Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 287, 13 October 1917 — Page 8
PAGE TEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, OCT. 13, 1917
BRINGING UP FATHER
By McManus
AKi I HAVE THE. L
PLEAIsURt OF YOUR DAUGHTERS COMPANY
AT A EUCHRE PAft"Pf
T0K1CHT
WHAT OOE tHE MEAN F ?hE ttftm THRT
-7 ri i f ,t .vj i 4 s - 'VH THAT GUY -OHM Think HE ; MT OO XDO f CfRTAlNLV On MY ft A VERY NICE f l THUlK MOTHER I REALLY. NERVES- .EKTLEMAN- K L WON THE. L, ,k'i
SIGNAL SYSTEM CHANGE IS MADE ON PENNSYLVANIA General Orders Issued More Men Needed to Break Freight Tie-up General orders looking to the change In the signal system have been Issued by the Pennsylvania and G. R. & I. railroad companies. On the G. R. & I. at Franklin street, Fort Wayne, the signals have been placed at the near end of the east yard office eo as to accustom employes to the change. At Richmond at the north side of the coal wharf trainmen and engine men are given an opportunity to observe the displays of color signals. The green will Indicate clear, and the yellow will indicate caution, red still indicating danger or stop. Englnemen and trainmen are advised to look out for the display mast indicating the lights and flags which has been erected In the park at Fort Wayne east yards. The change In color signalling will be put In force on the Pennsylvania and G. R. & I. next week. Inquiry at the freight offices this morning elicited the fact that busi
ness on the east and west system a has
been heavy. Extra help has been put on, and more men can be used at the present moment. The movements In coal, iron, steel and grain have been above the average and yardmasters
have been hard put to move the extra
freieht and through freight trains.
While October always was above the normal, the army cantonment equip
ments has necessitated a general roundup of all care. Cars, however, are coming In on the Richmond division, and It was expected the embargoes at Alliance and Chicago would be lifted in a few days, allowing transfers to go on as usual. A total of $9,500 has been subscribed for the Red Cross and Liberty Loan bonds by trackmen and track foremen on the Pennsylvania divisions. Among the subscribers are many who have enlisted and are e erring in the army and navy The general order Issued some time ago had also born fruit on the divisions, and arrangements made whereby employes might contribute on the Installment plan were successful. The honor list on the Richmond division may be enlarged as plans are under way for the mobilization of another engineer corps, to succeed the Twenty-first company. A large number of G. R. & I. men Joined the first company as published In these pages last week.
for Cleveland, business.
Friday, on company
The new electric welding apparatus has been successfully tested at the round house. H. R. Cartrlght, fireman, and H. R. Johnson, brakeman, were unable to join the engineers corps as all applications had been filled.
W. W. Bartlett, passenger engineer, is on the sick list owing to an attack of sciatic rheumatism. Adolph Srbse, day caller, expects to be called on the next draft. He Is a popular employe with the men, and ambition to succeed la railroad work. Engineer C. F. Shera is taking a few days off, and visiting with relatives near Richmond. Brakeman Ollie Wiggins is planning a trip to California with his wife and will be absent two months.
J. T. Fowler, storekeeper on the Fort Wayne G. R. & I. division has been visiting with friends and relatives in Richmond. John Thomas, Warren Baker and D. R. Rady have been chasing the festive rabbits at the river bottom. The trio got one rabbit in the big bag taken with them on the trip. The hand operated derail on the G. R. & I. has been changed from green to purple to indicate the derail is set in the derailing position.
Insurance of $150,000 Carrried on Works in Luxembourg Exhibit
A Sack f Living Matter. As might be expected, It is among the inhabitants of the water that we find the simplest types of life. One of the polyps, the hydra, illustrates how simple these structures sometimes are. This little creature 1b nothing more than a sack of living matter, the inside coating attending to the work of digestion and the outside membrane doing the breathing. Yet the functions of the two membranes are so slightly specialized that the polyp may be turned inside out and the former stomach begins respiring, and the former breathing apparatus digests food.
INDIANAPOLIS, Oct 13. A collection of famous paintings and sculpture by French artists is now on view at the John Herron Art Institute and is attracting large crowds of visitors, among them many persons from other cities of the state The collection belongs to the Luxembourg Museum of
Paris and was sent to this country in 1915, to be' shown In the French building at the Panama-Pacific Exposition la San Francisco. Later, permission was obtained from Monsieur Jules Gulf fray, the director of the Luxembourg Museum, for the exhibition of the collection in some of the principal cities of the United States. Pittsburgh, Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, St. Louis and Toronto, Canada, have had the honor of showing it, and after leaving Indianapolis, it will probably be exhibited In Minneapolis and Buffalo, before being reshipped to France. Insured for $150,000. Insurance to the amount of nearly $150,000 is carried on tho sixty-six paintings, five bronzes and one hundred and five medals which comprise the collection. Many are of great size and heavily framed. So large are they, that the authorities of the Canadian National Exhibition at Toronto, from which point the collection came to Indianapolis, when they found that the Canadian and United tStaes governments had commandeered all ex
press cars with doors large enough to admit the huge vans or boxes in which the pictures were packed, were forced to remove them from the packing cases and pack them uncrated, in a palace horse car for shipmen to Indianapolis. The catalogue list contains the names of many of the greatest artists of France during the forty-year period, from 1870 to 1910, covered by the collection. During this period, the art
of painting underwent a great revolution and the men of the older schools the Academics, the Classicists and the Romanticists who painted mostly in their studios and were bound about by centuries old conventions, were
forced to give way to the Realists and the Impressionists with their more brilliant, brighter colored and, as we now see It, truer rendition of nature and eunllght. Among the portraitists are Carolus Duran, Cabanel, Bonnat, Gervex Fan-tln-Latour, Benjamin Constant and Delauney. Large canvasses by Gustave Moreau and Jean-Paul Laurens hark back to the perio dof classical
and historical subjects. Jules Bre
ton's "Evening" Is one of his many interpretations of the peasant type.
The great decorator of the nineteenth
century, Puvls de Chavannes, is represented by the sketch for one of his
"Saint Genevieve" serieB, placed in
the Pantheon, and by a less well known canvas, "Hope." Two War Subjects.
Two subjects taken from the
Franco-Prussian war by DeNeuvflle
and an over-large canvas by Alme Morot, showing a squadron of German cavalry in full retreat before a regiment of French Cuirassiers, represent the group of war painters who were at the height of the popular wave thirty years ago. (Morot, by the way, Is said to have been one of the first painters to use instantaneous photography as an aid to painting horses In active motion). "The Balcony" by Edouard Manet is one of those works from his brush which set all artistic Paris by the ears when first exhibited. Looking at it now, one can hardly understand why large crowds constanUy stood" before it as It hung in the Salon of 1869 not to admire, but to Jeer and condemn. Of those, who, along with Manet, braved the indignation of the critics of those days, there are to be found typical examples of Claude Monet, including one of his famous Berles of the Rouen Cathedral painted at different hours of the day, Camille Plssarro, Jeon Francois Raffaelli, Alfred Sisley, and Paul Auguste Renoir. Other painters represented are L'Hermltte J. J. Henner, Ziem, Ribot, Baudry, Bastlen-Lepage, Harpignies, Flameng, Tissot, Roybet, Besnard,
Boudin, Dagnan-Bouveret and Legros. Of the Bculptors, Auguste Rodin, acclaimed as the greatest living master of the chisel, is represented by a heroic and forceful bronze head of "Bellona," and Juls Dalou by his model for the statue to the chemist Lavoisier erected In the grand amphitheater of the Sorbonne. Several equestrian figures of military personages are works by Gerome and Melssonier, both better known as painters than as sculptors. Medal Work Strong. Louis-Oscar Roty, Ovide Yencesse,
Victor Peter, Dupuls, Chaplain and Alphonse Legros are some of the medallists whose work is shown. These small, almost tiny, examples of the sculptor's art, represent every phase of life birth, marriage, death, festivity, valor, and competition. Every one is a gem and they should not, because of their lack of size, be overlooked. "Permission has just been received to keep the Luxembourg collection on
ffi&l Fair List Prices Fair Treatment
,:5- Mir !!
Slftlnga and Personals. John J. Rodgers for 25 years In the service of the general construction department, has been appointed assistant to the president of the Pennsylvania system. C. N. Brentlinger, chief clerk, motive power department, and C. P. Cherry, chief material inspector, are in Pittsburgh on company business.
P. J. Schield, general foreman of the Pennsy shops at Fort Wayne who has been visiting here, left for Toledo where his son, Frank, is general foreman of the shops. K. T. Pierce of the Pittsburgh auditing department, is on a visit to the freight agents of the system to explain a new inbound freight filing system soon to be put in operation on this division. O. C. Via and C. L. Tillson, passenger firemen, are on the sick list.
H. V. Diem, Master car builder, left
SAYS THE DRUG IS AN ETHER COMPOUND
Just a few drops loosens any corn so it lifts out without pain.
You simply say to the drug store man, "Give me a quarter of an ounce of freezone." This will cost very little but is sufficient to remove every hard or soft corn from one's feet. A few drops applied directly upon a tender, aching corn should relieve the soreness instantly, and soon the entire corn, root and all, can be lifted out with the fingers without pain. This new way to rid one's feet of corns was introduced by a Cincinnati man, who says that while freezone Is sticky it dries in a moment, and seems to simply shrivel up the corn without inflaming or even irritating the surrounding tissue or skin. Don't let father die of iniection or lockjaw from whittling at his corns, bat cut thU out and make him try It j-Adv.
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Ivy "VTr
" MONOMEUT , - ilf v g
Jl
How You Indianans Made "Hoosier" Famous
rril
YOU took what sister states considered a joke, and made it the one nickname a state cherishes with genuine pride. You have made Hoosier mean individuality and merit, because you put quality and self-esteem-back of a name. Because Goodrich put quality, and self-esteem back of a name, "Goodrich" stamped on a tire means tire individuality and merit.
mum
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URIC ACID IN MEAT CLOGS THE KIDNEYS Take a glass of Salts If your Back hurts or Bladder rthers you Drink more water.
If you must, have your meat every day, eat It, but flush your kidneys with salts occasionally, says a noted author ity who tells us that meat forms uric acid which almost paralyzes the kidneys in their effortj to expel It from the blood. They become sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizzlnessi your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and Irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body's urinous waste get four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy here; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then
act fine. This famous salts is made
from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, 'combined with llthia, and has
been used for generations to flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so It no longer Irritates, thus ending bladder
weakness.
Jad Salts Is inexpensive; cannot injure, and make a delightful efferves
cent lithia-water drink. adv.
view through Sunday, November 4, so that those attending the meetings ot the State Teachers' Association, October 31 to November 3, may have ample opportunity to see and study it," announces Harold H. Brown, director of the John Herron Art Institute. "The Luxembourg collection ex
hibit offers an almost unparralleled opportunity for the people of Indianapolis and Indiana to study at first hand examples of the greatest of the French painters of the last half century. Through It, it 1b possible to
trace, not only the art history of France since 1870, but also of almost all Europe and of this country. For It should not be forgotten that many of these men were great teachers as well as painters and their pupils are to be found In all parts of the world,
carrying with them the sound principles of drawing and of color which their masters gave them during tnelr tschool days in Paris." In addition to the Luxembourg col lection, the Art Institute's permanent collection of paintings, sculpture and the decorative arts is also on view. The museum building is open daily from 9 to 5 and on Sundays during this exhibit from 1 to 9:30 p m.
Visit the store of pleasant dealing
Opp. Post Offi
"When it's done by "Wilson, It's done right"
Furs
They demand care in cleaning You are safe in sending them to us. Skill and attention insure perfect satisfaction.
Phone 1766.
Wilson, the Gleaner
In the Westcott
Kodak Films developed Free Prints 3c each, thwaite's Drug Stores.
Thistle-
S Hr let
Ilk
erttationa
Newspaper
Windoaiyisplcn
mill
The Dealers Have Answered
: .t;;: :nir -jv.
"Best in th& Isongr Run
jr
1
Mr. Manufacturer! Mr. National Distributor! Mr. Advertising Agent! you frequently ask the question:; "What kind of advertising interests the local dealer?' The merchants in this and 400 other cities of North America have answered your question this week. They have put the goods in the window and have told you why they have put them there. The products they displayed were all newspaper advertised products. They chose these because they know it pays store-keepers to co-operate with newspaper advertising. They want to encourage more manufacturers to use advertising in the daily newspapers. Manufacturers and others interested in the results of International Newspaper Window Display Week are invited to write to the Bureau of Advertising, American Newspaper Publishers Association, World Building;, New York.
