready -cooked and ready-to-serve. Made ai Niagara Falls, N. Y.

A. G. Luken and Company

CARRY 8,000,000 MEN

LONDON, Aug. 13. The British

merchant marine has carried success-!'

fully to their destination 8,000,000 men and 10,000,000 tons of war material, said Commander Dion Calthorpp 1

PERFECT CONFIDENCE

FARGO, N. D., Aug. 13. Not only helping In the world war by rasing enormous crops, the states of North and South Dakota, and Minnesota are also helping in the manufacture cf munitions for the allies in the war acal:'.0! Germany by supplying tons

upert tons of discarded farm raachiucvv, which is cut into pieces and , shipped east, to bo -msnuractured into! muuttions. v - , PALLADIUM WANT 'ADS PAY

Richmond People Have Good Reason For Complete Reliance. Do you know how j To find relief from backache; To correct distressing urinary ills; To assist weak kidneys? Your neighbors know the way Have used Doan's Kidney Pills; Have proved their worth in many tests. Here's Richmond testimony. Mrs. Robert Hull. 101 S. Ninth St., Richmond, says: "My back was weak and lame and ached steadily. My kidneys were irregular in action. I used Doan's Kidney Pills, procured at Thistlethwaite'3 Drug Store and they cured me. I haven't been bothered since." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that cured Mrs. Hull. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. Adv.

AUTLUBO "THAT GOOD OIL" Made by the Moore Oil Co. A pure Penn. FILTERED Oil. (Not bleached with Sulphuric Acid,) For sale Hdw. Co., Irvln Reed & Son, ER. Draver In 1 to 5 gal. lots. H. S. MALTBY Local Agent. Phone 4772.

I Hol Sal a.t tl'i

First National Bank Second National Bank German-American Trust & Savings Bank Dickinson Trust Company Union National Bank The George JH. Knollenberg Co. 'Neff &Nusbaum Boston Store Rcmey Furniture Company Loehr & Klute Krone & Kennedy Lee B. Nusbaum Company Model Clothing Company

Feltman's Shoe Store W. H. Ross Drug Company H. H. Toler, Drugs George Fox, Clothier and Furnisher Thistlethwaite's Drug Stores Chas. H. Haner, Jeweler C. T. Price & Sons, Confectionery. Doan & Klute - Sam Fred, Clothier Thompson & Borton, Clothing and Furnishings C. H. Finney, Confectionery Starr Piano Company The Conkey Drug Company

Reed Furniture Company Hoover Drug Company , Nicholson & Brother, Book Store 0. A. Hughbanks, Confectionery Adam H. Bartel Company Bartel & Rohe, Office and School Supplies George Nolte, Carpets and Draperies Y.M.C.A. Hoosier Store Quigley's Drug Stores Jenkins & Company, Jeweler The McConaha Company 0. E. Dickinson, Jeweler Ratliff Jewelry Store

Call Finery a

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