Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 228, 8 July 1919 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND ss UN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1919.
EARLHAM WILL OFFER COURSES INJUESS New Departure for Local College to be Introduced in Fall Education Feature. Business courses for students who wish to enter the business world, or to enter a school of administration with advanced credits, will be offered at Earlham next year. Such a course has not been offered before. The am colleges were designed especially to offer ministerial courses,
pointed out President David M. Edwards, Tuesday morning. Then, as other professions, the law, medicine, and engineering, came into importance In the trained world, work in them was entered upon college curriculums. "And now we find it necessary to see the needs of the business profession, and look after those needs," said President Edwards in discussing the proposed course. Work in moneys, banking and other allied subjects, is to be offered, with courses added each year until the student will be able to major in business, in the same manner as the student wishing to enter law or medicine majors in his line. Education Course Offered As provided by the State Board of Education, Earlham will also offer a two-year course in education for the benefit of those preparing for teaching. The scarcity of teachers now makes the work in this department particularly important. The best opportunities possible for students intending to major in education are to be offered the coming year. George H. Hilliard. a graduate of the State University of Iowa, and who has for three years pursued postgraduate work In that university, came to Earlham at the beginning of the present lummer school and has charge of the educational department. Closely related to this department is the department of philosophy, under the direction of Dr. J. C. Coffin, a graduate of Cornell university. Dr. Coffin has been associated with Earlham college for a number of years, and has gained distinction in his work.
News Dispatches From Surrounding Communities
LYNN John M. Chenoweth, 75 years old. died at the home of his son John, West Church street, after an illness of several months. He Is survived by three sons, John and Everett of Lynn, and Ernest of Winchester, and a daughter, Mrs. Cora Hlatt of Lynn. Mervyn Humphreys, son of Mrs. Emma Humphreys of Lynn, has returned home after service overseas. LOSANTVILLE Clay Burroughs and Miss Julie Furnish were united in marriage here. They will live in Losantvilie. CAMDEN The first of the twilight Services to be held by the Methodist and Presbyterian churches was addressed by the Rev. Mr. Gear of the Presbyterian church, Sunday evening. The services are held In the yard of the grade school and will continue through July and August. WEBSTER The threBhing ring met at the home of the president, Jacob Fudge to arrange the work for the season. Threshing will begin Wednesday. ECONOMY The Rev. Oliver M. Frazer. pastor of the Friends church here for the last ten years, has resigned his charge to enter community service work in New York. His
congregation here attempted to persuade him to remain by offering to double his salary. . During his pastor ate Mr. Fraser has made many improvements In the church. NEW PARIS A weasel entered the home of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Mikesell and was heading fOr the cradle where their month-old baby lay, when the mother screamed and frightened the animal away. John Sawyer, Jr., former New Paris resident, is connected with an engineering company in California which recently completed a tunnel 6,400 feet long through the mountain and has a still longer one under construction. OXFORD Friday, July 18, will be McGuffey day at the Miami university summer school in memory of Dr. William Holmes McGuffey, author of the
series of readers and spellers. Addresses will be made by Dr. John Franklin Bobbitt. University of Chicago; Dr. W. H. Elson. of Chicago; Miss Dorothy G. Stevens, of New York; Senator White, of the Ohio General Assembly, and W. H. Winters of the Ohio Department of Education. A McGuffey pageant will be given in the evening, and throughout the day there will be an exhibit of McGuffey relics, including the table upon which he compiled bis text-books.
to it at Versailles, will first be straa-' Sled industrially and commercially, and presently re-annexed to Germany, restoring the old situation of evil and ' the ancient obstacle to world peace. ' Events In Poland In the next weeks j
ana monws, tnererore, must have a very important bearing upon the future of Europe and of world peace, and no detail in the application of the conditions of peace can be more interesting than that which relates to the surrender by Germany of the territories she has promised to return to Poland.
WESTERN QUESTION SOLVED FOR GERMANY; EASTERN FRONTIER OPEN FOR AGGRESSION
Winchester, Ind. Mrs. Will Simmons was hostess to the Priscilla club Thursday afternoon. After the preliminary session the remainder of the afternoon was spent with cards and dancing. . . .Mrs. Harry Illff of, Dayton, O., who has been visiting her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Will
GERMANY AND POLAND By FRANK H. SIMONDS (Copyright, 1919, by The McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) However exaggerated the current reports of German military operations
'against Poland may be ,it is necessary
to recognize that sucn operations must now be expected. The unmistakable fact is that the cessions of German territory to Poland are things that cannot be accepted by any German now, and it is hard to believe that future generations will concur on the new map made at Versailles, which undoes all German achievement in the east in more than a century and a half. As it stands, the Germans have evacuated the province of Posen, under allied pressure, thus abandoning a fertile region, one of the best agricultural districts of the Empire to the Poles. This territory has an area twice as great as Alsace-Lorraine and a population of above 2,000,000, but it is not from the German point of view the most Important sacrifice demand
ed, in addition, the terms of peace require that she should abandon to the
machinery, nothing is more likely than the East Prussian fragment will in time, be submerged by the Polish waves from the great Slav hinterland. Eastern Hopes Are Gone. Germany recognizes with a certain clarity that she has lost the war in the west; it may well be that she will never challenge France again, so far as Alsace-Lorraine is concerned, with the certainty that France will be backed by Great Britain and not im
probably by the United States, moreover, the loss of Alsace-Lorraine, even the loss of the Saare Basin, is of relatively minor importance, but if a real Poland is constructed, protected during its early years, endowed with Germany's Polish provinces, then Germany's hopes in the east are gone. For Germany, then, the Polish question is vital. As it stands, Polish armies in Posen are less than a hundred miles from Berlin. The barrier of the Lower Vistula Is removed. If the Slavs should ever stand together, if PanSlavism should re-awaken, when Russia comes to her own again, the road to the German capital would be open
.ind short, without natural obstacle
SOCIETY
The Social Aid society of Reid Memorial church will hold a picnic Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Jacob Horr, 318 Pearl street. AH members and their families are urged to be present. The Tirsah Aid society will hold a picnic tomorrow afternoon and evening at Thittlethwalte falls. In case Of rain it will be held at the home of Mrs. Bert Williams, 133 North Eighteenth street. . The Ladies Missionary auxiliary of Nazarene church will hold a picnic meeting Thursday afternoon and evening on the lawn at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wilson in Chester. Supper will be served on the lawn and a program given in the evening. The Degree of Honor will meet this evening at 7:30 o'clock at the Commercial club rooms. Candidates will be initiated.
Hawkins, left Wednesday morning for
Denver. Colorado The Apex club! poles almost all of West Prussia withEven lf RUSSta remained in chaos an met Tuesday evening with Miss Doris an area and population equal to. Posen. i other European war ln whlch Poiand, Eiler. Refreshments were served consent to the erection of a free city ! ..i,, ,it,, iv.
is the guest of relatives Mrs. Geo. (Poland and absolutely separated from E. Leggett was hostess to the Friday (Germany, and in addition consent to Afternoon Bridge club. A number of j plebiscites in portions of East Prussia visitors were present Mi6s Helen and ln all of Upper Silesia. Chenoweth entertained a large com-1 Ceding West Prussia to Poland, l-sny of friends Tuesday evening j surrendering Danzig, risking the loss Mrs. J. E. HInshaw is attending the I of part of East Prussia by plebiscite, Methodist Centenary convention at j these are for the Germans terrible Columbus, O Mrs. J. W. Macy has ! sacrifices. The first two. isolate the returned home from Indianapolis, j German speaking regions about where she has been taking treatment jKonigsberg from the main mass of in a hospital. She is much improved ; German speaking people, they literal-
ln health Miss Helen rayne or ineijy cut Prussia In two, they not merely
Marshal Field Co., Chicago., is at home
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Payne, for her summer vacation...:. Mrs. A. D. Shepherd of Chicago, is the truest of Mrs. P. E. Goodrich Mrs. John Grimm of New York City, is the guest of her daughter. Mrs. W. O. Coats. Mrs. A. S. Rarick accompanied her. . . . . .Mrs. Hiram Moorman entertained a company of young friends, Friday evening The Emanon girls mrt with Mrs. Jack Davisson Tuesday evening. Business of the club was
take away twenty odd thousand
France and Great Britain, wouid bring instant and deadly peril to Germany. In sum, and the point is capital, Germany cannot, save after she is reduced to utter helplessness, accept the eastern fronties as drawn at Versailles. She cannot permit them to be even established temporarily, for the Balkan example has shown that peoples once liberated, maintain their freedom tenaciously and successfully.
If Poland gets her new boundaries, her chance of keeping them is far
The Daughters of America will meet tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock in the
Vaughn hall. Candidates will be init
iated and final arrangements made
for a social to be given Friday eve
ning.
The Perseverance Bible class of the
First Baptist church will hold its
regular business meeting tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. George Bowers at her home in Benton Heights. The meeting of the Ladies' Aid society of the Second English Lutheran church, which was to have been held Thursday at the home of Mrs. Lizzie King, has been postponed indefinitely.
WITH THOSE IN ARMY AND NAVY
This column, containing news et Richmond and Wayne county soldiers and sailors, will appear dally In the Palladium. Contributions will be welcomed. "
William Toney has arrived safely
in the States following several months
service overseas with the 17th Engineers. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Tremont Toney. Sergeant Vernon Hobbs has arrived at Camp Mills and will go soon to Virginia to visit bis parents, following which he will come to Richmond and spend some time with his sister, Mrs. Bingley. WinsOr Harris, son of Benjamin F. Harris of South Eighth street, has reached Camp Monroe. Harris had been overseas in a naval station for eight months. Mrs. Carl Wadman has word that her brother Charles Rolf has landed
ln the States. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Saxton received information yesterday that their son, Harry Saxton is on his way back to this country. The Saxtons are residents of Columbus, O., and are spending several days here.
Captain Harry M. Clark, who has been with the Motor Transport corps in France for twenty months, has arrived in Boston and is expected at his home in Fountain City in a few days. H6 is the son of Oliver Clark of Fountain City and a cousin of Earl Adams Clark.
Vacations Again Popular; Everybody Taking Them After the strain of war, vacations are regaining their popularity. Over five times as many people have gone oh vacations this year as last, say officials of the Pennsylvania. The farm is still first In preference as a resort, while following it are the lake resorts and the cities. Many have answered the call of the wild and
PESKY BED BUGS The ttew chmieal, 3f. E. . ?ky
tvll' Quietus actually put the ever-
many boxes and packages of fish and lurtle are being shipped back to friends. The north Is most popular, many going to the resorts in northern Indiana or to the many fishing streams in the north and west. Cincinnati, Indianapolis and Dayton are holding the honors as the cities, although Great Lakes towns are also very popular.
Poslam's Balm Ends Itching Soothes Skin
For eczema you must have an efficient, competent remedy to see true results. Poslam is so good for skin troubles that you can make no mistake in trying it first and for all. Apply right on the places that burn, itch and harrass; they will be pacified, soothed, cooled. Poslam offers oualitv to each
lattfrtr to petky bedbugs, roaches, ants ounce tnftt cannot be equalled by
pounds of inefficiency. For every form of eruption on the skin, pimples, scalpscale, rashes, blemishes, burns, itching feet. Sold everywhere. For free sample write to Emergency Laboratories, 243 West 47th St.. New York City. Poslam Soap, medicated with Poslam, brightens, beautifies complexions. Adv.
and fleas; impassible for them to exist
where P. D. Q. Is used. P. D. Q. kills and leaves a coatlngr on their eras and prevents hatching. A two-ounce package makes a Quart of the strongest bug killer On earth. A box Of P. D. Q. goes farther than a barrel tt old fashioned bu killers. Look for the devil's head On every box; also patent spout in every box of P. D. Q. The P. D. Q. kills fleas on dogs. All leading" drug stores. Adv.
Franco-American Union Of Physicians Planned (By Associated Press)
PARIS, Monday, July 7 The Temps 1
announces that an organization has been formed with the object of es-j
tablishing permanent relations between American and French physicians and surgeons. Several commissions have been appointed by the organization. One of these will have in charge the establishment of a course of teaching for American physicians visiting France and another the founding of a bureau of information. A third commission will examine into means of organizing an exchange of articles on medical and surgical subjects between the journals of the United States and France.
At the New Hampshire State college eighteen girl students made the bleachers for the athletic field.
greater than if the matter is delayey j
square miles of territory and upwards u-v vvlZ,s Y a S J .n k ,v armies are demobilized, and Allied
publics have wearied and gone back
of four millions of people, but they break down Prussia itself. Thus mu
tilated, Prussia, the very heart of the German spirit, which from Bismarck to the last battle of the present war, dominated the German Empire, becomes an amorphous thing, the reactionary, the military, the Junker section either put in alien hands or cut off from the rest of Germany.
For the German there is no solace
transacted, after which a social time,in the fact that Dantzig does not go
was enjoyed Miss Minnie Fischer
has entered an art school in Chicago. She will remain during the summer. . ..Mrs. Tt. E. Slcardi of Indianapolis, is the guest of relatives here Mrs. John Stlne was hostess to the Thimble club, Thursday afternoon Miss Minnie Miller of Dayton, O.. is the guest of relatives here Miss Geraldine Remmel entertained a company of young girls, Tuesday evening at 6 o'clock dinner as a farewell courtesy to Miss Alice Mills who left Thursday for her home in Hamilton, Canada. . . . Miss Mary Jaqua entertained a company of young friends Friday evening in honor of Miss Emily Stonerock. of Dayton, O. After an informal evening npent at the Jaqua home, they went n RriHnn for refreshments Mrs.
unconditionally or absolutely to Poland, he loses, above all else, that grip upon Poland which he has had, with the exception of a brief Napoleonic interlude, for nearly a century and a half. Is Terrible Blow. Politically this is a far more terrible blow than the loss of Alsace-Lorraine or the possible permanent surrender of the Saare district. It is something more than a loss of a tenth of the area of the country. It is even more than the actual cutting of his country in half. It is the erection on his eastern frontier of a new state, destined, if it has time and the support of the Western Powers, permanently to block his
pathway of expansion on the east, and the permanent surrender to a race he
Kyle Gard has returned rrom men-, regards with something of the point mond where she was the guest of i of view we nave toward the Mexicans, frirnds Miss Florence Hutchens. nnt alnnp nf tirrifnrv essential tn Cler-
who has been visiting her parents many but of territory in which a Ger-
fcere, has returned to Indianapolis to
resume her duties at tne aiemoaisi hospital The Eta Beta Pi girls held u merry picnic at Funk's lake, Wednesday evening. Dancing and skating followed an appetizing spread The Tri Kappa held its regular meeting Monday evening with Miss Thelma Johnson Miss Edith Kabel enterin inorf th cirls of her Sunday school
man population, a minority to be sure
lives.
As for Upper Silesia, if this, by the vote of the people who are in very
great majority Polish, shall choose to join Poland, also one of the greatest mineralized districts will be taken
away and Poland will be able at no
distant date to challenge Germany
- vuv oit.ui lUMUSii iai oiairn
class at ner country nome ; 0f Europe. Moreover, if a real Poland
is thus created, with sure outlets on the sea, with satisfactory industrial
n all-dav affair Mrs. Ivan C. Bren
ner left Monday for New York City where she will meet her husband, Capt. Ivan C. Brenner, recently returned from overseas Mrs. G. A. Buswell has returned to her home in North Manchester, after a few weeks' visit with her father, Abner Jobes Mrs. Edwin Ginn has returned home from Ft. Wayne where she has been visiting her son, Hubert Ginn and family. Mrs. Ernest Barnes entertained lrienda Wednesday evening as a farewell courtesy to Miss Grace Kelley, who has gone to spend the summer months in Ronan, Montana .
to fortgetfulness.
Cannot Accept Frontiers. There is no need of pointing out
that what Poland has obtained is justice, not generosity. The Danzig compromise is a very real disappoint
ment of legitimate Polish aspirations. But to permit Poland to have justice, means for Germany, For Prussia, the
true master of Germany, to lose much
of her power in Germany, much of her
force in Europe.
By contrast, if Poland does not ob
tain justice, Germany will escape from the war with no real barrier in her
way for a new adventure, and the flimsy Polish state, which does not include German territories assigned
Be Careful What You Wash You Hair With
"BAYER CROSS" ON GENUINE ASPIRIN
Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkili, which is very injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle. The best thing to use is Mulsifled cocoanut oil shampoo, for this is pure and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap and beats anything else all to pieces. You can get this at any drug store, and a few ounces will last the whole family for months. Simply moisten the 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, fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy, and easy to handle. Besides, it loosens and takes out every particle of dust, dirt and dandruff. Adv.
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" to be genuine must bo marked with the safety "Bayer Cross." Always buy an unbroken Bayer package which contains proper directions to safely relieve Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia. Colds and pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents at drug stores larger packages also. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticaci--lester of Salicylicacld. Adv.
HAS THANKSGIVING EVERYDAY "Two years ago, after suffering many years with stomach trouble, I took a course of Mayr'B Wonderful Remedy and haven't been sick a day since. I can eat anything I want and have no pain at all. Three doctors had advised operation, but your remedy has cured me. Every day is thanksgiving for me." It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the Inflammation which causes practically all 6tomach, liver and Intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. One dose will convince or money refunded. Clem Thistlethwaite's Six Drug Stores, and leading druggists everywhere. Adv.
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DR.E.B.GROSVENOR Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Scientific glass fitting City Light Bldg. 32 S. 8th
3 REED'S C
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EMPLOYEES' PROFIT SHARING SALE (Bimsailtn(Dini2 H. C. L. knocked out in less time than it took Dempsey to finish Willard. Talk of high prices seems like an almanac joke when you see this Bed Outfit at this price. ?
METAL
If you need a Bed and want a metal one, don't fail to see this super-value that we are now offering in this employees' profit-sharing sale.
This Complete Bed Outfit
White or Vernis Martin Bed, Spring and Mattress, at only
24.9
FREE
2 lbs. Bout's Old Master Coffee with every Range sold this week.
FREE
310TH & MAINES
RICHMOND C
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men
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Jones Hardware Go0
