Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 257, 9 September 1918 — Page 7
THE RICHMOND JAluAUiUm AlNU SUN-TELEGKAM.
BRINGING UP FATHER By McManus a Polish beauty. She Is also a Polish idylL J Her story Is one worth studying. ' ' ' ' Go to 'see Gall -Kane In "Love's Law." At the Murray today. ' - WHAT DO X0O MERM BY THROYIN A VAjE OUT THE WINDOW AT WE-YOU "PftiEO TO MURRETTE. James Whitcomb Riley's famous poem, "A Hoosier Romance." Is the basis of a remarkable motion picture play in which Colleen Moore, one of the most brilliant of the younger stars of film drama, and Thomas Jefferson, famous for his "Rip Van Winkle," one KILL HE - DIDN'T flXJ? assume the lead roles. "A Hoosier Romance" was adapted
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BOSTON FANS SEE FIRST EASTERN GAME OF SERIES Small Crowd Witnesses 4th Match of Baseball Classis Red Sox Favorites. (Br Associated Press) BOSTON, SepL 9. Notwithstanding a heavy rain that lasted nearly all night, baseball fans took heart at the sight of the sun when they awoke today and early Indications were that the Boston American and Chicago National teams would be able to play this afternoon the first Boston game of the world series. Ground keepers eald the playing field at Fenway Park had been protected as far as possible from the rain and they hoped that with a drying sun this morning con ditlons would permit a resumption of the series which now stands two games to one in favor of the Red Sox There were a few early arrivals at the park in readiness for the opening of the sale of bleacher seats, but the number waiting in line was below the mark of former world series contests. The train which brought the play era from Chicago was behind its schedule and as it was midnight when they reached their hotel they were allowed to sleep late this morning. When they came down to breakfast it was apparent that all the members of both teams were brimful of determination. The Red Sox were bent on cleaning up the series with two games on the home grounds while the Cubs were equally set on evening things up In the first game here and then forging ahead to final victory. In spite of the intense rivalry, the players of the two teams were a unit in declaring that they would back up to the limit the joint committee which they appointed on the train coming from Chicago to demand of the national baseball commission the fulfillment of the guarantee which they assert was given of payment of $2,000 to each player on the winning team and $1,400 to each loser. They were informed yesterday that the receipts from tickets were proving so small thi3 year that their shares would be cut to $1,200 and $S00 respectively. HAGERSTOWN, IND. I Miss Odetta Needham and Miss Opal Honold, teachers of the public school, will be guests for the year in the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Brant ..Everett Root of Jefferson Barracks, who has been home on a few days' furlough, left Wednesday. Mr. Root and family were entertained at dinner Monday by Mr. and Mrs. Henry Strickler. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Strickler were also guests. .. .George Keagy, who is engaged in war work in Philadelphia, spent from Friday until Monday here with his family Jerome Day has been transferred from camp at Syracuse, N. Y., to Camp Merrift, N. J... Mrs. Jerome Day of Greensfork, was the guest of, Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Day Monday Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas Hunt were entertained Monday by Mr. and Mrs. Arvillo Daily, near Centerville. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Roy McConjiaughey and family have moed to Newcastle Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Brown are entertaining Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wagstaff and Miss Sarah Brown of Waynesburg, Ohio. The ladles are nieces of Mr. Brown. They arrived Wednesday and will spend two weeks here and will also be guests of other relatives here... .The W. H. M. S. of the local M. E. church met Tuesday afternoon at tho home of Mrs Daniel Fist. .. .Herbert Hotsenplller of Richmond, was the guest Tuesday of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Crull. ... .Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Feely will move to Connersville soon Mr. and Mrs. Fons Ledbetter went to Hoopeston, 111., where Mr. Ledbetter obtained employment in the rallrond yards. Mrs. Ledbetter has returned to their home here.... Miss Irene Searls of Muncie. Lester Ilanscom and Miss Florence Bell and mother, Mrs. Sarah Bell, spent from Saturday until Monday at Indianapolis, guest9 of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Hnnscom and mother. Mrs. Alice Ilanscom.
THE HORRIBLE HANDICAP OF POISONED BLOOD
The Innocent Suffer Even Unto the Third and Fourth Generations, But Relief Is Now In Sight. It has long been accepted as a matter of course that the sins of the fathers must be suffered by innocent posterity, yet it is hard to become reconciled to this condition. The heritage of physical infirmaty is a handicap under which thousands must face the battle of life. Scrofula is probably the most noticeable of the transmitted blood disorders, though there are other more severe diseases of the blood that pass from one generation to another. No matter what inherited blood taint yau may be laboring under, S. S. S. offers hope. This remdy has been in gen
NATCO PLAYERS MAINTAIN LEAD
Won Lost Pet. League Standing. Natco 10 3 .769 Simplex 10 4 .714,1 j. vuicans ...4 9 .3o3 M. Pennsy 3 11 .214 The Natco team of the S. A. L. held its lead when it defeated the Malleable Pennsys, 5-1. The Simplexers still are running a close second by winning from the Jenkins-Vulcans Saturday. 8-0. Minner and Hawekotte held their adversaries down to few hits, and Hawekotte struch out eleven men in nine innings, while Mlnner whiffed nine. Hawekotte's only letup was in the ninth when he allowed the Malleables to score a run. Haas of the Simplex squad made the long smash, of the day, a three-bagger. Two baggers were made by Minner, Schepman and Heery. Scores: (First game.) Malleables A. R. H. O. E. Hill, 2b 2 0 0 1 0 Long, ss 3 0 0 2 0 Burkett, lb 2 0 0 9 0 Rety, 3b 3 0 0 0 0 Line, c 3 1 1 2 0 Cammeron, cf 2 0 0 0 0 Hass, rf 2 0 0 1 0 Craycraft, p 2 0 0 0 0 Totals 22 L 2 18 0 Natcos A. R. H. O. E. H. Logan, ss 2 1 0 1 1 J. Logan, 3b 3 0 1 0 0 Hawekotte, p 3 0 0 0 0 Holmes, lb 3 0 0 0 0 Schepman, 2b 3 2 2 0 0 Snyder, cf 3 0 1 0 0 Schattel, If 2 11 0. 0 Haas, c 2 1 1 12 0 Gregg, rf 1 0 0 0 0 Totals 22 5 6 21 1 Score by Innings: Malleable-Pennsy 000 000 0011 Natco 131 000 OOx 5 Two base hits Schepman. Sacrifice hitsHewitt, Retz, Schattel. Schepman. Struck out by Hawekotte, 11; Craycraft, 2. Hit by pitcher, Hill. Vulcans A. R. Burkett, ss 3 Retz, lb 3 Sturm, 3b 3 Hewitt, If 3 Hauck, c 3 Frobel, 2b 1 Reece, cf 2 Clapp, rf 1 Kuetter, p 2 H. O. 0 0 1 E. 0 1 2 2 1 0 1 0 4 3 2 5 2 0 0 18 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 Totals 21 0 7 IS Simnlex A. R. H. O. 1 E. 0 Fuller, 2b 3 0 0 7 Reddinghaus, 3b 4 1 1-1 Long, ss 3 1 1 1 Holmes, lb . ;3 2 2 1 Minner, p 3 1 3 0 Haas, c .2 1 1 9 Heery, If 3 2 2 1 Porter, rf 3 0 0 1 Dunham, rf 3 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 27 8 12 21 1 Score by Innings: J. Vuicans , .... 000 000 00 Simplex 503 000 x-S Summary r Three base hits Haas. Two base hits Heery. Minner, Porter. Sacrifice hits Dunram. Clapp. Double piaySHinner to Fuller to Holmes. Struck out by Minner, 9; by Craycraft, 3. Passed balls off Minner, 1; Craycraft, 1. District War Industries Chairmen Meet Friday The district chairman of the War Industries region will meet at the War Industries headquarters in the Masonic Temple next Friday afternoon at 1 o'clock for a consideration of routine business. The business brought up at the Region meeting at Cincinnati Tuesday will also be considered The two representatives from this district for the Cincinnati meeting are J. t. McQuinn of Newcastle, and F. I. Barrows of Connersville. A rich deposit of manganese has been discovered in Honduras, within two miles of a railroad. eral use for more than fifty years. It is purely vegetable, and contains not a particle of any chemical, and acts prompetly on the blood by routing all traces of the taint, and restoring it to absolute purity. Some of the most distressing cases of transmitted blood poisen have yielded to the treatment of S. S. S., and no case should be considered incurable until this great remedy has been given a thorough trial. S. S. S. acts as an antidote to every impurity in the blood. You can obtain it at any drug store. Our chief medical adviser will take pleasure in giving you without cost any advise that your individual case requires. Write to-day to Swift Specific Co., 433 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. Adv. v ,
Belgium Paid $466,000,000 to Germany in Four Years
PARIS, Sept. 9 Germany has exacted war contributions from Belgium during the first four years of the war amounting to a total of $466,000,000. This is in addition to the vast amount of machinery; materials and men taken from Belgium to sustain Germany. In this fifth year of war it is interesting to review the "financial activities" of the Germans in Belguim since that fateful day in Belgium's history, August 20, 1914, when the German hordes entered Brussels. During that month, as the German armies were hacking their way through the little kingdom, numerous towns and cities were "fined" and war contributions were levied from each province as the Germans progressed southwestward. The first move of the German staff when entering a town was to proceed to the" city hall and announce to the burgomaster that for resisting the advance of Emperor William's armies, his city or town had been fined so many thousand or million francs, as the case might be. When the burgomaster would remonstrate, Uhlans and Death's Head Hussars would cavort innocently in City Hall Square or the burgomaster would be taken prisoner. In one instance in the province of Liege, the German commander of the company entering the town informed the burgomaster that a war contribution of 100,000 francs would have to be forthcoming within two hours. The burgomaster demurred. Never in the history of the little town had there been so much money in the city treasury. At the present moment, there was only a little over three thousand francs in the strong box. "Well, we'll take that" calmly responded the German. More than 200,000,000 francs were thus levied between August and November, 1914.
"Hello, Jones" "Bought a new car, eh? She's a beauty." "No, Bill, this is the same old girl. I've given her a new dress. My first job of painting, but results aren't bad." "Say that's what I call war economy. You've a new car and saved $ 1 000. Murphy Da-cote Motor Car Enamels Do as Jones did. Drop in and we'll tell you how it's easy.
BETHARD AUTO 1117 Main St. t Da -coir Dries ROBERT B. BOREN. President. THOMAS BRENNAN, Cashier.
Report of the condition of the Fountain Bank, a Private bank at Fountain City, in the State of Indiana, at the close of its business on August 13, 1918. Resources. J Liabilities. Loans and discounts $ 90.658.08 Capital stock paid in $ 10,000.00
Overdrafts 75.00 U. S. Bonds 23,850.00 Other bond securities 19,275.00 Furniture and Fixtures.... 1,450.00 Due from banks and Trust Companies 43.813.18 Cash on Hand Cash Items Current expenses Taxes paid Interest paid Other Assets 3,995.49 664.09 1,669.30 174.75 767.12 4.23 1,223.85 Total Resources .$187,620.09 State of Indiana, County of Wayne, ss: I, Thomas Brennan, Cashier of the that the above statement is true. Subscribed and sworn to before me, My commission expires January 1, 1920.
Then Field Marshal Baron von der Goltz-Pasha decreed that Belgium would have to pay a monthly contribution of 40,000,000 francs during one year and it would not be increased and that it would not be renewed. The Pasha's decree, however, proved to be but another scrap of paper. In. November, 1915, Baron yon Bissing called upon the councils of the nine Belgian provinces to meet and inofrmed them that the promise of his predecessor had been made in good faith but with the implied condition that war would be ended within the year and that he saw no alternative but than to renew the monthly contribution of 40,000,000 francs for another year. On the 20th of November, 1916, instead of abolishing the onerous tax on Belgium, von Bissing decided that, owing to the duration of the war, the increase in prices, high cost of living, he would have to increase the monthly payments to 50,000,000 francs. He added ominously, "temporarily." It proved to be so, indeed, for, on the 21st of May, 1917, the contribution was further raised to 60,000,000 francs. The flow of francs into the coffers of the war lord was too small to satisfy the gargantuan appetites of the military men, however, and on the 12th of September, 1916, they "seized" 430,000,000 million marks, constituting all the deposits in German bills of the Banque Nationale and the Cociete Generale de Belgique, the two largest banks in Belgium. When one of the directors of the Societe General refused to divulge that part of the combination of the vaults which he alone knew and without which the vaults could not be opened, the Germans said that they would blow them
open with high explosives. The diAGENCY Phone 1041 i ti Overnight F. M. LAMB, Vice-President. GRACE M. BRENNAN, Asst. Cashier. Surplus 7,502.96 Exchange, discount and interest 4.44S.72 Demand Deposits ....$134,612.75 Demand Certificates ...31,055.66' 165,668.41 Total liabilities $187,620.09 - Fountain Bank, do solemnly swear THOMAS BRENNAN, this 7th day of September, 1918. F. L. Thomas, Town Clerk. , V
rector rather than have the yaults of the institution wrecked, decided to acquiesce. Thus what will probably go down as the greatest burglary of modern times was perpetrated.
Court Records MARRIAGE LICENSES A marriage license has been issued to Lon T. Edwards, 55 years old, farmer, Economy, and Grace L. Garrison, 24 years old, Economy. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Bert Farmer to O. M. Jennines, lots 56, 57, 58, 59, in Whitewater, $450. South Side Improvement Association to Henry F. Iserman, 623, 624, 625, 625, 627, 628, Beallville, $1. On The Screen MURRAY. Do you believe in heredity If the father fiddles, should the daughter be a genius? Here is a wonderful story of a little slum girl with only one treasured posLast Showing Tonight James Whitcomb Riley's "A HOOSIER ROMANCE" Also FATTY ARBUCKLE in "Fatty the Bouncer" Tuesday Only RUTH CLIFFORD in "The Fires of Youth" Also THE HOUSE OF HATE' aa MUSIC THAT CHARMS Today and Tuesday
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UHCHASHNED WOMAN Supported by Frank Mills From Oliver Morosco's Brilliant production of Louis K. Anspacher's play
Mr. and Mrs. Conventional America Allow Us to Introduce the Unchastened Woman A New problem for men to solve and a New Species for Women to Dissect She is almost impossible of analysis. The product of our modern civilization, and some would say the victim of too muoh freedom. Anyway, she is one type of the emancipated woman, and a dangerous type. Somewhat in advance of the vampire, but equally as potent. In Jact, to paraphrase Kipling, we might say "The Unchastened Woman and the snaky lady are sisters under the skin." She is a curious mixture of Washington Square and votes for women and the eternal Eve, as bizarre as a Futurist painting and equally as understandable. Brilliant and witty, alluring, cunning and abnormally selfish, she seems to think she can use and abuse people very much as she pleases. She is married, but she laughs at conventions. She flirts outrageously and seems to revel in the world's verdict. But through it all, she remains chaste in body but quite the reverse in spirit and soul. Her one redeeming grace is her sense of humor she laughs at everyone, including herself. She is cruel and equally gentle when it serves her purpose. One moment a purring lounge cat, the next Its tigerish feline ancestor. But beneath this textuTe of modernism she Is undeniably womanly, we discover that at a time when she finds that "The Sauce for the Goose can also be Sauce for the Gander." But she is beyond us, also the artist who was asked to illustrate her in this advertisement, so we will have to do as Dr. Anspacher. the author suggests, "Let the curtain fall on her, unchanged, unwhipped, just as we found her in the beginning, chaste in body, but unchastened in spirit and soul." Also showing an Alice Howell Comedy "CHOO CHOO LOVE" ADULTS 20c Shows Cont 1:45 til 11 p. m. CHILDREN 10c
session the fiddle left her by her father when he died. With this battered relic of an old Italian workshop she fiddles her way into the heaets of all who know her, and nearly meets disaster through mixing heart throbs with art themes, but, by virtue of her childish innocence, saves a rich man from the wreck of his possessions and makes a gentleman of him. Sonia, the factory worker's ward, is
FRESH CAULIFLOWER at THE BEE HIVE PRICES Main Floor, 22c 3c tax. Balcony, 13c 2c tax. Children, 9c 1c tax. Matinee All seats 13c 2c tax except Sunday and Holidays.
Last Showing Today The well known screen star
In her latest success
"LOVES LAW" UNIVERSAL WEEKLY Tuesday Only wre present MAE ALLISON
A SUCCEESSFUL ADVENTURE
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
JACK DIXON Nut Comedian In his comedy Offering the Susbstitute
Coming Thursday, Friday and Saturday VALENTINE VOX Comedy Ventriloquist Special scenery
ROBINSON BROTHERS PLAYING THE PICTURES
I " Scene fromlWt UNCHA5TENED WOMAN A PI ALTO DE LUXE PRODUCTION
6creen by Colin Campbell, who direct' ed "The Spoilers," "The Garden of Allah," and "The Crisis." This Mutual-Selig offering Is elaborately staged and the photograph Is of the best . Included in the cast are Edward Jobson, well known for his work in "A Bit of Kindling and "The Aftermath"; Eugenie Besserer, tot; merly In support of Margaret Anglin, and Frank Hayes, a comedian familiar to motion picture fans for his appear-, ances in more than forty Keystone comedies. At the Murrette today.
CATARRH, HEAD NOISKS, DEAFNESS, easily cured in a tew days by the new 'French orleae." Scores of wonderful cures reported. COMPLETELY CURED." Ae 76. Mr. Thomas WinslaUe. of Borden. Hants, writes: I am deligrhted I tried the new "Orlene" for the head-nolsea, I am pleased to tell you. ARE GONE, and I van hear aa well aa ever I eoald In my lire. I think It wonderful, as I am seventy-six years old. and the people here are surprised to think I can hear so well again at my age." Many other equally good reports. Try one box today, which can be forwarded to any address upon the receipt of money order for $1.00: There Is nothing better at any price. Address, "ORLENE" Co, Railway Crescent, West Croydon, -Surrey, England. GOOD Time of Vaudeville
MUSIC All the Time
3, 8 and '9:30 p. m. 5 Motion Pictures 2:C0 till 11:00 p. m. -inSam and Lou Lambert Australian novelty imitators. Direct from Keith's theatre, Dayton . Some Bill PICK 0 THE PICTURES
