Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 225, 2 August 1918 — Page 6
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 1918. J
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Seo ond Class Mail Matter. MRMBBIt OP TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS Th Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the us for republication of'all news dispatches credited to It o BOt otherwise credited In this paper and also the local Mews published herein. All rlfhts of republication of special dispatches herein arc als reserved. The Day Nursery Appeal The ways and means committee of the day nursery has hit upon an excellent plan to simplify the collection of waste paper, rags and junk of all kinds, the sale of which supplies funds for the work. The work of collecting this material in one day proved both irksome and unsatisfactory because of the many homes that had to be visited in so short a time. The new plan is simplicity itself. All the housewife need do, is step to the telephone, call Mr. Jaffe, who will give her coupons in payment for the junk. As. he has paid for the coupons, the transaction is ended. Both the housewife and the Day Nursery are relieved of considerable worry and bother. It is to be hoped that, every housewife will put the plan into execution at once. Mr. Jaffe is willing to answer calls with dispatch, and the day nursery is anxious to obtain the money that will flow into its treasury. The good work accomplished by the day nursery needs no advertisement. It is giving relief and assistance in a practical way that helps both the children and the mothers who are forced to vork for a living.
Moment
Saving Only His Meal Ticket. The following want ad has been discovered in a Michigan paper: "Owing to reduced circumBtances, hard times and general disposition, I will on July 21, sell everything on my farm but my wife the school teacher. J. A. HAMMERESLEY Have you noticed the chorus men since the "work-or-fight" thing went Into effect? A chorus man is never a work of art, but this summer they are the limit. Saw one the other night who will never be fifty-six years old again. The electric fan is certainly the four-leaf clover of good luck these days.
Think how much it from Berlin to Paris.
costs to get
How to Convert Your Bonds The Treasury Department has submitted the following: Bonds of the First and Second Liberty Loans may now and until November 9, 1918, be converted into 414 bonds. Eonds delivered upon conversion will have the same maturity as the bonds surrendered. In all other respects they will be identical with the bonds of the Third Liberty Loan. This conversion may be effected through the subscriber's bank. Holders of 4 bonds of the First Liberty Loan Converted, presenting them for conversion on or before November 9, 1918, will receive in exchange, without an adjustment of interest, 44 Gold Bonds of 1927-42, bearing interest at the increased rate from May 15, 1918. Holders of Coupon bonds may receive at their option either Coupon bonds or Registered bonds ; but Registered bonds only willv be delivered upon conversion of Registered bonds, and such bonds will be registered only in the same name as the bonds surrendered for conversion. When Registered bonds are presented for conversion, they should be assigned to "The Secretary of the Treasury for Conversion," on the form appearing on the backs of registered bonds. Such assignments, however, need not be witnessed. AH unmatured coupons must be attached to the bonds presented for conversion, and all matured coupons must be detached. Holders of 3 13 bonds of the First Liberty Loan, presenting them for conversion on or before November 9, 1918, will receive in exchange 414 Gold Bonds of 1932-47, bearing interest at the increased rate from June 15, 1918, but such holders must pay the United States government accrued interest at the rate of 34 of 1 per annum from June 15, 1918 to the date of conversion. The conversion privilege on 4 bonds of both the First and Second Liberty Loans expires on November 9, 1918, and they cannot be converted into subsequent issues of United States bonds which might come out at a higher rate. Therefore, holders of 4 Liberty Loan bonds should in every case present them for conversion. By converting these bonds they will not only receive U of 1 additional interest, but after the conversion period has expired (November 9, 1918) there will undoubtedly be several points' difference in the market price of the 4 and 414 bonds.
A TEST. King George expressed a modest wish, To try some strictly Yankee dish. They gave him buckwheats, piping hot He ate-a stack right on the spot. He loved them well and asked for more, Now he's pro-Yankee to the core. He's strong for flapjacks, so they say, And he will eat them every day. If he keeps up that buckwheat thing Throughout the summer, He's some! king There has been so much excitement over the war that everybody is away behind in his fly swatting this season.
"What we will get out of Russia," J
That this plea should find some encouragement among avowed pacifists and cowards is not surprising. No nation is free of spineless and brainless citizens who fear fighting an issue out to a conclusion. Loyalty to the cause of the Allies demands that we stand firm against every overture that would let the Berlin gang of murderers escape punishment for their deeds. They ruthlessly set aside all the laws of God and men to humiliate their enemies, and now when the tide is turning against these offenders, the Allies would be guilty of outrageous folly if they accepted Germany's promises to be good hereafter. Richard H. Edmonds, editor of the Manufacturers Record, takes the following position, in which every American must concur: "Germany, the blackest criminal in the world's
history, will, through every influence which it! why register disgust over the incan exert in this and every other country, seek I creains cost of traveling in this
peace wnenever its military leaders una tnat iney are doomed. We shall have peace talk from some weak-minded ministers of the Gospel, but, thank God! their number is few. We shall have peace talk , from many papers some moved by proGerman influence, some by sickly neurotic sentiment against punishment of crime and wherever pro-German deviltry can carry on its work we may rest assured it will be done, for many men, claiming the livery of Heaven, will be engaged in the work of the devil. "Many will seek to create an impression that Germany must not be punished and that its people are different from its military leaders,
when every 'intelligent man who has studied the
situation now knows that the people and the military leaders are one and the same in the support of this war. "The unspeakable individual crimes which marked the movement of the German army through Belgium and France, crimes which blacken the pages of human history as they were never blackened in the past; crimes, to recount which Secretary Lansing recently said 'would sicken a tiger,' were not committed individually by the Kaiser or the military leaders, but by the people themselves in the armies of Germany, encouraged thereto by the military leaders as a part of Germany's Campaign of Frightf ulness. These
people must be made to realize that sin must be
punished and that crime must be atoned for, or else the blood of the millions of soldiers who have died will have been shed in vain, and the brokenhearted women, who have suffered as no other women in all human history, will go unavenged. "The great danger which faces this country today is that there will be a persistent effort to bring about a premature peace; a peace without punishment, which, if ever made, would be a deep stain on the honor and chivalry of this Nation. "The Nation which condones international crime is akin to the criminal, as the individual who condones crime becomes in effect a participator in the immorality of the criminal. "It behooves every honest-hearted man and woman in this country to make certain that neither in the pulpit nor in the press nor in private conversation shall there be the lightest word said in favor of peace until that peace is written in Berlin, after the criminals have paid the full measure of penalty for their crimes. " 'On to Berlin !' should be the unceasing demand of every honest-hearted man and woman, and he who does not take that view of the situation is false to all honor and false to all civilization, it matters not who he may be, or what his position in life."
begins a sentence in von Hertling'a speech. Move to amend by striking out the word "What." The world Is about to become one vast Greenwich Tillage. Already the women of England are bobbing their hair, and, of course, tho thing will spread. Long hair for women is rapidly going out of tyle on account of the shortage of hairpins. The ladies will not miss them so much In the matter of holding up their hair. This is the least important function the hairpin performs. A woman uses a hairpin for 6,463 different purposes from fixing automobile engines to making the war garden. With a hairpin and a pair of shears she can mend anything from a balky alarm clock to an electric cream separator. And what is the husband going to do when his pipe clogs up? Really, it is a serious matter, don't you know?
Government reports the cartridge output to be 27,000,(X)0 a day. There are 1,000,000,000 of our over there now. That gives them each twenty-seven shots a day. There isn't an American living who can't hit something In twenty-seven shots.
Advertising is the science of being believed.
Wiffiams'Kidney and Liver Pffls Have you overworked your nerrcras 6ystem and caused trouble with your kidneys and liver? Have you pains in loius, eiiie and back? Have you a flabby appearance of the face and under the eyes? If so, use WILLIAMS' KIDNEY AND LIVER PILLS. For sale by all druggists. Price 60 cents. WILLIAMS MFG. CO, Props, Cleveland, Ohio For Sale by Con key Irus Co.
Do This After Yom M Hot Weather "Out of Fix" Stomachs Easily Put Right
vy'tiea tec weather ccmes, stomach ana ccx usuries begin, tttrcn?, eoiinj. BtnTn .-b .m weil aa weai orna a?B cas"" ul 3 . ty tie barmru
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to; wsa h . . er nitre's iceLcx. ,s pene- hot weataer t reeds taa pesoncua perm- Uiai cause tXomiiii3 pci3cn in aJ. i'ja many .or ma. Every one knows that tha aiter-cai-in; nausea teichini?, ttai wretched, bai3il "laJQpy" l3'-lini ecur -tcm-aca tearto ira, rood rcr atm?, znd ocatrr icnxu x indisrastlo.! ana dyspepsia are lar mere "irsquent auiln txi J w?atcer. ii is iha time when yea tu V2 to guard ccnsfc-nily solnsi an upset stoJnzca and tto many l!s thai an? a. ways api to i-Jcw. 'ien cgain va fc4r3 tn.3 Trcr'd a war to win w3a tn3 chanj ct ci i a d extra wa'i waica mans -.V3 muse sul car ra3 v guard cur ttcmaciiB this yeartee;? ourse.ved fit and fine. A marveirc3 reaei and trsvsntion haJ teen lound :cr stcmach cufferers. waiin mai3s it Fossitle icr vu to eat ta tnins you li&e tesi w.tncui a
eina-la nnnle&pant thouehb o?
Tablets, fooa
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mav roiiow.
icatinz ouick acting and absolutely
tanress have already proven an unto id blessing to thousands ot people. Ona cr two EATCNIC Tablet after meaid work wonders. They eweeten and parry the stomach by neitraliuig tos trouble-making acids and gases and ttcp tee griping pains ot indigealicn and other etomacn and bowel albturcancea. And tae best part of ft Is yon can teycurcwn.-udge. Just try EATON73. Let your cwn stomacn tel. you Lo truth, ii you are not pleased then t3y don't cost you one penny tru??ist6 are amazed at the aston shia? reoorta from EATON IO users, w bave lound EATONIO a quick. wd oerru. reliet tor stomacn ailment. So we tell you to get a large box of EXONIC from your druggist, whom you know and can trust and then U LA'iCKIJ le cot suited to your casei ietu-D X to your drufrtrta; w once and re) tack year money That's a fair squart cfr-u Ev-.ry person fe urged to make tin iea your own stomach tt-l' you (M ttUo. iso a out mame EAXOMC today.
OPTOMETRIC SERVICE JENKINS, Optometrist Darning Makes the Lenses and Makes Them Right. 726 Main Street
PALLADIUM WANT ADS BRING RESULTS
Peace Without Punishment German leaders, realizing that they cannot win the war on the field of battle, are seeking victory through a peace by negotiation. The only motive for their tactics is an effort to escape punishment for their iniquity. To bring about peace by negotiation, German leaders are trying to convince the people of the allied nations that now is an excellent time to cease hostilities.
The One Certainty
From the Saturday Evening Tost.
tt VE had only one letter from him," she said, "and
I that was four weeks ago. I know the mails are slow; but it seems a good while to wait. He had a little cold the day he was here before he sailed. He used to have some trouble with bronchitis the year he entered high school. How long do you think it will last?" It is a hard question because the answer is hard. But we see no reason to change an original conviction that there will be no peace until Germany experiences a change of heart. Never, to an outsider, has the military party seemed more completely in control of that country than at this writing. The energy that engages seven million Allied soldiers in France, that busily intrigues in Russia and Finland looks far from spent. However scarce food may be, there are still plenty of p.uns and men to use them. Incipient revolutions may bubble up in Austria-Hungary, but they seem as helpless to reach a culmination as everything else in Austria-Hungary Is. From that huge, lumbering incompetence nobody is warranted in expecting anything of a conclusive sort. This is unpalatable to millions of American households, for which every added month of war means an extended hazard of a member's life and limbs; but it is idle to speculate on when the war will end. It may end as swiftly and unexpectedly as it began. But there is only one certainty on1yN one idea really worth holding namely, that it shall end right.
DinnerStories
"I want you to be sure, Eliza, that you use the thermometer to see that the water Is the right temperature when you give the baby his bath." naid Mrs. Blinks to her nurse girl. "Land sakes!" replied Eliza cherfully. "I don't need a thermometer. If the baby turns red I know the water's too hot, and if he turns blue I know It's too cold and there you are!" Old Caesar thought he knew something about the tented field, having followed his master as body servant through the war between the states, but Camp Jackson was a revelation to him. "Yer mean, Maus' Jeems," he crossexamined his young maussa, "dat dese
young gem'n can't drink nothin' strongcr'n spring water?" "That's all." "And no frolickin' wid de gals?" "None whatever."
, "An" no swearin' at de mules?' "Against regulations." "Lor1, Maus' Jeems, disher ainJ camp. Disher's a camp meetin'
t no
E5est toy
The
Bowels
sterna
Act upon the liver in such a manner so as to obtain the maximum benefits nfant
and active laxative without
after effects, and tend tn
healthy bowel movement. Gonstissatson
is readily relieved by VEGETINE LAXATIVE TaRSFTfS
as their action imnnin, th mr.PCTinv i
of bile which in turn actVi T a ieJ laxat i r'KmMV'vauaMwm Vour Druggist Will Supply You
President Wilson Says: "The work the chantauqaa is doing has not lost importance because of the war, but rather, has gained new opportunities for service. Let me express the hope that the people will not fail in the support of a patriotic institution that may be said to be an integral part of the national defense"
Richmond.
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Aug. 18 to Sept. 1, 1918 Is the Greatest Chautauqua in the Central States 15 Big Days 1800 Season Tickets $1.50 Each 15 Big Days Look at this List of. Great Talent: Bishop Francis J. McConnel, D. D., L. L. D., Aug. 1 8. Lorado Taft, American's greatest Sculptor, Aug. 20. Irvin S. Cobb, The Famous Humorist and Writer, Aug. 22. Dr. Herbert L. Willett, Dean of Chicago University, Aug. 25. Miss Eleanor Barker, Representing the Food Administration, Aug. 23. Henry A. Adrian, The Luther Burbank Man, Aug. 26. Hon. Fred Landis, M. C. an Eloquent Orator, Sept. 1. Geo. R. Stuart, Notecl Southern Lecturer, Aug. 21. Rev. Chas. W. Whitman, Eloquent Preacher, Sept. 1 . Miss Florence Norton, Domestic Science, Aug. 19 to 24. Chief Caupolican, South American Lecturer and Singer, Aug.. 29. Tom Hendrix, Humorist, Aug. 20. Miss Jeannette King, Popular Play-Reader, Aug. 18 and 19. Burnell Ford, Electrical Wizard, Aug. 23. Mrs. Frank Tilson, Entertainer, Aug. 28. Dr. Chas. C. Ellis, Institute Instructor and Lecturer, Aug. 26 to 30. Dr. Francis H. Green, Institute Instructor and Lecturer, Aug. 26 to 30. Mr. Bertrand Lyons, Impersonator and Entertainer, Aug. 30 and 3 1 . Chicago Operatic Co., Greatest Vocal Organization on the Platform, Aug. 25 and 26. The John B. Miller Co., Very Popular, Aug. 1 8 and 1 9. The Howard Quintette, Instrumental, Aug. 23 and 24. Zedeler Symphonic Quintet, All Musicians, Aug. 20 and 21 . Castle Court Singers, Appearing in Costumes, Aug. 27 and 28. The Crawford Adams Co., Entertainers and Singers, Aug. 29. Vierra's Royal Hawaiians, the Best Company known, Aug. 22. Southern Dixie Jubilee Singers, 'Nough Said, Aug. 30. Hruby's Orchestra, direct from European Triumphs, Aug. 3 1 -Sept. 1 "Wake Up, America," Great Patriotic Feature Film, Aug. 24. Two or more of the above attractions will appear each day. DAILY ADMISSION ONLY 25 CENTS Help Win the War Support the Chautauqua Buy your Season Ticket at Once. Come and Camp. With Us
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