Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 25, 11 December 1917 — Page 11
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND" SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, DEC. 11, 19tt.
PAGE ELEVEN
BOARD ACCEPTS RESIGNATION OF ERNSTJUNWALD Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra Dispenses With Conductor's Services.
CINCINNATI, Dee. 11 Resignation cf Dr. Ernst Kunwald at conductor of Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra was accepted by the Board of Directors yesterday afternoon. At the same time It was announced Ibat Walter Henry Rothwell will arrive in Cincinnati tomorrow morning, to assume rehearsals of the orchestra and to conduct the concerts Friday afternoon and Saturday night as guest conductor. Tho following statement was made by the Hoard of Directors following its meeting: "At a meeting of the Executive Committee of Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra Association held Monday afternoon. Dr. Kuqwald's resignation at conductor of the Cincinnati Orchestra was accepted. It Is announced that Walter Henry Rothwell has been engaged as 'guest conductor.' He will make his first appearance at the symphony concerts on Friday afternoon and Saturday evening of this week. Mr. Rothwell is well known in musical circles, having been engaged actively In New York during the la3t several years." Will Stay In City Dr. Kunwald said last night he will remain in this city for the present. He has a lease on the house in which he lives until next May and Intends to remain here at least until then. "I like Cincinnati," he said, "and
there is no better place for me to go." Asked about bis resignation he said: "When I presented my resignation the first time, four weeks ago. It was refused. It was very gratifying to me to realize that the Board of Directors thought so well of me. At the same time I told them that, as the reason for my resignation remained. I desired them to regard it as always at their command, whenever circumstances might make it advisable for them to act differently." Walter Henry Rothwell, who comes as guest conductor for tho two concerts this week, formerly was conductor of the St. Paul Symphony Orchestra. He came to this country orlflnally 13 years ago, when ho was brought over by Henry W. Savage to conduct his production of "Parsifal" in English. Since that timo he has identified himself with musical life in America. In recent years he has been ronrlurtlne In Now Vnrlr
The program will be changed for the concerts this week. Instead of the "Harold In Italy" symphony, Mr Rothwell will play the "New World" symphony of Dvorak, which Is based on American negro melodies and which
Dvorak wrote at the time when he was In New York. There-will be soloist, following the usual course of introducing a conductor as he sale attraction. The orchestra reheaisel yesterday under the direction of Julius Sturm, and will do the same tomorrow
MISS ANNE MORGAN IN FRANCE
- ffi
Uncle Sam , to Look Into Principles of Chicago U. Faculty
CHICAGO, Dec. 11. When a minority faction of the University of Chicago faculty voted down a football game with Michigan for the benefit of various war funds, with the explanation that "money Isn't everything and a principle is Involved," and later declined to pay a war tax on football games, also on the theory that it involved a principle. It didn't make any hit with the United States government. In a strenuous effort to unearth the "principle" of the thing, the government has had revenue agents at work
; on the books of the athletic depart
ment of the university for the last three days and a report will be made Monday or Tuesday to Washington. The report, of course, will not be made public at this time, but indications are tha the university will be made to pay the tax. The university authorities took the position that football on the Midway was not subject to the 10 per cent, government levy on "amusements," etc., because such sports as are conducted on Stagg field come under the head of "educational activities."
Perigord Wont be Able to Talk Here
Secretary Albus received word Monday night Lieutenant Paul Perigord would be unable to speak Wednesday evening at the High school auditorium. The affair was to have been held
under the auspices of tHe Commercial club and the Wayne County Red Cross association. Previous to the Red Cross drive for membership, December 17, a mass meeting may be arranged for Sunday afternoon. " The committee hopes to secure Lieutenant Perigord for an address at this time.
PALLADIUM WANT AOS PAY
Brain Food. The more brains a man has the more he Is in need of brain food,1 though not necessarily the kind he would take in through Lis mouth. That is, the best kind of food for tho brain is the kind we put into the brain Instead of the stomach. There Isn't much use to take food for the brain we haven't got, anyway. E cbaDge.
How the Nurse at Home Helps Win the War. A
Miss Anne Mor gan in France.'
HEADS BRAZILIAN MISSION TO U. S.
UNION JACK FLIES OVER HOLY CITY LONDON, Dec. 11 No attempt will bo made to define the future positton of Jerusalem until n general peace comes, the Times says it understands. In the meantime, the city will be treated as In British military occupation and win be under martial law. Gen eral Allenby will appoint a miitary fly over the city, the French and Italian flags will be placed over their national property, such as convents and schools. A solemn thanksgiving and te deum will be held In St. Paul's Cathedral todn yln celebration of the surrender, governor. While the British flag will Just Try This. Nobody can do the right thing always. The best any of us can do is to go ahead and do the right thing as often as posslh'cv Detroit Free Press.
NEW YORK, Dec. 7. Miss Anne Morgan, who left New York early in the summer for France, has been en
gaged in reconstruction work, and doing everything, including washing dishes and bedmaking. to make th-a people among whom she lives comfortable. In a letter which has just been received by the Vacation association, of which she is the treasurer, Miss Morgan tells of the work that is being done. The letter was written in BlerancourL
Lightens Burdens "Try as much us we will," sho
writes, "much of the suffering must
continue to the end, but there is aa
indefinite amount that can be dona
to ease the burden and lighten the
load. When we find three old people,
over eighty, sleeping on the floor of a hovel without blankets and without
a Btove, you can Imagine what it means to the brave woman who Is looking after them to know that we
are there at her door to bring her from far away America warm clothes, good, nourishing foodstuffs for her old people, shoes and stockings for her children and for herself, 1ools to work in her garden so that they may have vegetables all winter long. "This week our cows are arriving and we are able to give the children
and the very -old, who have een rdernourished so long, the milk that, they need. Yesterday we went over to see one of our families of . eleven and a happier crowd you never saw. They are all being moved into new quarters, while their own two rooms are being mended and cleaned so that the rain shall no longer come down on the old grandmother's bed, and the woman who has been sleeping on a table turned upside down feels herself in a palace with a real bed all to herself. Rebuilding Ruins "We are to have a real party at St. Paul au Bois this week. Three of
our families are moving into movable houses that have been secured from the government and we have been promised a first meal with them. They are a wonderful people over here, and are only longing to have this shelter so that they may be in condition to set to work and try and build up their own ruins and so face life again. Meanwhile some of them have been walking over from neighboring villages every day a matter of five or six miles to work in their own gardens, and dig around the trunks of their old fruit trees so wantonly destroyed. You ran think what it means to them to have the tools we are able to give
them and what they nink of America, which stands behind all this. "It is all in a day's work, but one's
heart Is torn as one realizes how long the path ahead must be. It is only by living in daily intercourse with the people that we learn to realize that it Is not only on the material side that
their need is so great. The strain
has been so great and so terrific that
their power of resistance has weaken
ed and they need more to be built up
morally than physically. They all want, in turn to go over the story of
this past terrible three years.
TO CARE FOR ORPHANS
NEW YORK, Dec. 11 The Canad
ian Club, of this city, Is making plana
to induce New York men and women
to adopt children who lost , their par
ents in the Halifax disaster, it was an
nounced today by the president, Thon as D. Neelands.
When Credit Is Due. "A good-natured man," said Uncle Eben, "ain't entitled to much credit If
he's good natured only jes because he
kin take life easy an' not care what happens."
Cures Colds in Great Britain LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE tablets remove the cause. E. W. GROVE'S
signature on box. 30c.
Si
Col. Alipo Gama. Brazil's military commission to the
United States is headed by Col. Alipo Gama. The photograph was taken on shipboard when the commission arrived at "An Atlantic Port."
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
Tuberculosis Visitors, Supported by Red Cross Seals, Working to Keep Soldiers' Families Well. The borne fight being waged in Amer
ica to sapply our soldiers with food and ammunition and conserve natural and human resources la as important as the fight in the trenches. Tbe soldier will give tbe laat drop of his blood in vain
if tbe people at home are not with him
Id order to back him to the limit they, too, must be in fighting trim, strong and
efficient.
One of tbe big questions to-day is hew
to make and keep the country one hundred
per cent efficient. Health experts main
tain that no community can render its most effective war service If it is nnder-
mined by disease. Thej believe that in
tensive home work among the sick and near lick will go far toward helping oa to
win the war. For this reason tbe National Assoela
tion for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis is laying special stress on the need of visiting nurses to go into tbe people's homes and teach them how to
live healthful lives. It asserts that the nurses' work will react on the community
and have ita effect on the men in tbe
trenches. As an example of what a visiting tuber
culosis nurse may mean to an -American
soldier In France, the association cites a
case which has come to its attention since Pershice's arcnv arrived in France. One
of the enlisted men left behind him a
young wife in the incipient stages f tuberculosis. Before he left she was put in the care of the local anti-tuberculosis association. A nurse made daily visits,
giving her Instructions and helping her to take the "cure." THe nurse has never
lost track of the wife since her husband
left She makes weekly reports to
relative, who in turn writes to the man in the trenches telling him of bis wife's
improvement.
The association a ks this question : "How do yoo suppose these letters react upon the man in Pershing's army? Don't
you Imagine they help to fire him witli
fighting seal and enable him to stand
loyally by the task he has undertaken?
To-day the visiting nurse shares responsibility with the war nurse. Though her duty is at home, she is just as much concerned in winning the war as the Red Cross nurse becauso-she is keeping the homes of our fighters safe. The tuberculosis nurse has also an immediate war task of caring for the men who hare been rejected from the army or returned from cantonments on account of tuberculosis. It is estimated that there will be at least 200.000 of these among the 10,000,000 registered for draft. This condition gives an added teason why there should be more tinrses. The nurse in her home work not only
. i 1 rl J i
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Re. 1. A Country Home Where the Nurse la Needed. No. 2. A Welcome Guest in City Tenements.
detects the disease but prevents its spread, conserving in two way the human resources of tbe community. She instructs those who have it in their own care end ho tells those 'who have not been infected how to nvoid Infection. "Christmas is a timely season," says a statement sent out by the association, "in which to call attention to the need of more visiting tuberculosis nurses, because it is within the power of every man. woman and child to help to secure them now. "The sale of Red Cross Christmas seals
gives this opportunity. Ninety per cent of the proceeds of the sale is left for the use of the community and State in which it is raised to help carry oa its antituberculosis work. If the community needs a nurse the funds can be used te engage one. She can show It what intensive care of the sick in their own homes really means and lay tbe foundation for a movement for better municipal, county and State nursing care of tuberculosis patients. In this way every one who buys a Red Crops seal helps te add te the army of home defenders."
'THE KING'S OWN" CAPTURE ST. ANDHEWS-BY-THE-SEA
A New and Popular Style
EAST AFRICA, LAST PR0VNCE OF TEUTONS, IS CLEARED OF GERMANS
I? id? X,
BRITISH
EAST ATKl5J? 111 I I q rsr Arrets a pH
The last of Germany's vast colonial possessions which included more than a million square miles at the beginning of the war, has been taken away from her. The allies have swept East Africa clear of Germans after a campaign which began back In 19 15. German East Africa had a populaion of more than eight million and Its area Is 364,000 square miles. 1 urltish forces In November captured Sinbas and Newala, taking 293 Germans and 3,400 natives. 2 The retreat of the Germans i s cut off by Belgian and Portugese troops at the south.
2162 Ladies' Two-Piece Morning or House Dress (with Sleeve in Either of Two Lengths). Percale, seersucker, lawn, linen, crepe, silk, washable satin, flannelette, challle and cashmere may be used for this model. The skirt measures about 2 yards at the foot. The Pattern is cut In 7 sizes: 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust measure. It requires for a 38-inch size, 5 yards of 3C-inch material.
A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents in silver or stamps.
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Address Pattern Department, Palladium.
Algonquin
HcmLL..
St. Andrews-bj-the-Sea on
maquoddy Bay! Doesn't that sound allurinp with its sutrcstion of old Scotland and the America of the Redskins? To the initiated thousands this hyphenated cognomen prsells "Joyful Living." Bountiful
Nature, supplemented by inventive
Man, provides measures m varied abundance for those who seek rest or amusement in Canada's niost pcnular Atlantic resort. The blue waters of the bay offer splendid boating and sea bathinp, two sports indulged in to the full by many of the visitors. Tho country about St. Andrews-by-thc-Sea is ribboned by charminp walks and drives; he who follows them -may choose whether he will stroll, hold the reins over a pair of hiffh-stepping roadsters, or roll on tho cushions of a twentieth century Mercury. One of the unusual sport attractions is a Bowling Green. Enthusiastic bowlers and Interested spectators may be found upon it at all hours of tho day or nijjht. Being electrically lighted, the sport need not cease with the waning of the daylight. Golf, however, is far and away The Game at St. Andrews-by-the-Sea. The links are famous far and wide. Hither at one time or another, come all golf celebrities for St. Andrews does not draw its clientele j from Canada's smart set alone. It numbers amonj? its puests society , leaders from every American city, j In this Newport of Cunnda you will i
nnd more than a few huh govern
Coven Hoven, asummer Cottage op the smart set
...
r
SEA BATHING AT St.Andrews -by-the-Sea.
t it If v- I" -It
VSs
.-- x:iy
Uiu- w
landahs of the Algonquin Hotel-r-th
eastermost of . that chain of fin hostelries by which the Canadian Pacific Railway has linked the Atlantic -and Pacific coasts present, a gay scene every- afternoon when the , trolfers. bowlers, bathers, sailor.
ling of men in uniform military and , to distract the tedium of inaction by -motorists, bridge-players, knitters naval these days. They are; almost j following the little white ball over ; and the purely decorative, gather for to. a man. devotees of The Game, i that wondrous course laid out on ! that . time-honored, almost religious. Many a brave soldier who has seen (Joe's Point overlooking the spark- ceremonial, afternoon tea. Then one hard service overseas and is now onllmg waters that lap tnese western realizes, to-what-an extent oeiety furloutrh recuperating, finds mental j sands and then slip back into the I has eone into khaki, for uniforms ,
rest and physical stimulation in a go great sea to some day wash the j predominate and add a new note of . -over the course, while the chaps who sands of far-awav France. . t distinction to that alwavs smart
mental officials and a heavy sprink-1 are awaiting sailing orders, are glad ! The wide, sea-breeze swept ver-i assemblage.
