Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 287, 13 October 1917 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, OCT. IS; 1917
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every Evening .Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Street. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr. Entered it tae Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, as 8e ond Class Mall Matter.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use
for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
Keeping Your Poise The man who keeps his poise under all circumstances and in every emergency possesses a valuable trait. It gives him absolute control over his thinking ability at a time when he needs it most, it permits him to accept the vagaries of fortune with equanimity of spirit. Some of the boys in the military training camps lack this quality. The grumbling against food and the new environment can be traced to men who are unable to accommodate themselves readily to new conditions. In the very nature of the situation, the boys cannot order their meals as if they were in a restaurant, nor surround themselves with the luxuries they had at home. On the other hand, none of them can say that the food served is not palatable and lacks nourishing qualities. The military establishment has been very careful to study the food problem. The food is substantial and of sufficient variety to satisfy the caprices of the appetite. Perhaps some of the boys who now cannot see the advantages of the diet will appreciate it when they discover the beneficial effects it has.
' ' Attending Night School
Attendance at the night school is satisfactory to the school authorities. The enrollment proves that our citizens realize how important is this
form of supplementary education. ,
One is never too old to learn. This holds true not only when applied to education but also to
business. None of the owners of mercantile and industrial establishments in Richmond will admit that his grasp of business is so profound that he does not learn new things constantly. - When a man stops learning lie is at the end Of his string. He is going bankrupt faster than, he imagines he is. Disaster has liim marked for an early fall. The person who is eager to acquire more learning, to explore new paths, to enrich his mental apparatus and to sharpen his thinking ability is
the man who is on the highway to success.
The very fact that a person enrolls in the night school is an indication of his enterprise and
aggressiveness. The plodder and self-satisfied man hasn't enough get-up to go to school at night. To his thinking such a step involves too
much work and effort. He believes extra work
is a sacrifice.
We hope that the students who have enrolled keep up their work. The enthusiasm of the first few lessons will soon wear off and the actual grind begin. This is the most dangerous period. Then will power must assert itself. The inclination to quit, to prefer, amusement to work, must be fought and conquered.- At the end of the semester the faithful students will be proud of their work and their determination.
40,CO0 Soldiers in Camp Grant
Are to be Taught How to Sing
Thanksgiving Will Be Different This Year From Woman's Home Companion. OR the first time since Austria struck the match ri which fired Europe, Americans can eat their Thanksgiving dinner with proud hearts and sacrificial joy. "The three last Thanksgiving Days were full of turkey and plum pudding, hut empty of noble gladness and serenity. We could not unconcernedly eat our fill when thousands of our fellow creatures were starving. We could not thank God, with the Pharisee, that we were not as the rest of njen, because the vision of th63e men- our brothers lying with stiffening wounds on the battlefield, or sinking into the whirl of waters while the submarine sped oh its deadly way, robbed us of our peace of mind. "Now in this annus mirabllis, this wonderful year of 1917, when the soul of the nation has spoken, when we have turned our backs upon ease, and comfort, and a security at once threatened and ignoble, we are prepared to celebrate Thanksgiving Day with solemn piety and purpose. We have not so loved our lives as to lose them. We have refused to Acquiesce in wrongdoing. We have
accepted our Bhare of responsibility for the well-being of
the civilized world."
Revelations of a Wife BY ADELE GARRISON
BRIDGE WORK PROGRESSING.
Katie and Dicky Have Met Before "All right. Katie," I said, delighted that she was so thoughtful about marketing problems and interested enough to go to the trouble of marketing herself, " we will go together. I will show you where the Bhops are, then you can go by yourself other days. I need the air anyway." "That will be nice," Katie beamed at me. "Thank you. Rattle," I replied. "I will be ready In a moment." I put on my hat and coat and Katie and 1 walk to the shops where I traded. I saw at once that she was a shrewd buyer. She saw faults where I would not have dreamed they existed, and haggled over prices in a way that made me blush, even though I knew that she was doing it in my interest. "These people, they charge you double prices If you don't watch," she said bluntly to me. "I hope you won't believe that, Mrs. Graham." The marketman came forward. "Sometimes prices are quoted incorrectly over the telephone. I am sure you will find our prices as reasonable as any other markets which keep our high class of goods." "See you keep 'em cheap or I no trade with you." This was Katie's parting defiance as she picked up the bundle of eatables and started homeward. I had a luxurious afternoon. Katie In the kitchen sans: softly over her Tork some minor-cadenced Polish folksong, and I nestled deep in an armchair by the sunniest window, dipped deep into-the pages of "magazines and newspapers which I had not read. I realized with a start that I was out of touch with the doings of the outside world, something which had not happened to me before for years, save in the few awful days of my mother's last illness. I -really must catch up again. I was so deep in a vivid description of the desolation . in Belgium that I did not hear Dicky enter. I started as he kissed me.' "Headache better, sweetheart? It must be, or you wouldn't be able to read that horror." He closed the magazine playfully and drew me to my feet. "I am perfectly well," I replied, "and I have good news for you. We have a maid, a trifle rough in her manner, but one whom I think will be very good." "That's, fine," Dicky said heartily. "I'd much rather come home to find you comfortably reading than scorching your face and reddening your hands in a kitchen." "Say, Missis Grahaml" Katie came swiftly into the room, and I heard an exclamation of surprise from Dicky. "Why, Katie, wherever did you come from?" - But Katie, with a scream of fear, her face white with terror, had backed into the kitchen. I heard her opening the door where she had put her hat and cloak, then the slamming of the kitchen door. I looked at Dicky in amazement. What did It all mean? He caught up his hat and dashed to the front door. , "Quick, Madge!" he called. "Follow her out the kitchen door as fast as you can. Ill meet you at the servant's entrance. I wouldn't let her get away for a hundred dollars." I obeyed Dicky's Instructions, but with a feeling of ' disgust creeping over me. I have always hated a scene, and this performance savored too jnuch of " moving picture melodrama to suit me. I hurried down the two flights of stairs and on toward the servant's entrance. I was almost there when
Katie came flying back, almost Into my arms. "Oh, Misses Graham," she moaned. "You kind lady. I pay it all back. I always have it with me. Don't let him put me in prison. I work, work my fingers to the bone for you, if you only not let him put me In prison." Dicky came up behind us. As she slw him she shrank closer to me in a pitiful, frightened way, and put out both her hands as if to push him away. "Don't be frightened, Katie," he said. Come into the house and tell me about it." "Bring her into the living room and get her quieted before I talk to her," suggested Dicky, as he disappeared into his room after I had got her upstairs. Bewildered and displeased at this bizarre situation which had been thrust upon me, I ushered Katie into the living room and removed her hat and coat. She trembled violently. I went to the dining room and from a decanter in the sideboard poured a glass of wine and, bringing it back, pressed it to her lips. She drank it, and Joe color gradually came back to her face and the twitching of her muscles lessened. When she was calmer I took her
j hands in mine and, looking her full in ! the face in the manner which I had sometimes used to quiet an hysterical 'pupil, I said slowly:
"Listen to me, Katie. Tou are not going to be put in prison. Mr. Graham will not harm you in the least. But he wishes to talk to you, and you must listen to what he has to say." Her answer was to seize my hand ancf cover it with tearful kisses. I detest any exhibition of emotion, and this girl's utter abandonment to whatever grief or terror was hers irritated me. But I tried not to show my feelings. I merely patted her head and said: - "Come, Katie, you must stop this and listen to Mr. Graham." Katie obediently wiped her eyes and sat up very straight "I am all right now," she said ouaveringly. "He can come. I tell him everything."
The supports for the pillars, of the Main street bridge have been completed with solid concrete and stel reinforcements. Pit No. 4 is being concreted for like pillars. The work on the arched annroach at the went
end is proceeding, and forms are being placed for the concrete. The old iron
trestie at the east end is being dismantled so that the two remaining pits may be started.
The origin of the towers of Ireland remains a mystery. It is thought that they were oriertnallv watch tmrcra
There are about eighty of them re
maining.
(ADVERTISEMENT) FIGHT FOR YOUR LIFE Duty Demands Robust Eealtli
' The New Brunswick motor vehicle law provides that no person under eighteen years of age shall drive a motor vehicle within the provincial limits.
iinnwiivutti-
Ah! That's the Spot Sloan's Liniment goes right to it. Have you a rheumatic ache or a dull throbbing neuralgic pain? You can find a quick and effective relief in Sloan's Liniment. Thousands of homes have this remedy handy for all extersal pains because time and time ag aia it has proven the quickest aaliaC. So clean and easy to apply, too. No rub. Dine bo ataia. so inconveaicaoa aa ia the caae with piaster or ointments. If you onoa use Sloan s Liniment. you will navar ba witsj out it. Generous abed bottles, at Q drogsista, 2Sc i(ku. SI.OO.
Fight to get it and keep il Fightfight day in and day out to prevent being overtaken by ills and alls. Keep wrinkles from marring the cheek and the body from losing Its routhful appearance and buoyancy, right when ill-health is coming with its pallor and pains, defects and declining powers. Fight to stay Its course and drive It off. But fight Intelligently. Don't fight trlthout weapons that can win the day for without the Intelligent use of effective weapons tho pallor spreads and weakness grows and a seeming!? strong man or woman ofttimes becomes a pray to iil3 after all. You will not find this class of persons in the hypoferrln ranks. No unhealthy, dull, draggy. droopy person: in that line. It is a hale, hearty, robust aggregation of quick-steppers whs view life in a joyous frame of mind and are mentally and physically equal to any emergency. Hypoferrln stands for sound body and sound mind it Is the Invigorating tonic of the times powerful and u usurp aaeed as a health restorer, vitallzor and health preserver. Fight to bold the vigor of a sound body with hypoferrln or to stay tha process of decay and restore health and strength you win. This tonic ol amazing, wonder-working properties has been approved by physicians a--a restorer and safeguard of health. It Is a thoroughly scientific prepara. tion of the very elements necessary to tone cp tha stomach and serves, to build strong, vital tissue, make purs blood, firm flesh and solid, active, tire less mnsclea. ! Hypoferrln eontatna these mlfhtj
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iron peptone , in a form boat adapt
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uuuisa Kio u tro w bmsk n isciuusaaat Iron pepton&te. In the system. I Your mental and physical strenrta aH endurance depends upon a lacltbln-and. Iron peptonata laden blood: - steady, do pendanle nerves and a healthy stomach! with these yea oan meet life at an angle. - This wander tonic, hypoferrtn, which Is r.s perfect as science can get to nature, meets every essential demand of Ua human organism. It is safe and sure and a boon to run-down, worn-out men and women. Hypoferrln means nature's own way f bringing- color to the cheeks; rtrength to the body and keeping- tha vigor and buoyancy of youth. The pow-i Bar and paint way t effecting beauty id rot needed by hypoferrln -women and rlrls. Their blood, filled with aature'l Leauty stores, creates conditions thai give firmness and grace to the body and the glow of health to the cheeks. I No need of going through lite slckty and always feeling miserable in this age of medical science. Join the hypofarrti? ranks. It puts Into you the springy snatf and vigor you ought to have and puts life into your body and mind that Inspires) tne confidence that you confront tfca world on an equal footing with anyone. Hypoferrln may De had at your drug4 gist s or direct from us for 11.00 per nack-i age. It ia well worth the price. Tho1 Seataao! Itacedcw Clacla&at r-.-.i..
nan 4
CHICAGO. Oct 12. Major Arthur Kevin, until recently a member of the faculty of the School of Fine Art at the University of Kansas, is In Cat cago today on his way to Camp Grant. Rockford, 111., where be will take charge of one of the largest singing classes in the world, more than 40,000 men being under his instruction. Major Nevin's task Is to teach the members of the . Hew national army now in Camp Grant how to sing on their way to victory. He has just received word that his commission is on Its way here from Washington. Discussing his plans. Major Nevin said he would divide the camp . into groups of ten to fifteen thousand each and hold singing classes twice a week. "I'm going to teach all those 40,000
Eleven Discharged From Army Service At Cambridge City
CAMBRIDGE CITY. Ind., Oct 13. Eleven men were given discharge's from military service on grounds of dependency . by the second Wayne county army board in sesslpn here Friday, Ten others were certified for service by the board and two were certified for service by the district board at Fort Wayne on appeal from the decision of the local board. Names of those held and of those discharged follow: Certified for Service. Shelby McFarland, Greensfork; James Edmund Murphy, Milton; Paul L. Wright, Brownsville; Dolph Morris, Dublin; Leslie Hatfield, Dublin; Chas. Francis Ellis, Greensfork; Lester Earl Nicholson, Greensfork; William Geo. Fagan, Greensfork; Clarence A. Brinkley, Fountain City; Chester C. Clements, Williamsburg. Discharged. Joseph Earl Phillips, Centerville; Chester Lloyd Morse, Cambridge City; Harlan Gilbert Reece, Williamsburg; Harry Robert Stover. Hagerstowu; Caleb John Bennett, Greensfork; Chauncey R. Wine, Hagerstown; Erville Edgar Gray, Hagerstown; Or Green, Hagerstown; Clifford Ozro Gable, Carlos City; Lawrence D. Hoover, Hagerstown. (Joseph Henry Weiss, Centerville, has been selected for military service, both by the local board and the district board; also Chester McClung, Williamsburg.)
men how to sing," he declared. "We must have singing. It's one of the most Important things In war for a soldier to sing along the road to victory." . Major Nevin, however, is not the only member of hi" family in army service. Mrs. Nevin departs tomorrow for the East and later will go to France to become head of the bacteriological department of a large red cross hospital in Paris. Hardricke 20 years old, and Jack, 18 years old, the remaining members of the Nevin fam
ily, both have enlisted in the Ameri
can ambulance corps.
Greensfork Church to Have Homecoming GREENSFORK. Ind-. Oct 13. An
all-day meeting and home coming will be held Sunday. Oct. 2 at the Christian church. A basket .dinner will feature
the noon hour.
Rev. C. E. Shulti, pastor, will be assisted by Rev. L. E. Murray of the First Christian church and Rev. H. W. Schwan of the Central Christian
church, Richmond.
. Members of the Gospel band of Richmond and a chorus from Jacksonburg will furnish the music.
Isley is Secretary of Brotherhood of Olive Branch Region Richmond Lutherans are named on the program of the Olive Branch district meeting of the General Synod of the United States, to be held In EvansviUe. Ind., October 16 to 18. A number of Richmond Lutherans will attend the meeting. Rev. C. R. Isley is secretary of the district Brotherhood, which will meet at the same place on Monday and Tuesday and will have a part in the program of the meeting. Rev. F. W. Rohlfing, of St Paul's Lutheran church will deliver the Quadrlcentennial address. " .
That Discouraged Him. An exchange asks: "What has become of the old-fashioned doctor who used to write. Take a heaping dlttefnl of this powder three times a day? We fancy, brother, ho was knocked out
rby the old Irishman who. not having a
dime bandy, loaded up a nickel twice and nearly croaked. Boston Transcript " .
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