Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 317, 17 November 1917 — Page 6

iiA.GE.SiX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. SATURDAY, NOV. 17, 1917.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building. North Ninth and Bailor 8treta. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, as Second Class Mall Matter.

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

Putting Your Heart Into It

The success of a venture usually is in propor

tion to the devotion and consecration which its

promoters put into it. An enterprise grows be

cause of the intensive "heart" cultivation which

it receives.

Beautiful roses are the products of the hard

labor and painstaking attention of florists whose hearts are wrapped up in the development of the species to greater luster and perfection. Let a rose grower relax his cultivation, let him set out a rose and permit it to grow amid luxuriant weeds and grass, and the plant will retrograde instead of maturing into a perfect specimen. And so it is in all efforts. Intense application, growing out of justice, righteousness, love for work, devotion to duty, is the dayspring of success.

The business world reveals thousands of cases

to prove the point.

The dynamo that drives every successful busi

ness man is the amount of moral earnestness and devotion he puts into his work.

And as a logical result, the greater the consecration of the man to his task, the greater his re

ward. Men who have accumulated money by their

own effort and strategy, put hours and hours of concentrated application to the job of winning their fortune. No big business has ever endured the storm and stress of time and competition if it was not fundamentally honest in its dealings, if its founders and their successors did not play fair, refuse to adopt short-cuts, and spurn every dishonest and crooked practice.

True, some men and some concerns seeming

ly have flourished and prospered by the use of

palpably unfair and sharp methods. But how long have they lasted? Retributive justice soon visited upon their heads the penalty for their

transgressions, and their ill-gotten gain quickly trickled back to the channels from which it was

stolen.

No truly great achievement ever grew by night and without the nursing and care of devoted men and women. A stern, rigid and masterful moral motive has always been found back of a successful movement, business, practice, pas

torate, or career. Some persons deceive themselves into believing that brains and brawn are the only two essentials that make for success. Either a man's wit or his muscle, in their estimation, boosts him and his cause up the ladder of achievement. The fallacy of this argument is to be seen plainly in the many incidents lying at our own door. No one will have the audacity to declare that brains and brawn are the motives impelling hundreds of women in Richmond to spend hours at the Red Cross Society headquarters sewing, knitting, and making bandages for the soldiers. These women are actuated by a higher motive than a mere intellectual desire to learn how to knit a sock or make a bandage. Something nobler than mere exercise of the muscles of their arms is bringing about their attendance. Surely no one will say that their zeal and interest is due to a desire to be seen, or that it grows out of a spirit of self-glorification, self-

praise and self-righteousness. No, their heart is in the work and so they are bending brain and muscle to the undertaking. Look at the motive back of the work done by hundreds of men this week to raise the war fund cf the Y.'M. C. A. No one is silly enough to assert, with seriousness that these men have dropped their business cares merely because their names would appear in print. Neither did they co-operate because it meant business training or physical exercise. The committeemen worked because their heart was in the cause. Here was a great task to be performed, and because their souls told them that the "spirit of home" must surround the boys in France they devoted themselves to the work.

Apply the same, principle to the great war.

Justice has been outraged, solemn pledges

broken, womanhood outraged, holy places defiled

and sacked.

Can victory rest on the banners of those who

have ordered and sanctioned these depredations ? Can success be the crown for these violations

of justice?

Will the intellectual acumen of the German general staff and the physical prowess of the

Kaiser's soldiers mock the principle that RIGHT IS RIGHT AND WILL ENDURE TILL' .THE

I END OF TIME ? Will the decrees of justice be

mocked and flaunted as a fallacy?

iir

SATISFIED. I'd hate to lie awake and plan

To circumvent the kaiser's clan.

I'd hate to lose good hours of sleep Evolving schemes to try and keep

The friendship of the Japanese,

Who seem so mighty hard to please. I'd hate to have notes from .the powers Consuming all my waking hours. I wouldn't like to cater to A -hundred million folks, would you? I'd hate to stand for all the blame For fozzles in the great war game. Whoever would be president, Can have the job, I am content. To Judge by the proud loog upon the face of the young man who has just been admitted to membership in a Greek letter fraternity you would never think that nearly all of the genuine Greeks are engaged in running shoe-making stands.

A NATURAL MUSICIAN. ..Billy Horn was arrested and fined $25 Saturday night for being on a toot. Kansas City Star.

You will find the answer in the morale of that thin line of French soldiers which for three years has stood off the mighty thrusts of the Teutonic war machine. Those brave Frenchmen are withstanding shot and shell, gas and bayonet, because they are fighting for righteousness and justice. They have taken to the trenches a stern devotion to duty and an intrepid sense of consecration that the German soldiers lack and never can acquire by an intellectual or a physical process. Mere intellectuality, illustrated in a superlative degree by the Kaiser's war machine, can never defeat men whose hearts pulsate with the consecration found in the French and British soldiers. French and British armies, manifestly inferior to the German forces at the outset of the war, had their hearts in the work when they repulsed the sweep of the Teutons in the battle of the Marne. And they have not quailed or faltered since. The victory of the Allies will come through the "heart work" of their soldiers, energizing and animating the execution of commands, and transforming their cannons, swords and rifles into vindictive agents of Eternal Justice.

bunions, appendicitis, color blindness,

spring Halt, spavin, stiff neck, falling hair, erysipelas, hay fever, house

maid s Knee ana baldness. A man

ought to be able to get a dollar a bottle for that

Some of the older residents can re

member the time when we thought

tne Mexican situation was "serious.

In the way of trouble, we are much more ambitious in this day and age

man we used to be.

A Cleveland crook sold on of the government lighthouses to a Chicago man for $5. Being a Chicago man he will receive no sympathy. ,

Hans Balloon Used

to Bear Propaganda is Sent to Pershing

WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN FRANCE, Nov. 17. (By The Associated Press.) A German paper balloon, used to distribute propaganda behind the hostile Unes, came down today in the town occupied by American division headquarters with copies of the Gazette Des Ardennes, which is published in French at Charleville, attached. The leading article attacked President Wilson for his alleged pre-war attitude and for not prohibiting the sale of munitions to Germany's enemies. In at attempt to convey an idea of reliability, the newspaper also printed a British official statement teUing of the

capture) of a thousand Germans in Flanders. The copies of the newspaper were sent to General Pershing.

Lungs Are Weakened By

Hard Colds CASCARA E? QUININE

The old family remedy in tablet form safe. ure, easy to take. No opiate no unpleesant aftrr effects.Cures colds in 24 hours Grip in 3 cays. Money back if it fails. Get the

genuine box -with Red Top and Mr. SfK. Kill's picture on it tfftv A 24 Tablet for 25c Wk M At Any Orxiz Star. VVv

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Things the War Cannot Destroy From Woman's Home Companion. fTp", HE war, with all its changing effort, and need B and sorrow and sacrifice, and massive endeavor, will pass by at last, and new problems will confront us; but the old human glories and immortalities love, brotherhood, devotion, kindness, understanding, gentle wisdom, self-forgetfulness, and high endeavor these will remain on, permanent and full of promise to the soul. It is these I would ask you not to forget or ignore in planning for your soldiers' Christmas, no, nor

in spending your own Christmas here at home: some gift If you want added proof of the proposition, I and salutation for the spirit, and some generous spendlook at your own homes. No mother ever loved 's of our own spirits, some giving, on our own part, of

IF YOU DON'T BELIEVE, TRY TO WRITE A COLUMN. There are only two things in the

world at the present time: The war

and the high cost of living. THE ADVENTURES OF A CYNIC

I had a cold In my head and my

friends knew it.

"I have a small package that I

would like to have you take home for

me," said he when I met him in front

of the hotel.

Being of a very goatlike that is

to say, gullible disposition and kind-

hearted withal, I acquiesced. It is a pleasant thing to do to acquiesce a hard thing to spell, but an easy thing to do. I supposed that my friend was obliged to stay down and I was willing to help him out. I did not go directly home, but lingered down in the avenues of trade for a couple of hours. I noticed that everywhere I went people eyed me suspiciously and then quietly moved away from me. None of my most intimate friends seemed to have any desire to hold confidential conversation with me. I finally took the car for home. One by one the passengers looked at their noses and moved to the forward end of the car. I soon had the rear end of the car to myself, excepting for the conductor. That conductor was a hero. He had to stay back there with me or lose his job. There were some sub-rosa remarks which reached me, and I gathered from them that I was an undesirable citizen of the most undesired sort. I could not have passed inspection at Ellis Island. When I got off the car at my home street I was surprised to tnd my friend out in front of his house,

sprinkling his lawn, and waiting for me. "Thanks for bringing home my little package," said he. "I didn't want to bring it home myself, and knew that you had hay fever and would

never notice it." "Some fine old limburger cheese," he replied. They are doing more tricks with alfalfa than a monkey can with a cocoanut. It remains for some genius to invent an alfalfa tea which will cure rheumatism, lumbago, misery in the back, tonsiiitis, that rundown feeling, sleeping sickness, corns,

"Here," said the doctor, indicating the whisk-broom, "is one of the finest little systems of spreading germs that was ever devised. This porter comes and he brushes me off; then he brushes you, and you and you, and everyone else ; and starts a lot of germs flying about in the air, to be breathed in and start disease. I say that germs ought not to be disturbed in public. It's dangerous. They ought to be let alone not thrown into the air by all this brushing." There was a moment of silence, during which the porter grinned. He waved his brush. "Come on, doctah," he said, "and let me brush you off. Don't let dat idea about microbes bother you. What little brushin' I'se going to do ain't goin' to disturb no germs. No, suh!"

her babe, watched over her sick children, made home a pleasure for her husband, because her intellect told her to do it, or because the work brought with it physical strength and stamina. A mother does this because she loves her little ones. An all-embracing moral impulse actuates her. Nothing intellectual, physical or commercial can be discovered behind a mother's love. In other words, she puts her heart into her vocation.

the very things our men have many of them given, for our sakes, and so generously. "Always I take a look each year at the unchanging Christmas stars; the same through so many, many changing ages, shining like symbols of the lovely things of the spirit that endure; but it seems to me they will mean more to me this Christmas than ever they have meant before, when I shall rememberas how, indeed, could we forget the thousands upon thousands of soldiers who under what changed and changing condition are maintaining the old and lovely things that endure, and who are perhaps looking up at the Christmas stars, also."

A highland minister was endeavoring to steer a boat load of young ladies to a landing. A squall was bursting: the steering was difficult. One of the girls annoyed him by jumping up and calling anxiously; "Oh, where are we going?" "If you don't sit down and keep still, my young leddy," said the minister pilot, significantly; that will verra greatly depend on. how you were brought up."

Little Ann was ill. Her throat was sore and Ehe was hoarse. Her mother suggested a mixture of butter and sugar as a remedy. "Well, mother," inquired the young patient, "if it makes me well I'll be sugar-cured, won't I?"

Experience

44 YEARS OF SUCCESS

that stormy winter weather exposes you to colds, coughs

grip, and a general danger of catarrhal conditions. You come in cold and with your resistance weakened, and the germs of grip find a lodgment You need tho help of a good tonic, with epecial value in

catarrhal conditions. Again the experience of many thousands repeats TAKE PERUNA FOR COLDS Perana invigorates. It affects directly the mucous membranes that suffer first in colds. It clears them of stagnant blood, and aids all the digestive apparatus to secure tone and activity. It carries you over the crisis if you take it in time, and banishes the cough and grip. Peruna is a reliable family medicine to have at hand for just such emergencies. It should be taken at the first symptom. Remember that Perana alto comet in tablet form. Carry a box with you. The Peruna Company, Colombo, Ohio-

'ST

Because of increased business I am forced to move to larger quarters so I will open at

LUNCH WITH ROYALTY.

LONDON, Nov. 17. The members of the American mission to the inter allied conference were invited to Buckingham palace yesterday afternoon for luncheon with the king and queen.

is "pure

THOUGHTS TO THINK ABOUT. Notice things. Hurry from worry; hasto frcra waste. Little acts of kindness lead to big opportunities; little deeds done put us in line for big deeds to be done. A Palladium Want Ad will get you a position that pays better than your present one. Be fair to yourself and those dependent upon you. Sell your ability to the highest bidder.

City Appointments Made at Ft. Wayne

FORT WAYNE,! Nov. 17. True to

j his promise to "clean out the City

hall," Mayor-elect W. Sherman Cutshall announced his appointments to the three city boards. All appointees are republicans. Creighton H. Williams was named city attorney. Members of the board

Noted Diplomat Will be Buried Sunday

EVAXSVILLE, Ind., Nov. 17. The tody of John W. Fester, former secretary of state and dean of American diplomats, who died in Washington Tttrsday, will arrive m Evansville on a private car at 6:25 o'clock Saturday ntsht. Robert Lansing, secretary of state, and Mrs. Lansing, Capt. and Mrs. Dulles will arrompany the body. The bodv will lie in state at the home of William Foster, a half-brother until Sunday noon. The only service fnr tiia AoaA riininmat will be a private

one at the grave at 1 o'clock in Oak' poet office.

Hill cemetery. .Secretary Lansing will at 4:20 o'clock on his return to - - -r, . . ,

of public works are Andrew T. Anderson, J. O. Brown and Dr. C. L. Baird. Those on the- board of public safety are B. Frank Sarver, J. B. Mills and W. G. Bordelman. Board of health members chosen are Dr. A. L. Schneider, Dr. E. A. Crull and Dr. A. J. Kressler.

The recent order for 7,000,000 pairs of army shoes at $4.65 a pair is the largest order for shoes ever placed by the government, and the bill will total more than $32,500,000.

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DORCHESTER MASS.

In the vault of the United State? land office at Springfield, Mo., are 1,500 undelivered patents to government lands aggregating 150,000 acres, and an effort is being made to find the patentees, else the tiUes to the land involved will always be imperfect. Some of the patents are dated prior to the civil war.

(Formerly occupied by the Cooper Auto Supply Co.) with a vulcanizing and tire repairing plant complete in every detail. I will be ready to take care of your tire needs in my new location Tuesday, Nov. 20. You have tried the rest now try the best.

"The Tire Man." $

Mrnrs-tl-ie

Middle Aged

an. u.s. pat. orr.

Established 1780

.State.

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Phone 1702

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V. K. CRANOR, Mgr.

1010 MAIN STREET In the Westcott.