Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 216, 23 July 1918 — Page 6
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3 .PAGE SIX THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGBAM. TUESDAY, JULY 23, 1918.
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by
Palladium Printing Co.
Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Streets
Entered at tb Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, as Se
ond Class Mail Matter.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Presa In exclusively entitled to the use tor republication of all news dispatches credited to It or aot otherwise credited In this paper and aso the local aews published herein. All rlfbts of republication of spetai dispatcher hereUi are also reserved.
Lack of Teaching Force ! """" V
United States Commissioner of Education P. .P. Claxton is calling on retired school teachers to get back into the harness for the duration of
the war. He bases his appeal on the withdrawal of thousands of men and women from the educational system for war service and for enrollment in industries that pay higher salaries. It takes no argument to convince a man that the backbone of every nation is its educational system. If that becomes inefficient and flabby, the growing generation is made up of spineless and incompetent men and women. That fact is axiomatic. And yet, how can the nation expect strong and highly trained men and women to enter the profession of teaching if the average salary of .740,000 teachers in the rural schools, for instance, is only $600 annually? We cannot expect men and women to spend money and years of preparation for enrollment in a profession that doesn't pay a living wage. The profession of teaching has made tremendous strides in recent years. Teachers are compelled to spend years at schools and colleges, spending their own money for their education before they are permitted to enter a classroom. If the annual compensation of a man and woman,
after spending hundreds of dollars for an educa
tion is only $600 annually, you cannot expect
thousands of them to rush into the profession. Vie
its no use to prate about the idealism of
teaching school or the priceless privilege of training the youth, for that does not pay a board bill or enable a teacher to lay aside enough money to take care of her in old age. The only remedy is a salary sufficiently high to make it worth while for ambitious men and women to enter the profession. Their work is a noble one. One of the highest in the state. Commensurate with the nobility and importance of the work should be their pay. It is to be regreted that many of them are entering other vocations at a time when the patriotic instruction of the youth is so imperatively necessary. The re-adjustment of the educational field to war conditions is fraught with grave consequences if its high standard is not maintained. The Roosevelt Family The casualty lists are becoming longer. Our boys are "going west" in increasingly larger numbers and all over the land mothers are mourning the loss of their sons. The Roosevelt family last week lost a son who died a hero's death combatting superior German
forces in the air. His parents met the loss calmly and without outcry. Not that heartache and sadness were absent, for their son was dear to them, priceless, beyond all human recompense. Their whole fortune would have been spent trying to save his life, had that been possible. But when the Roosevelt sons entered the service tteir parents, like thousands of others, dedicated them to th cause of human liberty. They knew that not every one of the boys would come home safe and sound. They steeled themselves for the news that would bring sadness to their home. And when it came, they met it with fortitude, deeming it an honor to be the parents of
a boy in whose veins was no slacker's or coward's blood. Young Roosevelt died in the service I
of his country, truly, a noble death. And so it was accepted by his parents.
We have heard few outcries about the loss of
our brave boys over there. The country as a whole is bearing the loss of human life bravely
and in the high spirit of sacrifice. The attitude of the Roosevelt family is typical of thousands of
homes that are not so prominent and well known.
In the humblest cottage of this nation, brave mothers are accepting the news of the death of their sons with Spartan composure.
Great victories have been won by the Franco-
American troops in the last hours. Greater victories still are being won by mothers and fathers
on this side of the Atlantic who are fighting
down their natural inclination to grieve unduly over the loss of their sons and exulting in the knowledge that their brave boys went to death shouting "Victory!"
For the parents who are victorious in finding
the right solace for their grief in the knowledge
that the boys went to death for a noble cause,
we have the highest regard and praise. They have won a victory that is great. And every right thinking man and woman will applaud such parents.
Now, if ever in the history of our nation.
must we keep on smiling in the face of heaw
losses. Now is the time to re-inforce our fighting
spirit at home with grim determination not to
lose courage when the casualty lists grow lanrer,
Now is the time for fathers and mothers, broth
ers and sisters, to prove that they are Americans in fact and not in theory only. The Malvy Trial Vrom the Chicago Tribune. THE trial of Malvy, the former French minister of the interior, indicates how narrowly France escaped demoralization through German influences. If Malvy was not himself pro-German, there seems to be no lack of evidence that he associated with men who were seeking to betray France, and that he went out of his way to protect them from prosecution. Of these men, Duval, one of the Bonnet Rouge crowd, has recently been executed. , The very fact, however, that the present ministry is bringing the "defeatists" to justice must be encouraging to all who wish to see the war pushed to a successful conclusion. France has borne the brunt of the war for four years; her territory has been fought over and devastated, yet today she stands more firmly than ever against defeatist propaganda. It is expected that the government will ultimately proceed against Caillaux himself, although certain elements in other allied nations have professed a measure of sympathy for his pacifist efforts.
NO TIME FOR OPTIMISM
Moment
We are now assured that "emuslliged" milk, selling at 9 cents a quart. Is ten times as pure as the certified kind. It is claimed for this reconstructed
rnllk that as much food value is con
tained in one quart as In five and a half pounds of flounder costing 89 cents, or eleven ounces of beef costing 30 cents, or six pounds of asparagus costing $1.06. "Erauslliged milk" is a process fluid by which powdered milk is returned to a liquid state and delivered through a pump. But why mention the pump ,and start the century-old argument going again? Dear Sir What is TXT? READER. TNT is trinitrotoloul. Now you kaow what TNT is. Constructive criticism is your own
line of thought which, if offered by somebody else would be called ordinary faultfinding. STATISTICS According to government report, the cartridge output in the United States Js 27.000,000 a day.
There are 1,000,000 of our boys over
there.
This gives them each twenty-seven
shots a day, if they all shoot.
And there isn't an American living who can't hit something in twuty-
eeven shots.
facturlng establishment. He lived In a hall room in a modest boarding house and ate his luncheons in a quick-lunch restaurant. "There's no chance for adventure here in a great city," he used to say as he sat on the front steps evenings. Then all in the same week a burglar took $16 from his trousers pocket, an ammonia tank blew up in his office building, he was caught in a subway wreck, he was arrested by a mistake for a pickpocket and he was run down by an automobile on his way home from work, and he married the nurse who helped set his broken arm.
1 Masonic Calendar
REGISTRATION IS CLOSED
OXFORD, O., July 23. Dr. W. W. Boyd, president of the Western College for Women, today announced that the registration of students for the coming year, beginning September 15, has been closed. Every room in both halls has been engaged. Inquiries for accommodations are still being received, but are being turned down. The
enrollment this year will be 260 ininstead of 250 as was at first intended.
(From the New York Times) No sooner does General Foch begin a smashing atack in the Soissons sector and take prisoners and guns with the co-operation of hard-hitting American divisions than his movement Is welcomed by our impressionable optomists as the beginning of the end for Germany. The note of elation arises to a cresendo of triumphant faith in victory. It is eaid thai the French strategist has regained the inititative; that he will not lose It again; that Paris, Amiens and the Channel ports are safe now; and that with a million American troops In the line the Germans will soon be driven from French territory. It is unfortunate that a gleam of success turns the heads of many of our Deonle so.
and that they see in It the growing dawn of victory and the sunburst of peace. The enemy is less imaginative; whatever his successes are, whatever advantage he obtains, he con
tinues to plan a military triumph in the west in the east be considers that he has won the war. No optimism could be more foolish than the auto-Intoxication of the Americans and their allies when a German thrust is parried, a "drive" checked or stopped, in Flanders, Picardy, or the Champagne. There is reason for elation when General Foch turns on the foe and throws him back with heavy casualties and accumulating losses, as he has done in this, his first real offensive since he assumed the command of the allied forces on the western front; nevertheless, his success should not be hailed as an assurance that the worst is over, and that henceforth the Germans will have to fight a defensive camnaism that
must end in defeat and disaster. The road to victory will be long and toilsome, however brilliant the strategy of General Foch. however valiantly the allied troops acquit themselves in the field. As that master of war has said, this is a struggle between peoples as well as between armies. It might be just as fatal for the people of the allied nations to be victims of overconfidence as for their armies to suffer from it. There is little danger of the I
latter; the allied soldiers know the foe, they do not make the mistake of underestimating his genius for war,
his fighting ability. But there is a real danger that the allied peoples, and particularly the Americans, will be deceived by over-confidence to the point of relaxing their energies when the situation calls for a supreme effort, if a victory is to be won and a democratic peace secured. In a homely phrase winning a round and that is just what General Foch has done in the Soissons sector1 may be, and generally is, a very different thing from winning a fight. In this war Germany has won most of the rounds so far and shows few, if any signs of waning skill and strength in the field. It was never more true that the Allies need all the resources they can command to end the war in their favor. As many ships, as many airplanes, as much artillery and ammunitionas can be constructed and manufactured, and as quickly as possible, is the urgent, the imperative need of a crisis which was never more acute. And as for troops, too many of them cannot be organized and trained, not two millions, but twice two millions or more. We are speaking of America's
contribution our allies are very near
the end of their resources in man power.
HOME FROM WAR ZONE.
It cannot be repeated too often that Germany designs to recruit a vast army in Russia, to match every American soldier with a coerced or corrput-
ible Russian, Commissions have beep offered veterans of the late Russian
forces, many of whom are of German
blood. Starvation will be the recruit
ing officer in many cases. There is
no doubt that Germany can raise a
large army In her new and suzerain provinces. But it can not be done,
or it should not be done, as expedit
iously as America can put freemen in
the field fully equipped and ardent for
victory. There is indisputably a Russian menace in the German program. This consideration alone should put Americans on their ' guard and give them pause when they huzza for a minor success, which may be temporary and will not lead to victory unless our people as well as our soldiers in the field, and our allies, combatants and noncombatants, dismiss insidious ODtimism and bmr themselves for a
long and desperate struggle. The wan
can surely be won with our enormous resources in man power and material, but not unless we prepare for the ordeal confronting us and give of our best.
MILLIONS WASTED IN AIRCRAFT WORK
WASHINGTON, July 23. Waste of millions of dollars in experimenting with the English Britol and other types of airplanes will be reported to congress by the senate military subcommittee investigating aircraft questions, it was announced. The report is now being drafted. Other findings will be that 1,200 training planes costing $6,000,000 recently were junked because they were regarded as too dangerous for use; that several aviators had been killed in using this type; and that amateurs in the engineering end of the administrative section have contributed to the delay in construction. Responsibility for part of the pro
duction delay was placed by committeemen on the former aircraft board, but they said that with the work now under the direction of John D. Ryan, director general of production, and Major General Kenly, the prospects for the future were much improved. All members of the committee were agreed that the Liberty motor is a complete success.
EATON. O.. July 23. Mrs. A. S. Chez, a local woman, has arrived home from Europe, where, with her husband, Bhe was engaged in Y. M. C. A. work. The trip from the point in Europe where 6he was located to the United States " required several months' time. Her husband hemained in Europe to continue his work.
KARNS FUNERAL MONDAY,
EATON, O., July 23. Funeral services for Mrs. Margaret Karns, 79 years old, were held Monday afternoon at the chapel at Mound Hill cemetery, following her death Saturday at the county infirmary. She is survived by several sons.
Womani's iVHoirniiiDg Sickness;? POOR WOMAN, she ia called upon to suffer and carry S!0,RJ5L, than her share of human ills, but the one that seems tobejr moBt trying and unfair of all is the sickness that comes to her' at the time of life when she should be at her beet when every ounce of her strength ehould be for the carrying ont of thai act v of Nature that makes her bring a new life into the world. MANY WOMEN SUFFERawfuttyterribly during thi time with a stomach sickness. It is the kind that never can be told in words the morning sickness of a woman.
Before Baby Comes
It is one of the most trying more so because it is so hard
tests of human endurance, and all the to control.
Few remedies can be depended upon to giva more or less temporary relief. 8o many favorable reports have come to ns from those whs have used EAXONIO during this time that it is with the greatest satis- ' taction we say to ALL SUFFERERS irom this peculiar woman's sickness of the stomach. "DO TRY KATONIO give it a tair inai, and ! GET THE HELP we so confidently teei sure you wiU get.'' f The results have ben so uniformiy good wonderfu'. in many cases that we 6ay to vou. and gladly do we e&y it. tbai any poor woman sufferer who obtains a package of EATONIC from any druggist in tbia city cr drug stores anywhere and uses it according to the einipie directions if it Jails to do the good and give the- neip tha'i it should ail sbe has to do is to return it to the druggist wbom you know and can trust and the money will be cheerfully refunded, temember only costs a penny or two a day to use ArUMC. SO WE SAYDo not ever suffer again
'ATONIC
FOB YOUR STOMACH'S SAKE)
to
Be Careful in Using Soap on Your Hair
Tuesday, July 23. Richmond Lodge No. 196, F. and A. M. Called meeting; worn in Master Mason degree. Wednesday, July 24. Webb Lodge, No. 24, F. and A. M. Called meeting; work in Entered Apprentice degree. Friday, July 2C. King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4. R. A. M. Called meeting; work in Mark Master degree. Friday, July 26. Loyal Chapter No. 49, O. E. S. Will give a picnic at Glen Miller park, Friday afternoon.
So long there is a build.
as there is a dollar left, foundation upon which to
LIVES 200 YEARS! For more than 200 years, Haarlem i)IJ. the famous national remedy of Holland, has been recognized as an Infallible relief from all forma of kidney and bladder disorders. Its very age is proof that It must have unusual merit. If you are troubled with pains or aches in the back, feel tired in the morning, headache, indigestion, insomnia, painful or too frequent passage of urine, irritation or stone in the bladder, you will almost certainly find quick relief in GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules. This Is the good old remedy that has stood the test for hundreds of years, prepared In the proper- quantity and convenient form to take. It is imported direct from
Holland laboratories, and you can get it at any drug store. Your money promptly refunded If it does not relieve you. But be sure to get the genuine GOLD MEDAL brand. In boxes, three sizes. Adv.
TELLS HOW TO GET BACK OLD TIME AMBITION Discoverer instructs druggists everywhere not to take a cent of anyone's money unless Bio-feren doubles energy, vigor and nerve force in two weeks.
7 A DAY FOR 7 DAYS
Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali, which is very injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair orittle. The best thing to use Is just plain mulsified cocoanut oil, for it is pure and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap and beats the most expensive soaps or anything else ail to pieces. You can get this at any drug store, and a few ounces will last the whole family for
months. Simply moisten tha hair with water and rub it in, about a teaspoonful is all that is required. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, cleanses thoroughly and rinses out easily. The hair dries quickly and evenly and is soft, fre6h looking, bright, fluffy, wavy, and easy to handle. Besides, it loosens and takes out every particle of dust, dirt and dandruff. Adv.
Button Holes Made, 4 cents each. Hemstitching and picot edge work, 10 cents a yard. FIobs stitching in design work.
Lacey's Sewing Machine Store
9 South 7th Street
Phone 1756
Make Washday a PleasureNo more blue Mondays by using MAGIC MARVEL For sale by Conkey Drug Co. and all Grocers D. W. Walters, 107 S. 9th, Mfgr.
July Investors Should Know About Dollinss' Securities 7 Tax Exempt and Sound Dollings Service Offers Investigation and Supervision and means SAFETY and SATISFIED CUSTOMERS. THE R. L DOLLINGS COMPANY E. M. HAAS, Wayne County Manager Richmon'd, Ind., Telephones 1310-2994 INDIANAPOLIS PHILADELPHIA PITTSBURGH COLUMBUS
DinnerStomes
A plumber and a painter were worklng in the same house. The painter arrived late and the plumber said to
him, "Vou re late this morning." , "Yes." said the painter, "I had to stop and have my hair cut." "You didn't do it on your employer's time, did you?" said the plumber. "Sure. I did." said the painter; "it grew on his time." He was a bookkeeper In a big manu-
Skin Sufferers You will i'Ch with relief at the firat tnasio touch of D. D. D., the oothint' wiuh of oili. Many are grateful for Mils advice. You vtll b ton. Try D. D. D. today. e. We and i.oo.
Lift Off Corns! "Freezone" is Magic! Lift any Corn or Callus right off with fingers No pain!
Any man or woman who finds that they are going backward, are not as etrong as they used to be, have lost confidence, in their ability to aceom pllsh things, are nervous and run down should take two Bio-feren tablets after
each meal and one at bedtime. Seven a riav for seven davs.
Then take one after each meal until
the BUDDly is exhausted.
Then If your nervousness Is riot gone. If you do not feel twice as strong and energetic as before, if your sluggish disposition has not been changed to a vigorous active one, take back the empty package and your money will be
returned witnout comment.
No matter what excesses, worry
overworn too mucn tobacco or alcohol have weakened your body and
wrecked your nerves, any druggist anywhere Is authorized to refund your
money on request u iiio-leren. the mighty upbullder of blood, muscle and brain does not do Just what ia claimed
lor it.
Note to Physicians There la no secret about the formula of Bio-feren. It is printed on every package. Here it
is: Lecithin: Calcium Glycerophos
phate; Iron Peptonate; Manganese Peptonate: Ext. Nux Vomica; Powd. Gen
tian; Phenoipntaaleln; Olearesia capsicum; Kola.
Tm
Ih-op a little Freezone on an aching orn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then you lift it right out. It (Jocwi't hurt one bit. Yea, magict .Why wtitt Youf druggist sells
tiny bottle of Freezone for a few cents, sufficient to rid your feet of every hard corn, soft corn, r corn between, the toes, and calluses, without soreness or irritatiost Jry it! Mi humbug t
Ohmi pi
Keeps Teeth Clean and Gums Healthy
Specially indicated for treatment of
Soft, Spongy and Bleeding Gums. ' ' All Dreigists and Teilet Counters.
JJ EXCEPT HEALTH
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The Opening Day Of Our Semi-Ann ual
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Look for the Ad in Tomorrow's
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