Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 311, 10 November 1917 — Page 4
page four;
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, NOV. 10, 1917.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM " - ; AND EXTN-TELEORAM ,
Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by : Palladium Printing Co. Palladium. Buiidlav North Nlaib and Sailor Btraeta, R. G. Leeds. Editor. E, H. Harris. Mgr. Entered at the Poet Office at Richmond, Indiana, as 8 oad Class Mall Matter.
MEMBCR OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS.
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use
for republicatim 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.
ailing Our Bluff For many yatrs we have boasted of our inventine genius and fcave advertised the excellence of our mechanical ability. We have asked the world to admire our sky scrapers, our long bridges and tunnels, our marvelous labor-saving devices. We have pointed to the reclamation and irrigation work of the West and asked the world to dupli
cate the Panama Caual. Today we are being put to the test. We must prove anew and with conclusive evidence that our speeches have not bean idle boasts and vainglorious braggadocia. Europe has called oSr bluff. England, France, Italy, Russia and Belgium are asking us to undertake a task too big for
them to handle. The inventive genius, the administrative ability, the eacecutive finesse, the industrial capability of these countries have grappled manfully with the job, but the task remains undone. Now America, youngest and most powerful of the nations, has been called to service. , The specifications for the." job of defeating Germany's war machine have been placed in our hands. -What are we going to do about it? How will American genius assert itself ? Every patriot answers that we will bring the best thought and execution of our nation to the task. The spirit that hewed a nation out of a howling wilderness, that bridged streams, built trans-continental railroads, invented a flying machine, and devised thousands of mechanical devises will not quail before Europe's challenge. Our whole nation, men, women and children, have consecrated themselves to the task of winning this war, cost what it may, and last as long as it may.
undertaking given by the Governor of the province of Antwerp and by the Governor-General himself, who directly represents the highest authority in the German Empire, I respectfully beg you to withdraw the orders regarding forced labor and deportation issued to the working men of Belgium, and also to send back to their homes
such of them" as have already been carried away
in such manner."
An appeal to neutrals, Mechlin, Nov. 7, 1916.
-"Bands of soldiers break into their peaceful
homes, snatch youth from their parents; the husband from his wife, the father from his children, guard with fixed bayonets the doors, through which wives and mothers attempt to pass to bid a last farewell to those who are leaving them; marshal their captives in groups of forty or fifty, and hoist them forcibly into open trucks; the engine stands ready under full steam; as soon as the train is full a superior 6f ficer gives the signal for departure. Here we have another thousand Belgians reduced to slavery; condemned without previous trial to the severest penalty in the penal code save the death penaltydeportation. They know not where they are going, nor for how long.
'All they know is that their work will benefit no
one but their enemies."
Second Letter to Baron von Bissing, Malines,
Nov. 10, 1916. "This pledge (of not deporting
young Belgians) has been violated every day, in ;
thousands of cases, for the last fortnight." Discourse pronounced at the church of St. Gudule, Brussels, Nov. 26, 1916. "And it is for that reason, my Brethren, that your bishops have broken hearts at present: They have seen thousands of sons torn from their pastoral care, snatched away into the 'unknown, sheep wandering without a shepherd, a prey to the perils of solitude, of impotent anger, perhaps even despair."
Third letter to Baron von Bissing, Nov. 29, 1916. "Several reports which I have in hand prove that the clergy are brutally thrust aside, burgomasters and town councillors reduced to silence; the recruiters then find themselves face to face with unknown men among whom they arbitrarily make their choice. There are abundant examples to prove this statement." Here is irrefutable proof of the snatching of civilians from their homes. German brutality carried them away into slavery. Need any one ask why the Allies are fighting Germany ?
( 1 ;v'v,; ' -" V J.',
111
as
Cardinal Mercier on Belgian Deportations It is a far cry from the deportations of Belgian men and women last year to present issues, but the war utterances of Cardinal Mercier, archbishop of Malines, printed under the title, "The Voice of Belgium," give us first hand evidence of the outrages perpetrated by the German conquerors. . It may be said in passing that the little volume is brimful of incidents that harassed the pastoral work of the archbishop and portrays the high spirittfal devotion with which he is administering his duties as episcopal head of the clergy and pastor of the thousands of oppressed members of the laity. " ?
We quote excerpts from his protests against the deportation of Belgians into Germany. First letter to Baron von Bissing, Oct. 19,
1916 "In the name of the Belgian citizen's right to choose his residence and work ; in the name of the inviolability of family life ; in the name of moral interests so gravely compromised by the practice of deportation; in the name, too, of the
T
War Pessimists a Menace
From the Indianapolis News.
HERB are persons who does not know them?
who are, or profess to be,, in an almost continuous state of depression about the war. It almost seems
as though they enjoy the feeling. Many of, them have no direct personal interest in the struggle, and are unrepresented in the armies that are fighting it. The feeling with them is, therefore, not personal. On the other hand, many fathers and mothers who have seen their boys leave for the front are brave and cheerful. The war is, of course, terrible, as all agree. But why continually dwell on hte fact? The men in the trenches, if we may judge from what we hear from them, and from the war pictures, are not thus gloom laden. Life to them has not lost its
brightness and charm. The situation is not all they could
ask, but they are facing it with a stout heart and a fine courage. Also they expect and mean to win. It is important that the people at home should share
their attitude. Those who refuse to see any cheering signs, who always look on the dark" side, who see in every reverse a sure indication of ultimate defeat, and who devote their time to inventing difficulties where they do not exist, are certainly contributing little to the success of the brave men who are upholding the Stars and Stripes on the battle field. Let it for once and all be admitted that the war is dreadful, and that no one can tell how long it will last. It ought to be enough for anyone to know that It will certainly last till Germany is defeated.
A LITTLE SLICE O' LIFE. It was In the cold gray dawn And the sleeper was crowded,
usual, . And everybody was twisting around Behind those funny, green curtains, And trying to get their clothe on. We reached for our shoes, knowing That George 'had shined them all up for me, When we dragged them to the surface We found that one was black and the other tan. They had not been to the night before, For we had spent the day in local option Territory. We called George And told him of the trouble. He looked at the shoes and scratched his head And said: "Boss, thar's sho'ly something Wrong in this yere kyar. I ex pec' et's a ha'ant. One black an' one tan
Dat's de second time dat has happened this mawnln." THE LETTERS OF A GERMAN SPY
Somewhere in America. W. Hohenzollern, Potsdam. Dear Bill Your check received. I note that it is smaller than usual. Am I not giving you enough information, or isn't it the right ouality, or what? . I can give you as much as you want. All I have to do is to read the papers. I don't even have to buy them. I can walk by the newsstands and read the headlines. So far as troubles are concerned, the Americans certainly believe-that it pays to advertise. I always send you the morning reports that Is the stuff from early editions of the afternoon papers to cheer you up. The early editions of the papers are always optimistic for us. Along toward night the papers begin to see a chance for America. When he is going to work in the morning the average American is pessimistic. When he is through work
in the evening he can whip the world
with one hand tied behind him. Therefore, dear Bill, I always send you the stuff from the first editions. I can report that everything is favorable for us here. The second Liberty loan was oversubscribed, but that means nothing. When you get ready to come over here with the first army, distinguished committee headed by three United States senators will meet you at the wharf in New York. Senator LaFollette will make the speech of welcome. Everything is arranged. ' Gott mlt uns. J. WISEHEIMER, Spy No. 567,983. WE NOTE BY A ST. LOUIS PAPER THAT "CHARLES D'AFFAIRS IS IN CONTROL OK THE PERUVIAN EMBASSY AT WASHINGTON." WELCOME, CHARLIE. If Hoover keeps on he will soon have the American people to the point where they will not eat more than
twice as much as Is good for them.
More power to his elbow. THE DISAPPEARING BISCUIT
With the higher cost of living there has been no diminution of the great
American appetite, and it puzzles
many a father with a large brood how
to make both ends meet, or, as one
of them puts it, at least one end meat
and the other end vegetables. The
pioneer settler, whom Douglas Malloch pictures so well in tils new book, "Tote-road and Trail," feels the promblem as much as anybody. An enumerator was taking a local census and came to the shanty of a French-Canadian settler. "How many children have you?" he asked. "Ten, twelve, fourteen I don't know. I know barrel of flour last pretty damn quick."
drive her point home she produced her ,
watch. "Now, girls," she bald, "you all see this watch" an assertion so obviously true that there was no danger of contradiction. "Now," she - continued, "just suppose for & moment that It did not keep correct time, that 1 found it was wDling to go any way but the right way, what should I do with It?" There was the usual pause which pupils Indulge in because it flatters the teacher by making her suppose her problem is a very deep one. and
that her wisdom Is, therefore, pro
found. Then a bright little girl held up her hand.
"Please, miss," she said, "you would
sell it to a friend." -
"You'll have to pay fare for that child, madam," said the conductor. "But he's only 8 years old." "We collect for ail children over 7." '
"Well, why don't you have your silly old rules put - up where people can see them?"
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Storie s
The friend had dropped in to see d'Auber, the great animal painter, put the finishing touches ou bis latest painting. He was mystified, however, when d'Auber took some raw meat and
The Forum
(All articles for this column must not exceed 300 words. Contributors must sign their names, although the uume will be withheld by the man. agoment at the requests; of the writer. Articles having no name attached will be thrown into the waste basket.)
Key of A flat major, blue. Key of D flat major, violet. i Key of E flat major, pink. " j Arvede Barine in his life of Alfred? de Musset. says of this lyrical poet: j "One fond of sensations rare, will learn perhaps with interest that Mus-i
set possessed the audition coloree, of jed with color and the w0rd8 and the
each other, a symphony with its different movements, so to speak. These harmonious analogies seem to have found complete form in Musset's verses, "To Madame N. Menessier," who had set to music some lines
by the author. Here in music is touch-
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COLOR AND SOUND Now that the Cincinnati Symphony orchestra has ?ust come and gone, and 1 memory with listening ear atill hears "The flute's sweet wail, a heavenly ? music floats. And like bright dew-drops fall the ; oboe's notes." there also comes in accordance with all this, the thought of that strange and mysterious analogy between the ors, and to which Plutarch makes alors, and to which Plutarch makese allusion when he speaks of the kindred harmony in colors and sounds. Thom
as Moore in his "Ode on the Genius i of Harmony,'.' has given expression to these ideas. In a. biographical sketch of Mrs. H H. A. Beach, it is related that when this famous composer was but two years old. she associated certain pieces of music that her mother played, w ith certain colors, by designating them as the blue, pink; or purple music. Itrjra at first supposed that this manifestation of musical feeling was connected with the color of the outside pane, r with which musical publications were covered, hut It was afterwards discovered that ths association of color and tone had no correspondence whatever, with colored wrappers, but pertained purely to the analogy between sound and color. This association of keys and colors is shared by many other composers, although, their color-schemes are by no means unanimous. The following' is the list of kindred harmony as expressed by Mrs. Beach, and which is
of interest both -to the musician, and to one: metaphysically inclined: I
Key of C, white. Ky: of Fr sharp" minor; key of G shaT minor, black. Kej of E' major, yellow. Keyof G major, red. "" Keyof A major, green. x . s ..V
which no one spoke at -that time, and
with which the psychological contemporary occupies himself so much. He relates to Madame Jaubert in one of his letters that he has been very sorry, dining with her family, of being obliged to sustain a discussion in
uiuci i. yiuvc """'"'""'lovrn exquisite beauty.
a voice of contralto brune. He thought! that those things went without say-j ing. Barine also adds: . "The instinct j
revealed to Musset, the relations mysterious which exist between the sonor ity of the words employed and the image that one wishes to evoke, faculty independent of the import of -the idea expressed, and - to which the grand movement of the alexandrine, is in the highest degree favorable."
One is led to believe that these inborn gifts of Musset tone and color, and the sonority of words characterizing the image are' all analogus to
imagery are divinely blended. Indeed, so beautiful and complete is this tribute to a musician, that there seems ho departing from its own speech, for surely in no other language will the poem find, like Narcissus found in the fountation, a perfect reflection of its
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URIC ACID IN MEAT CLOGS THE KIDNEYS
Take a glass of Salts if your Back hurts or Bladder r-thers you Drink more water.
rubbed it vigorously over the painted rabbit fn the foreground. "Why on earth do you do that?" he asked. "Well, you see," explained d'Auber, "Mrs. Millions is coming to see this picture today. When she sees her pet poodle smell that rabbit and get excited over it she'll buy It on the spot."
The teacher was trying to impress upon . her class the necessity of regulating the sinful human heart, and to
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, dizziness, 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 wa6te 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 effervescent lithia-water drink. adv.
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What of a Meatless Day if You Have
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