Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 263, 15 September 1917 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, SEPT. 15, 1917."

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM

AND 6 UN-TELEGRAM

Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Streets. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Second Class Mail Matter.

MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited In this papef and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.

Don't think that team-work means tandem

with the high stepper in front. Paragraphs-

Smokes for the Soldiers Readers of the Palladium have acquainted themselves with the movement to supply the boys in the trenches with tobacco. News articles have explained the details... Let us remember that smokers take comfort from tobacco which those of us who do not use the weed cannot understand and appreciate. Physicians, nurses, high military officers, and correspondents speak of the yearning of the soldiers for tobacco. , It is the one luxury and comfort that a soldier can enjoy. He is forced to forego almost every other pleasure. You can contribute an untold amount of pleasure by contributing a few cents to the fund. Through the courtesy of a large tobacco Company, your twenty-five cents will buy about twice as much tobacco as it would in the ordinary retail business. . . You will get in touch with some soldier boy in France by sending a kit, for a card accompanies each contribution, and the soldier boy who receives the tobacco is asked to sign his name to it with a message. This card sent from the trenches and training camps of France will be returned to you. Do your bit and enjoy the pleasure of knowing that a soldier has enjoyed "a smoke" on your generosity. Be a Good Fellow.

Commercial Club Boosts Hagerstovn Richmond is going to the Hagerstown horse show and free fair. The Commercial Club is. arranging to take over a large delegation of Richmond boosters. They are going to show our neighbor to the northwest that we appreciate her importance in Wayne county. The delegation will bring the good feeling and friendship of the county seat. Richmond wants Hagerstown to know and to feel that this city is back of every movement Hagerstown may inaugurate for the improvement and benefit of herself and the whole county. Because this horse show and free fair has advantages that redound to the welfare of all Wayne county, the hope is expressed that every

section of our community will pay a visit to Hagerstowh during the show. Music and the War The Chicago Tribune commenting on the closing of the Ravinia season remarks that if the war continues into next summer there will be a more than usual heed for the orchestra program and opera in the open air. "Americans are not going to pull long faces because sacrifices are required of them," sapiently remarks the editor' of the Tribune. He has a sensible view about the cultivation of music during the war stress. ' , "Meanwhile we hear in some quarters that the good things which the arts offer ought not to be enjoyed in war time. The exact contrary, we think, is true.' It is of the greatest importance that we should keep as normal as can be under the stress of war time. Music is especially good for us now." Richmond has a reputation as a music center. It has some excellent artists and music clubs. Their work need not suffer interruption because of the war. Let us cultivate the art with greater zeal, for music will relieve the tension in the hearts of many.

Giving It Back to the People "The money came from the people and we feel it should return to the people a continuing fund that shall serve the state for generations to come." ! .. . So said Dr. Will J. Mayo when he turned over to the board of regents of the University of Minnesota all property rights to the Mayo foundation at Rochester, which he and his Brother, Dr. Charles H. Mayo have established through their skill as surgeons and their thrift as business men. Who has not heard of the Mayo institute? Famed throughout the land and abroad for the superlative quality of its surgical work. Home of two of the greatest surgeons of the country. This institute and securities amounting to $1,650,344, the fortunes of the two men, have been given to the state for the benefit of the people.. Truly a magnificnt gift! "We turn over to the regents the bulk of our savings of a generation as an outright gift," explained Dr. Will J. Mayo. Expenses of the institute will be paid by the Mayo brothers until a fund of $2,000,000 has accumulated. Thereafter the income from the fund will maintain the institute. One of the Mayos will go to France next spring with the recruits and they will take turns there until the end of the war. The Mayo brothers have a right conception of their duty toward their fellow men. They capitalized on their skill, made money on their ability, not for the sordid sake of accumulating lucre but for the nobler purpose of enriching humanity by turning over to the people a medical institute admirably equipped to alleviate human suffering and adequately endowed to study epidemics and diseases whose cure still baffles the physician.

AT THE MURRETTE WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY

TOW

KING-9 KHYBERRIRES

1 Romance cfjrfdvniurQ.

jg&U J&y IALBOT F1UNBY

V 7

191f Bt Tn

In twenty minutes he had undone all King's missionary work. And then in ten more, feeling his power ' and their response, and being at heart a fool as all rogues are, he built it up again. He began to make promises too definite. He wanted Khinjan Caves. More, he needed them. So he promised them they should all be free of Khinjan Caves within a day or two, to come and go and live there at their pleastire. He promised them they should leave their wives and children and belongings safe in the Caves while they themselves went down to plunder India. He overlooked the fact that Khinjan Caves for centuries had been a secret to be spoken of in whispers, and that prospect bf its violation came to them as a shock. Half of them did not believe him. Such a thing was . Impossible, and if he were lying as to one point, why not as to all the, others, too?

And ' the army veterans, who had been converted by King's talk of pardons, and almost reconverted by the sermon, shook their" heads at the talk of taking Khinjan. Why waste time trying to do what never had been done, with "her" to reckon against, when a place in the sun was waiting for them down in India to say nothing of the hope of parodns and clean living for awbile? They shook their beads and combed their beards and Ted one another sidewise in a way the "Hills" understand. That night, while the mullah glow

ered over the camp like a great old owl, with leaping Irelight reflected in bis eyes, the thousands under the skin tents argued, so that the night was

all noise. But King slept.

All of another day and part of another night he toiled among the sick,

wondering when a message would come back. It was nearly midnight when he bandaged his last patient and came out into the starlight to bend bis back straight and yawn and pick his way reeling with weariness back to the mullah's cave. He had given his bag of medicines and implements to a man to carry ahead of him and had gone perhaps ten paces into the dark when a strong hand gripped him by the wrist. - "Hush!" said a voice that seemed familiar. : " , He turned . swiftly and looked straight Into the eyes of the Rangar Pfwa Gunga! ,

' "How did you get here?" he asked in English. "Any fool could learn the password in this camp! Come over here, sahib. I bring word from her." The ground was criss-crossed like a man's palm by the shadows of tentropes. The Rangar led him to where the tents were forty feet apart and none was likely to overhear them. There he turned like a flash. "She sends you this!" he hissed. In that same instant King was fighting for his life. In another second they were down together among the tent-pegs. King holding the Rangar's wrist with both hands and struggling to break it, and the Rangar striving for another stroke. The dagger he held had missed King's ribs by so little that his skin yet tingled from its touch. It was a dagger with bronze blade and a gold hilt her dagger. It was her" perfume in the "air. They rolled over and over, breathing hard. King wanted to think before he gave

an alarm, and he could not think with that scent in his nostrils and creeping into Lis lungs. Even in the stress of fighting he wondered how the Rangar's clothes and turban had come to be drenched in it. He admitted

to himself afterward that it was noth

tng else than jealousy that suggested

to him to make the Rangar prisoner

and hand hint over to the mullah.

That would have been a ridiculous thing to do, for it would have forced

his own betrayal to the mullah. But

as If the Rangar had read his mind he suddenly redoubled his efforts and

King, weary to the point of sickness

had to redouble his own or die. Per

haps the jealousy helped put venom in his effort, for his strength came back to him as a madman's does. The

Rangar gave a moan and let the knife fall. And because jealousy is poison King did the wrong thing then. He

pdVnced on the knife instead of on the Rangar. He could have questioned him knelt on him and perhaps forced explanations from him. But with a

sudden swift effort like a snake's the Rangar freed himself and was up and gone before King could struggle to his feet gone like a shadow among shadows. King got up and felt himself all over, for they had fought on stony ground and he was bruised. But bruises faded into nothing, and weariness as well, as his mind began to dwell on the new complications to his problem. It was plain that the moment he had returned from his message to the Khyber the Ranger had been sent on this new murderous mission. If Yasminl had told the truth a letter had gone into India describing him, King, as a traitor, and from her

point of view that might be supposed

to cut the very ground away from un der his feet. To be continued

PLOWING FIFTY ACRES

STRAUGHN, Ind., Sept. 15. J. H

Spahr is plowing fifty acres for wheat,

of which six already have been seed

ed. He has 24 acres in corn. His 18

acres In wheat went 26 bushels to the

acre. He has 66 herd of hogs, and

a dozen brood sows.

A Nebraska man, after eleven years

of experiment, has invented a device

that enables a user of a party tele phone line to identify any other sub

scriber who may be listening to his

conversation.

Cremation

Adults, $25 Children; $15

Cincinnati Cremation Co. Office. SO Wiggins Blk., Cincin

nati, O. Booklet free.

WOMEN! IT'S MAGIC! CORNS SHRIVEL AND LIFT OUT NO PAIN!

For a few cents you can get a small wttle of the magic drug freezone retently discovered by a Cincinnati man. Just ask at any drug

store for a small bottle of freezone. Apply a few drops upon a tender, aching corn and Instantly, yes Immediately, all soreness disappears and shortly you will find the corn bo loose that you lift it out, root and all, with the fingers. Just think! Not one bit of pain before applying freezone or afterwards. It doesn't even irritate the surrounding skin.

Hard corns, soft corns or sorns between the toes, also hardened calluses on bottom of feet just seem to shrivel up and fall off without hurting a particle. It is almost magical. It is a

compound made from ether says a well

known druggist here and the genuin has a yellow labeL

I!

IPS T 1 J .Hip Hk

FannieWakd

LA5KY PARAMOUNT JTAfc

ECONOMY IND.

Mrs. Jennie Veal and children, Lafayette, are visiting E. T. Veal and wife and Mrs. Alvie Albertson until Prof. Ciscro Veal, who has been one of the Purdue faculty for several yers, gets their nem home somewhere in the United States fixed in the town where aircraft machines are made. Prof. Veal left Purdue to work for Uncle Sam until the war ends, then he will return to hold the old position with the college. He is an E. H. S.

graduate The Strickler-Byrd pub. lie sale near Sugar Grove Wednesday drew a large crowd Prof. Mark Albertson, who is a graduate of E. H. S. and connected with Purdue college the past year has accepted a queentine position with a chemical company at Pittsburgh, and after a few days' visit here with his mother, left for the new work in the Smoky City The M. E. Brotherhood will give a social Saturday evening in honor of the two soldier boys, Harry Parker and Walter Bond, who leave soon for the training camp Fred Greenstreet and family left Wednesday for Michigan The C. & O. bridge crew left Wednesday for Blountsville Mrs. James Haxton was shopping In Richmond Wednesday J. A. Weyl went to Indianapolis stock yards and bought a car load of stock cattle to feed out Mrs. Mabel Gwin, Kokomo, is here visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jim

Jackson. . . .Harry Cain of the C. & O. station was on a deaf Wednesday afternoon in Stringtown Will Williamson has bought a new tractor. It makes the second one for him.

WANT SPEEDY JOB

STRAUGHN, Ind., Sept. 15. The old state road has been plowed, gravelled, and graded. A special machine has been used for the gutters. Work also on the business section of the main street for the national highway has begun. The merchants petitioned that this be made a speedy Job.

GRANDSON DIES

Mr. and Mrs. B. A. .Kennepohl received word Friday of the death of their grandson, Richard E. Kennepohl. 9 years old, in Los Angeles, Cal. He was the son of August Kennepohl. formerly of this city.

Ten non-Christian Korean boys won copies of the New Testament in their own langage, by copying down in note books, word by word, the Gospel of Mark.

SOWING OF WHEAT STARTS IN PERRY ECONOMY, lnd., Sept. 15. Wheat sowing haa commenced in Perry township. John W. Taylor began drilling in wheat Wednesday and Oliver Hiatt is sowing in corn this Friday.:.... Thursday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. 6. L. Hiatt a six o'clock dinner for Mrs. Clara Mundell and Miss Mary Mundell, Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Underhlll and children, Greensfork, were served. ..Miss Carol Weldy entertained the E. H. 8. orchestra at practice Thursday" evening. Charley Lane, Lynn, was here Thursday afternoon. .. .Harrison Johnson, Modoc, was here-Thursday Charley Mendenhall was at Williamsburg Thursday afternoon. . .Mrs. Josephine ' Williams received a telegram Thursday morning from Fountain City stating Mrs. Will Perkins daughter was seriously ill and requested she Come Immediately. .. .Miss Ida Lamb, postmistress, has been out of the office two days and Miss Blanche Fenimore, assistant, worked in the office . . .'.The M. E. church board is contemplating an addition to the church. ;.. .Mrs. Mary Johnson and two children are visiting Muncie relatives this week Mrs. Mary Jane Rowns, Modoc, is visiting Mrs, Nancy Pierce and Mrs. SusanlMendenhall....The charter members of the Four-Leaf Clover club, "H. H. Smith of the Milwaukee Public- Museum, Dr. C. D. Green, Pittsburgh, G. G. Fielden, federal mail clerk, Indianapolis, and N. H. Edwards, Economy, will hold their annual quartet reunion Oct. 6 at Cleveland, O. The reunion would have been

Give The Stomach A Chance To Work

We cant expect the stomach te act normally if the natural avsauss of lUm. Inatloa are Mocked so It caamot dispose of Its ref as. Wbea tbe bowels are constipated the stomach is callsd upon for work Deyoad Its capacity aad the result Is bloat, belchiaf, headache, aad discomfort generally, and, nalsss tlx conditio Is promptly relieved., serious Illness. An effective remedy for coartipatioB Is sold la draft stores under tbe name of Br. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It la a combination of simple laxative herbs wltb pepsin that acts on the bowels lm

lag or other pain or discomfort, affording' speedy relief. Get a bottle of 2r. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin from your draggist and have it In tbe house when yoa need It; It costs only fifty cents and is the Ideal family remedy, mild eneafh for children, and old people, yet sufficiently powerful for the strongest constitution. A trial bottle, free of cbarse, can be obtained by writing; to Sr. W. B. Caldwell, 45e Washington St, Xoatti cello, Illinois.

(BVBBBBSSBnMaBBBSBSSBBSSBBBSBBISSSBBBSSBSBBBBSBSBBBSSBSBSSSBSBBBBBBBSBBBBBB

Dr. Grosvenor Fits Glasses of every kind, style & price. I

Municipal Light Building;. 32 South 8th Street.

at Indianapolis Sept 15, if Governor James P. Goodrich had not have been ill with fever as part of the day was to have been spent with him.... Mr. and Mrs. Doak Swain returned home Thursday evening from Lake Point, where they were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Will Conarroe..... Farmers will soon have the fodder in the shock but .there will be but few pumpkins for Sir Jackson Frost to land on. There is two causes why the crop is short, thus, bad seed and pesky bugs.

BABY GIRL HAD BREAKING OUT 1 1 11

Red and Inflamed. Irritated Badly. Cuticura Healed.

"My baby girl had a breaking out on her face when she was one year old. It appeared in the form of blisters, and

tne skin was very red and inflamed. It itched and irritated her so badly that she was very fretful, and would scratch her face till it was covered with blood.

TSvtxNv It became so bad I had to keen mittens on her

hands all the time, and her (ace was disfigured. . ' "'f tried medicines without success. Then I procured Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and they very soon healed her. Her face is now without scar or blemish." (Signed) Mrs. D. A. Stanger, Box 244. Blue Mound, 111., Oct. 8, 1916. It is easier to prevent skin troubles than to heal them. Clear the pores ind keep them clear by using Cuticura Soap for every-day toilet purposes and touches of Ointment as needed. For Free Sample Each by Return Mail address post-card: "Catlcura, Dept. R, Boston." Sold everywhere.

Handsome Serviceable Material. Guaranteed - Fitting. Get Our Estimates Now.

High Class Repair Work a specialty.

John H. Russell

16 S. 7th St.

Phone 1793

f. o. b. Detroit With full electric equipment.

Note These Fine-Gar Features on Saxon Roadster at $395

Electric starting and lighting system, two unit type, built by Wagner. Demountable rims. 30-inch by 3-inch tires.

High-speed Saxon Continental Motor. Schebler carburetor. 3-speed transmission. Dry plate clutch. Hyatt Quiet Bearings.

Streamline body. Fedders radiator. Atwater-Kent ignition. Extra long vanadium steel springs, cantilever type.

Check those features one by one. Think of the convenience of merely stepping on a button to start your motor.

Think of the added smoothness, the greater economy, the finer performance given by the 3speed transmission. Consider the fact that the tires are 30. inch by 3 inch. That means that Saxon Roadster has more tire surface in proportion to car weight than any other car in the world. c

So you are practically immune to tire trouble. Every feature of'Saxon Roadster is a feature of high-quality and known reputation. No other car within $300 of the price of Saxon Roadster has all these features And Saxon Roadster is a wonderfully able car. The Continental motor is unusually powerful and flexible. . It pulls smoothly and quietly "on high" or "in low." You note instant power-response

to the least pressure on the accelerator. And above all else, Saxon Roadster is the world's low-cost car to drive. It has established a grand average of 30 miles per gallon of gasoline. 10,000 miles to the set of tires is its tire-average. And a complete two-year record of total operating costs on thousarfds of Saxon Roadsters shows an average of 3c per mile. Price is $393, f . o. b. Detroit. Saxon "Six," $935; Saxon "Six" Sedan $1395; Saxon "SixChummy Roadster, $935. F. o. b. Detroit.

Auto Sales Agency HEADQUARTERS Distributors for Wayne, Randolph, Jay, Union, Fayette and Franklin Counties. NATIONAL GARAGE 1211 MAIN STREET, RICHMOND