Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 267, 23 August 1919 — Page 6
Page six
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TrELEGRAM, SATURDAY, AUG. 23, 1919.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Bulldlni. North. Ninth and SaUo Btreeta. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Second Clase. Mail Matter.
MEMBER OF TWO ASSOCIATED PIUESS The. AaaoeKted Pres te.-exelvsrrely. entitled to for repnbUcatlon of all news dlcpatches credited to it or nnf nv,..-i... -..i... in Trf end el bo the local
newe published herein. All rirhte of republication of spe
cial dispatches herein are also r&servea.
Important New Decision on Reinstatement Secretary of the Treasury Carter Glass, on July 25, signed a decision of momentous importance and interest to discharged, soldiers, sailors and marines. In the decision (T. D. 47r, W. R.) the secretary ruled that discharged soldiers, sailors and marines who have dropped or cancelled their insurance may reinstate it within eighteen months after discharge without paying the back premiums. All they will be asked to pay will be the premium on the amount of insurance to be reinstated for the month of grace in which they were covered and for the current month. Thus, for example, if a man dropped $10,000
of insurance in January, 1919, and applies for
reinstatement the 1st of September for $5,000, all he will have to pay will be the premium for 'January (the month of grace) on $5,000 and the premium for September on $5,000. Or if he applies for reinstatement of the full $10,000, he will pay a total of two months' premiums on $10,000, one for January and one for September. He will not have to pay premiums in either case for the
intervening months. The decision stipulates that the former service man applying for reinstatement be in as good health as at date of discharge. Former Treasury Decision 45, W. R., and other prior regulations in conflict with the new decision are revoked. Director R. G. Cholmeley-Jones, of the Bureau of War Risk Insurance, following the signing of the decision made the following statement: "The present decision is one of the most important to former service men that has been made in the history of the bureau. "Many service men have been deterred from availing themselves of the former and less liberal reinstatement privileges by reason of the relatively large amount of money represented by accumulated overdue premiums, and because it would seem that they were paying for something that they never actually had, which, in fact, was the case. "Under the new decision a man is relieved of the burden of overdue premiums. He has an opportunity to rehabilitate himself financially after getting out of the army, navy or marine corps, and to reinstate his insurance at any time within 18 months following discharge without the burden of paying a large amount of money. "The reason payment for the month of grace is required under the new decision is that the insured was protected by reason of his insurance continuing, in force during that month, and that had he died during the period of grace his policy would have been paid.
"Of course, every man who has dropped his
insurance should reinstate it immediately, for the reason that if he should die before reinstate
ment his dependents will not receive any pay
ment.
- "Therefore, I urge that care be taken to make clear to every f ormer service man who has dropped, his insurance, that the new ruling does not automatically reinstate him, and to impress upon him that he will be without insurance until he voluntarily applies for and secures reinstatement. He should immediately apply for reinstatement for his own protection and that of his dependents. "Don't forget that men die or become disabled in peace time as well as in war time, and that if a man waits he may not be in as good health as he was at the time of his discharge and consequently may not be able to secure reinstatement. "Don't put off reinstatement. Do it now." If the policy holder is unable to keep the full amount of War Risk Insurance he carried while in the service, he may reinstate part of it from $1,000 up to $10,000, in multiples of $500. Reductions may be made in multiples of $500 to any amount, but not less than $1,000. Premiums are due on the first of the month, although payments may be made any time during the calendar month. Premiums should be paid by check, draft, or money order payable to .the Treasurer of the United States, and sent to the Premium Receipt Section, Bureau of War Risk Insurance, Washington, D. C.
Condensed Classics of Famous Aulhors
POINTED PARAGRAPHS
RECKLES3 HUNGARIANS Dallas News. Hon. Bela Kun doesn't see how the people of Hungary can afford to lose him, but they are game and are willing to risk it
k- K $S iv;t V7---: -v .!
CAINE Thomas Henry Hall Calne, since 1318 Sir Hall, of Manx descent, was born at Runcorn, Mav 14. 1853
He was trained for an architect, but was attracted to journalism and to the writing of novels, which have frequently been reproduced on tha stage; during the war he has taken a hand in propaganda, largely intended for America, and was editor of "King Albert's Book" and Queen Alexandra's "Christmas Carol." His best-known stories have attained an enormous circulation in print, and reached great audiences on the stage. "The Deemster," "The Bondman," "The Manxman," "The Christian," "The Kternal City," "The Woman Thou Qavest Me," are among the best known in a long list, which have passed from the printed page to the stage, and finally, in some cases, to the films. It will be Interesting to see how his books last. A certain force he undoubtedly has, and he knows extremely well how to choose a subject with an appeal to a large audience; he has, however, a considerable crudity In thought and expression, and his emotional passages sometimes have the air of being created to order. No English speaking autfior has ever been so extensively advertised
Sir Hall Calne, Born tS33
-r r , . i i
, "ne. lie must wait a generation or so to see whether in the end It pays to advertise.
True Stories of Successful Women By Edith Morlarty
TIME DEEMSTER
THE DOUBLE TROUBLE Baltimore American.
Double the railway workers wages, double every-d
body's, double everything. Double, double; toil and trouble I
THE LOWER THE HIGHER Ohio State Journal. The cost of low living also remains rather high.
THE FLY IN THE OINTMENT New York World. Airplane weddings would be more romantic if the participants didn't have to come back to earth.
HE THINKS HE'S A MODERN ATLAS Anaconda Standard. As a figure in the world's progress, thought and uplift Senator Borah is the figure "O".
HUMAN ALARM CLOCK Louisville Courier-Journal. Whereas the ordinary man goes to his bunk when he Is sleepy, that most extraordinary man, Hiram Johnson, of California, goes to Ms with hope of awakening and alarming the audience.
BY HALL CAINE Condensation by Caroline Ticknor The scene of this story is laid in At the close of his trial Dan was the Isle of Man, two centuries ago, pronounced "guilty," and awaited the and it is filled with the weird super- ath-sentence which he felt sure must stition nr th at., follow. A more dreaded fate, however, stitions of the Manx people. awaited him. With a breaking heart Inorkell Mylrea, the Deemster, was his father pronounced his sentence: a violent, cruel and crafty Judge, who "This man shall be cut off from his dwelt among the sturdy fisher-folk j people. . . . From now, forever, let dispensing whatever justice suited his no tongue speak to him. Alone let him purpose. Being accustomed to bendine I live, alone die."
all others to his will he was bitterly As the people shrank away from him disappointed when his scholarly son. I Dan passed from among them to the
Ewan, refused to fulfill his word'ly am-
ouions ana retired into the ministry. In anger, he cast him off and took into his household his illegitimate son, Jarvis Kerruish, a worthless fop. Those qualities of strength and leadership which he longed to see in hi3 son, Ewan, the Deemster found in his dare-devil nephew, Eishop-of-Man. Dan was a handsome, fiery young giant, who excelled in every manly sport, and Ewan and his lovely sister, Mono, adored their stalwart cousin, whose wild exploits among the fishermen gave the Bishop much anxiety. From time to time Dan's impulsive nature run away with him and he committed some reckless act that he sorely repented later.
In a moment of
south of the Island, where a boat, containing supplies and precisions, was awaiting him. For a year Dan dwelt In this boat shunning his kind, but at last, unable to endure the loneliness of the sea, he erected a rude shelter on a rocky island not far from shore, where he cculd look upon the habitations of men. On the first night that he slept ashore, a frightful storm swept away his boat, leaving him a prisoner on the island. Here, for seven years, he spent a solitary life striving to make his peace with God, until at last it seemed to him the curse was lifted.
It was Just eight years ago that Ethel Green started out In the business world. She was a pretty young girl of sixteen, just finishing her third year in high school when her father became ill and she had to leave school to go to work. It was a disappointment to both her mother and father for they had intended to send her through school and in their words "to make something of her." She was disappointed too, but she would not admit it. She decided that she would enter some business just as she would enter a' school and that she would try to learn all about it, beginning at the bottom. The question which was most troublesome was where could she find work which would give her the onnor-
jtunities she wanted. The two things which presented themselves first were 'a place as office girl for a doctor In
the neighborhood and that of apprentice to the only milliner in that end of the town. She took neither of them because as a milliner's apprentice she would only earn fifty cents a week and carfare and in the doctor's office there seemed to be no future. She wanted a job in a large concern where she thought she would be able to learn more. Finally she was hired as an errand girl by the largest department store In the city. And every Saturday night she brought four dollars home to add to the ten dollars "sick benefit" which her father got each week. Enjoys Her Work. At the end of a year she was put in the stock room, where she put garments and material away, pinned on price tags and did other odd jobs connected with keeping the stock in or-
fder, such as sewing on buttons and
mending linings. For this work she was paid six dollars a week. While in the stock room she was often called upon to sell, especially during the busy seasons or during special sales. Ethel liked this work and it was but a short time before she was given the bargain square on the main floor, where each day's bargains were on sale. She liked the variety. One day she would sell gloves and the next day
lingerie, then perhaps perfume and
high salaried person who does uplift work In large concerns. She organized clubs for the girls and often gave them lessons In salesmanship. She sometimes directed them in recreational work and did other such things which were not outlined among the duties of a department 6tore buyer. Today she has charge of the buying in all the departments which sell ready-made clothes and she still does the buying for tho women's apparel department. She is only twenty-four years old and is earning $4,000 a year. She Is the sole support of her family and she has never told them cf the disappointment it was to have to leave school; in fact, she is beginning to wonder if It really was a disappoint-
uood Evening BY ROY K. MOULTON
THE PESSIMIST There's been a whole lot written of the value of a smile. But still the feller that goes 'round a-smilin' all the while And don't do nothin' else but smile, no matter what is said, Don't seem in this world's goods to get so very far ahead. You'll hear this idee harped on by the optimistic crowd; There Is a silver linin' bright to every gol ding cloud. But when the cloud dissolves in air and disappears from view, The silver linin gen'ally dissolves In thin air, too. The darkest hour comes just before i the dawn, hey love to say, ! Although your' own pertickler dawn is twenty years way. It never helps the feller much that's workin' in 'the ditch To hear that some day, possibly, perhaps he may be rich.
Tho optimists and pessimists can argue pro and con, And thrash out ail the questions that they are debatin' on.
another time table linens. During the i But after all is said and done, I think
six monins mat she was clerk at the i lcat 'OU will find
bargain square she sold almost every kind of article which the large depart
ment store handled,
She was earning twelve dollars a
m 7. a. i 2 v.i j .a
men at. ms cauin uoor appeared a wpplr oimnsr all r,f
who had landed half-; hnrT1 ' r" "l
uymg priest., wno naa lanaea nail- hnrria v,, . Q -
r thoughtlessness, fainting from a blow received from the ,Tm ,7".' . ' V an
when hounded for a debt, which he boom of his boat. The priest had 1 1 I " . " "a L "".?
feared would worry the Bishop, Dan come from Ireland, at the Bishop-of- he T&ceiv(A 'hT V v " J;i i forged his cousin's name, feeling sure Man's request, to succor the people 1 Sa """2
fmm o Hrnorffii oArro stolid " " "uuic
,'"m "'Yv """ -- the. Greens had.
The priest told Dan that he should carry on his own unfinied work, convey his message to the Bishop, and help to stay the plague. Before he
that Ewan would willingly have ad
vanced the money, and Ewan, being confranted with the signature, declared it to be his own, telling a tie to save his cousin from prosecution.
Uan s prompt expression"? of sorrow
and gratitude were checked bv Ewan's ' died the saintly man outlined the
announcement that Dan should be : methods to be followed in order to from this time a stranger to himself check the epidemic, end sister. Crushed and humiliated, ! And then at last Dan knew the opDan rushed t o Mona's home and ! portunity had come to make complete sought his cousin in her room, where ! atonement. Able once more to reach
For the next two years Ethel clerked in any department which needed help. In this way she was learning much more about the business than she ever thought she would when she started in as an errand girl four years before. At the end of two years she was in the infants' wear department earning eighteen dollars a week. She staved
THUGS AND THIEVES Columbia Record. Al Jennings, former bandit, says he would rather be a train robber than a food profiteer. It's not so remunerative a profession, perhaps, but far more respectable.
LOOK OUT FOR A CRASH THEN Washington Post. Those who think the world is topsy-turvy should take rote how congress expects to cure the present situation by talk, exactly like the good old days. Nothing has changed!
l'n t Vi Q r 1ariQti(mi 1 a 1 i
he acknowledged his fault and protest-1 the shore, he went among the suffer- " Vyv 6C "'J f f" ed against being estranged from her. ! ers, ministered to their needs and 'nd.. ' f ft shf Mnna. nnnnreH M tlt BfttWw ! taueht. them how to rone with th dis- WaS gIV.en a try at the Place- HeT" sal-
should ever estrange them, and Dan.
deeply repentant, hurried awav. en- while all the people were loud In
counter! eg in the hall Jarvis Kerruish, 1 praise of the strange priest whose face who seeing him emerge from his i seemed to many a familiar one.
The Deemster was among the last stricken; and Dan, summoned to his bedside, arrived in time to ease his
final sufferings and to be recognized
cousin's room, promptly reported to the Deemster this evidence of Dan's improper conduct towards Mona.
The Deemster, whose feeling for
Dan had changed to jealous hatred, I with superstitious horror before his in turn conveyed this intelligence to ! uncle died. Even as Mona entered the Ewan, doing his best to convince him house to reach her father's bedside, that Dan had treated Mona dishonor-1 Dan spped away, and hastening to the
UNROMANTIC BUCCANEERS Philadelphia Public Ledger. Profiteers have caused a good many privateers.
Limitatioo of Immigration
From the Christian Science Monitor. ' WHILE Senator Dillingham's Immigration bill provides for a revolutionary change in the Immigration policy of the United States, it cannot be called a radical measure It s both sweeping and simple, and may reasonably be expected to meet with approval ; from American Labor and tho oriental nations, as well
as irom citizens ui lue uuueu o La.tta gcuciaiij, ouu mat. Is saying a great deal. That the author of this bill sees the immigration question from a genuine American point of view can scarcely bo doubted when it is remembered that he has represented Vermont in the senate for many years. He may also properly be looked upon as an expert concerning immigration, since he was formerly chairman of the United States Immigration Commission, and for pereval years was chairman of the Senate Committee on Immigration. Sinco he represents Vermont he is, of - course, a Republican, and that fact should be helpful in the promotion of the measure in the present congress. . While the thought about Vermont and Its representatives may, in some quarters, be that they are not the most liberal, there is nothing narrow about Senator Dillingham's bill. One of its strong and appealing points is that, without opening wide the doors to any nationality, it absolutely shuts out none. In connection with a statement like this, one immediately, of course, thinks of the oriental races, and probably asks what it is proposed to do about the present legal barriers against them. The answer is that they are dealt with In the same manner as others. To be more specific, the Dillingham bill provides that after July 1, ' 19C0, the number of aliens who may be admitted to the United States as Immigrants In any year shall be limited to 5 per cent of the number of persons of such nationality, excepting persons native to countries of the Western " Hemisphere, already residing in the United States. It lfl, : however, reasonably made possible for near relatives of previously admitted Immigrants, as well as specified professional classes, to be admitted after the annual maxl"j mum is otherwise reached, and also for tho secretary of labor to admit aliens in excess of the number when, in his opinion, such action is Justifiable as a measure of - humanity. The bill, if made law, will repeal the existing Bpeclal laws relating directly or indirectly to immigta- - lion from China, Japan, and other oriental countries, ineluding the Chinese exclusion law, the passport provision - of which Is the basis of the "gentlemen's agreement" with Japan, and the provision of the Immigration act of 1917 rt which denies the admis3ion to immigrants from certain
portions of Asia and adjacent islands. While It is plain that some people of the groups now excluded would be admitted, it is equally clear that there would bo no great number of any single element, those of Asia, for instance, because of the relatively small number of Asiatics now in the United States. The question of the effect of immigration on Labor has by no means been disregarded in the preparation of this measure; in fact it Is said that the primary purpose of the bill is to limit the entrance of laborers, particularly from southern and eastern Europe. One professed intention. Indeed, Is to prevent a repitition of the enormous influx of such immigration as took place for some years before the war, and which the United States Immigration Commission declared to be highly detrimental to Labor in the Republic. The practical effects and tho generally moderate character of the Dillingham bill are readily grasped when the calculation is made that it will establish the limit of possible immigration from southern and eastern Europe at a little more than one-third of the annual volume before the war, and will not materially interfere with a resumption of the normal flow from northern Europe. It is reasonable to believe that a change in the immigration laws such as that represented by the Dillingham measure would be found of great importance in improving the relations with oriental countries, especially Japan, whose representatives of late have put much emphasis on the claim of racial equality. In this connection there Is interest In a computation which has been made showing that whereas, during the four years next preceding the period of the war, the average annual immigration from China, Japan, and India was 10,153, under the 5 per centum plan embodied in the bill under discussion the annual number of such immigrants would be 1281. In view, especially, of the closer relation of nations which unquestionably is one of the chief results of the war. It does not seem right that the United States should persist in its present utterly forbidding attitude toward oriental peoples, so- far as its laws are concerned. Japan undoubtedly feels keenly the letter of the discrimination, and China, with its courageous efforts for better social conditions and for democratic government, deserves, broadly Bpeaking, a more friendly attitude on the part of the western nation. There Is, of course, imperative need of regulation of Immigration on lines new to the United States, for its own safety and welfare, and now is the time to readjust the conditions. The Dillingham bill seems to furnish a fair and sensible basis for the readjustment
ably. An excited interview between Ewan and his sister followed in which Ewan mistook her innocent protestations of love for Dan for a confirmation of her lover's guilt, and dashed away to avenge her supposed wrong. He found Dan ready to beg forgiveness for his past fault, but in blind passion Ewan took no heed of his words; ac
cused him of being the basest of I
ease. Soon the epideilic was stayed, i "
.... . . ! t Lcn.
This meant that the Greens need not worry any more about money matters, for Mrs. Green had managed to get along when Ethel was earning only four dollars and she looked at twentyfive dollars as if it were a fortune. Ethel had been true to her decision which she made when she first started to work. She took all of her experiences as if they were lessons and it is little wonder that the head of the firm recognized in her a young woman who "knew the business from every angle." In addition to the infants'
wear department she was soon made
Eishop gave him the dead priest's mes
sage, and also the assurance that nis son lived and had made atonement for bis sin.
And now, word went abroad that the
That misery or happiness is just a state of mind. THE POET'S OBJECTION "Dear Tom, said Maud, with eyes of blue, "To tell the truth I cannot see Why you don't make a verse or two Which I can say is all for me?" "My love," said Tom. "that would do If I did not with fear forsee That if I made a verse for you It might make you averse to me." Walter Pulizer. Charle3 W. Mills says a friend of his was charged 90 cent3 an hour for
the use of a pool table, and upon remonstrating, was told that it was on account of the high price ot chalk. "Can you beat It?" said Charl?. No we can't beat it, but we can tieit. A friend of ours raised the pipe of beef sandwiches from 10 to 15 xents because beef had gone up one ent a pound.
Dinner Stories
-A
nrioi : neaa 01 the women s apparel shons
Mylrea, had been appointed to succeed j an he4re ,sh a?ain, Proved that she his late-uncle as Deemster, or Judge understood the business, for her de-
mien i. wu eiijurgea insiae ot n year and the sales were almost
of the Island.
This message read by Mona, filled
scoundrels and Lade him depart from' j her with hope and a belief that Dan the Island. I should at last come to his own. AcDan protested his innocence, but I companied by one faithful fisherboy,
when he found that Ewan believed him she journeyed to seek him out, only
to be so base, his own wild passion flamed up and he, in turn, cried out that there was "room for but one of them in the world." A mortal combat followed, near the edge of a cliff, and Ewan, almost overcome, threw his dagger inio the air and reeled backward, fall I g o r t'l? precipice to his death. Then Dan realized what he had done and was overwhelmed with remorse. It. was Christmas Eve, and Mona waiting for Ewan's return, had a terrible presentiment of his fate. As she tried to banish her fears, Dan climbed in through her window, prostrated himself before her, and confessed his guilt. Pilled with grief Jor her brother, horror at Dan's confession, and apprehension for her lover, Mona told Dan that he must give himself up to justice and that by so doing he should atone for his sin. He pledged himself to do as" she wished, and while she protested her undying love for him, he bade her a passionate farewell and vanished into the night. Returning half-dazed to where Ewan's body lay, Dan found that his fisher friends had planned to take the body out to sea for burial. They embarked upon Dan's btat. and he reluctantly allowed them to carry out their plan; owing to their unskilled sewing of the canvas about Ewan's body, the covering slipped apart and the corpse was washed back to land. Despite the fishermen's protest that all would be prosecuted if they return fi, Dan insisted upon their doing so. Ewan's body having been washed ashore was brought to the church where the Bishop had just finished his Christmas service. He and the Deemster looked upon the face of Ewan and realized the tragedy; and the latter taunting his brother with the fact that if Dan were proved the culprit, the Eishc must pronounce judgment on his own son. Dan, who had crept back in the darkness, witnessed the midnight burial of Ewan, and after slipping away, narrowly escaped death when he fell into an old mine-shaft where he remained for some time a prisoner. Meanwhile his fisherman friends w;re arrested as implicated in the murder, but during their arraignment in court Dan appeared, pushed his way through the crowd and announced his guilt. He was placed in a dungeon under the Bishop's jurisdiction, and his father, bowed with grief, visited him and offered him the means of escape, which he refused.
to find him unconscious and ill unto death, in a bare cabin, where he had fallen a victim to the disease he had so bravely combated. Mona watched beside him until In his last moments he looked upon her with joyful recognition. She murmured the Lord's prayer and as he echoed the words, "Deliver us from evil," his spirit passed. Copyright. 1919, bu the Post PublishingCompany (The Boston Post). Copyright in the United Kingdom, the Dominions, Its Colonies and dependencies, under tho copyright act. by the Post Publishing Company, Boston, Mass., U. S. A. All rights reserved. (Published by special arrangement with the MeClure Newspaper Syndicate. All rights reserved).
"Hypathia," by Charles Klngsley, as
condensed by Prof W. F be printed Monday.
Memories of Old Days
In This Paper Ten Years
Ago Today
doubled.
Earns 54,000 a Year. During all cf her years of work, however, she had not lost sight of other things and although she had responsibilities far beyond the average for one of her years she was still a young woman with a youthful outlook. She did not always have her nose to the grindstone and she enjoyed many of the girlish pleasures which other young women of twenty do. Perhaps that was one reason for her success the fact that her life was not all work and no play. At the end of six years she was considered indispensable by the firm. It was not only her value as a buyer and organizer of departments, but she built up a feeling of loyalty and spirit among the girls, especially those in her deparmentts, which made the
j store a place where girls liked to
Harris, will j worK-
vi twenty-two r.tnei ureen besides managing and buying for two departments was doing many things which are done by experts on employment work, personnel, and social work or whatever one cares to call the modern
C. E. Beck was named as a logical candidate on the democratic mayoralty ticket.
The first of the teachers' Institutes was held at the Richmond Chautauqua. !
Barnum and Bailey circus showed in Richmond.
One morning a woman walked into a Village grocery store with a majestic stride. It was easy to see by the sternness of her expression that she was somewhat disturbed. "This," she sarcastically explained, throwing one package on the counter, "is the washing itself, and this is the soap. It's the soap that makes washing a pleasure. It's the soap
"That isn't soap, madam," interrupted the groceryman, examining the package. "Your little girl was in here yesterday for a half pound of cheese' and a half pound of soan. This Is the cheese." "U m, that accounts for It," said the woman, as the light of understanding bgan to glow. "I wondered all night what made the welsh rarebit we had for supper taste so queer." "I want to have a tooth drawn," announced the small boy with the steel-gray eye, "and I want gas." "You're too young to have gas, my little man," said the dentist. "Besides I'm sure you aren't afraid of being hurt. Sit still and be a man." "It isn't that at all." safd the boy, "but I'm afraid I shall not be able to help giving a bit af a squeel when it comes out." "Well, that won't' matter at all." said the dentist. "I'm sure I shall not mind." "No, but I shall. Look out of that window. The dentist looked and saw a lot of grinning lads standing under the window. "They're all the kids I've fought and licked,' said the customer, "and they've come to hear me holler."
PROFESSOR LEBARON RESIGNS
OXFORD, O., Aug. 23. Harrison D. LeBaron, for a number of years associate professor of organ and theoretical music at the Western college for Women, yesterday tendered his resignation. Prof. LeBaron will become head of the department of music In Adrian college, Adrian, Mich.
START WORK ON pORMITORY OXFORD, O., Aug. 23. Work was yesterday begun on Miami University's new dormitory for girls, to be erected on the girls' athletic field, south of the campus. The work will be done by day labor, under the superintendency of A. D. Vanausdall. It 13 hoped to have the building ready for occupancy by December 1.
On Nov. 28,1814, the London Times introduced the steam printing press to the Industrial world.
THE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DAILY TALK
KEEP ADDENQ UP We are apt these days to think that the world Is going backward and that the fine things of civilization have begun to disintegrate. But this is not so. As a matter of fact, this is an age of turning over a time of reconstruction and reconsideration of tearing down and adding up again. And if we are careful to put something better In place of what we tear down, the world is going to be great and big in the end. SO Keep adding up. Development always means addition something better from something good. Get and then give. Give and you get again! Adding up, you see, all the time. Keep adding up.' Another thing the better and more persistent that you are in doing your job, the better the job you do and the better man you become. And the more men doing better jobs the better the world is bound to be. Keep adding up. Nature and life is built upon the adding plan. It Is the law of growth and success. A MAN need never stop growing adding something to what he already has. The builder is always an adder. He sees in units each new one added to what has been placed until he has his plans worked to completion Into something permanent. Keep adding up. If you have a good smile, add a few and throw them around. If you have varied abilities, test them out, then put them to use, and you will be happily surprised at the way they keep adding up making you easier to live with, righting the world about you, and making It a better world ia which to live.
