Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 289, 18 September 1919 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TrELEGRAM, THURSDAY, SEPT. 18, 1919.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Ejccept Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, as Second Clast. Mail Matter.
MEMBER OF1 THE ASSOCIATF.D PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the as far republication of all new dlcpatches credited to u or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. . " , ' v The Health Crusade ; ;With the announcement made by the National Tuberculosis association that the second annual tournament of the modern health crusade for school children will begin immediately after the opening of the school terms this fall, a further statement was made that the National Education association, which includes 400,000 teachers in the country, has endorsed the crusade in a formal resolution. There will be approximately 3,000,000 entries in the crusade this coming year. All children who won the title of page, squire, knight or knight banneret last year are eligible again to try for promotions in ' the field of the cloth of gold" and new entries may take the jousting field at any time. The modern health crusade is based on the performance of eleven chores to be done each day for 15 consecutive weeks. By completing 75 per cent of the chores each week during the fifteen weeks, the entrant becomes a knight banneret and the lesser titles are graded according to the number of chores done. The endorsement from the National Education association came at the Milwaukee meeting this summer. Mrs. Josephine Corliss Preston,
comfort in operation with production that is valuable. 'He must be absolutely efficient; that is, he must have ability, judgment, courage, enthusiasm, self-confidence, energy, initiative, foresight experience, a great knowledge of human -nature and personality enough to be a real leader of men. He must take infinite pains in small things as well as in large. He must demand of himself as well as of others nothing but the best. He must win and retain the confidence and the friendship of his superiors, his associates, and his subordinates. He must always be ready to take responsible ity, to decide quickly, and he must be right more than half the time. With all that he must have backbone and a real desire not only to excel but also to serve. Of course, a man has to earn a big salary before we can pay it; but we are only too anxious to pay it to men who can earn it.
Condensed Classics of Famous Authors
'The
An Impractical Poet unfortunate status that has been
SUE
Rrk-
Eogfae Sue, ISO 1-1S57
Eugene Sue was born at Paris. Jan. 20. 1804. His father was a distinguished Burgeon in Napoleon's army, and Jae himself served in a like capacity at the battle of Navarino in 1S26. After a varied experience in the army and navy, he inherited his father's fortune in 1829 and set up to follow Cooper's example in the telling: of tales of the sea, for which his experience well fitted him. The great romantic movement included him in its all-embracing sweep. Many thought him the equal of Dumas, but facility of composition is probably the only point on which he was fully able to meet his great contemporary. Socialism greatly attracted him, and in pleading for the cause of the working classes he won a large audience. He sat in the French Assembly, but his opposition to the coup d'etat of Kapoleon III. sent him Into exile. He died at Annecy in Savoy, Aug. 3, 1837. His "Mysteries of Paris" and "The length and enormous numbers of Wandering Jew" reached enormous readers as they appeared in newspapers, in book form, and on the stage.
THE MYSTERIES OF PARIS BY EUGENE SUE Condensation by Miss Sara Ware Bassett
To interpret justly the works of
brought about by a few overzealous Italians in j Eugene sue, one must not forget to
Fiume is not likely to prove so serious as many may fear," says the Indianapolis Star. "The responsible officials of the Italian government are not in sympathy with the seizure of that city by Capt. D'Annunzio and his followers. They look upon the incident as a regrettable affair that should be considered as purely a local clash among Italians and not as a menace to the harmony that has existed among the allies. "Capt. d'Annunzio, who is a poet and has made a great record as a military airman, headed a small body of troops that went into the city and took possession in a most theatric manner. The whole proceeding was so characteristically what
the newly elected president of the teachers' asso- a poet, instead of a practical patriot, might have elation, in her first address said there were at j conceived that it should not be taken too serleast 15.000.000 defective children in the country i iously. The hauling down of the British and
taKe into consideration the epoch at which they won their place in world
literature. When Sue was born the novel was still a comparatively new product. There had, it is true, been books before its advent, for the invention of printing had put reading matter within the reach of the people; but until fiction made its appearance,
J?' lltLli miraculously escapes. And through-
- v,.. u. if .civua UCUU, VUllOlC Lillgj Ul lives of the saints, and treatises on theology and science. Even then, such volumes were costly, to say nothing of their being of far too ponderous a nature to answer the cravings of
is around these two themes that the romance moves. In pursuing them, M. Rudolph is beset by every imaginable adventure. He is locked up in a subterranean cellar, where the waters of the Seine slowly creep up to his neck, and from which predicament the faithful Slasher rescues him. Innumerable traps are laid for his feet; but from each successive snare
a public scantily educated and desirous for entertainment at a time when amusements were few. Therefore, when out of this arid literary waste the novel sprung into being, we can easily picture the eagerness with which the hungering masses
out this series of entanglements he
never abandons his promise that no matter how depraved the individual.
THE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DAILY TALK WORD RESPONSIBILITY How wonderful are words their actual formation, their meanings, their possibilities, their responsibilities! All that we are is a representation of what words have meant to us. How words can hurt but. oh, how they are able to lift and Inspire and lead! For It is the use to which words are put that make them agents of ill or greatness. Think before you send your words out into the world to do their Job. Words travel very fast. They sometlmeg have a thousand legs. And no eagle ever matched their speed or space. "Words net the world and bind it, tho only to give it life and vitality. Words have lives like people, too. Kind words live longest. So, therefore, their responsibility is greatest. We all have our own assortment of words. In a plantation sort of way, we harbor them. But many of them should never be let out they would damage too much. Keep an eye upon them, then, won't you? Words, once expressed, can never be recalled. The words that make people happiest are those sent from heart to heart words that sort of know each other just the minute that they meet words wrapped in love tissue, and made beautiful by the deslro that sent them on their way. Train your words up in the way that they should go, and as you grow they will clothe you with honor. Unselfish words are more than coronets!
Good Evening BY ROY K. MOULTON
Masonic Calendar j
Thursday, Sept. 18. Wayne Council
"You ought to spank that kid." said Nc- 10 R- & S. M., speciaV assembly, our neighbor to his wife. "He has work 5n select masters degree. Light been cutting up all during dinner." i refreshments. The wife replied "I'll not spank that ! 1 nday, Sept 19. King Solomon's boy on a full stomach." "Well,"! chapter No. 4, R. A. M special convosnapped the husband, "turn him over." cation. ork in mark masters degree. J Saturday, Sept. 20 Loyal Chapter V- jo i' r - c i i s i .
, . ' v;. il,. o. iaiieu meeting; worn ?enrT"?tr?s eSTsee ! v
uiuvmi uy Kjitiim ma tron. Supper 6:30. Stated meeting. 7:30, followed by social hour.
"Here is
writes Frankhenry. "It is easy
he is her first." The following extract from a new story is inclosed: "We
needed a hook immediately for our
there is potential good in all humanity, scre,en door My husband took
which if nurtured, will blossom into virtue. In consequence he becomes a sort of "inferior Providence" to those whom he meets. He saveB the blameless debtor from prison, and places an honest livelihood within his reach. He does a thousand kindnesses. On the other hand, he does
not besitatae to bring the unworthy
and that only two percent of 387 representative counties she had visite(d had adopted a health program. Following her speech, the resolution of endorsement for the modern health crusade was adopted. It was also announced that the governors of Missouri, Iowa, -Minnesota and Alabama, in proclamations addressed to the mayors of cities at the opening of school terms, urged the adoption of the crusade. Governor Harding of Iowa called upon "every Iowa teacher, patient and child to cooperate in this health-habit forming movement." The modern health crusade is conducted by the National Tuberculosis association and the 1000 local and state organizations affiliated with it. More than $6,500,000 worth of Red Cross Christmas seals will be placed on sale during the holiday season under the auspices of the National Tuberculosis association. The seal sale will provide the funds for the "-extensive educational campaign which the association is conducting in its fight on tuberculosis..
French flags and the practical internment of the
soldiers of those nations who were on guard in Fiume may have been spectacular but can not rank a tommon sense proceeding, and Italian statesmen make haste to disavow the entire program. "No doubt there is great dissatisfaction among Itab"answhc had their hearts set on' getting unconditional control of Fiume. The action of the peace conference in considering the future
every man s understanding; nere, in fascinating form, were presented not only characters from the life with
which he was familiar, but also adventures in those mystic realms of loir.ance that he had imagined. It was like water to the thirsty! Hence, if whtn reading the very early novels, or even those of the later decades to which Sue belonged, we are conscious of stilted dialogue, and melodramatic and improbable situations, let us remember that the writers of this era were to no small extent the pioneers in a sQareely trodden wilderness of art; and that when "the world was so new and all," in literary development, it is a marvel that their handiwork has endured for so many
of the people in the area back from the coast has j years. Sue s "Mysteries of Pans, , . Ti. l- r. i. t i i i penned in 1842, seems touched with rankled m some Italian breasts. But the dele- the fires nf everinstine- voutii indeed
itn uvu 11. a. K, lilBL, was BUUie- y T 1 1
JlZl h"f wthlIl.tne ?cPe ? I eyes of a wretch who has been pitiless
I to the weak to be put out that he j may know what it means to be help
less and the prey of the strong.
gates were acting for the
' the fires of everlasting youth
future of peace in j must possess the charm of universal
1 onrifl'.l r r i irntil1 Airot Vi i i.n tto
southern Europe and not merely to please any Piace for almost a eenturv. When we
Italy was asked to grant tojconsider how few of our present-day
uuveis survue a stcunu Bta.Huii, we
to this
Recipe for Success Who doesn't hanker to be a $25,000 a year man ? Almost every one has an ambition to be in that class, to earn the money, and to rejoice in the performance of the work involved. Theodore N. Vail in an article in Forbes Magazine discusses the question, "What are the qualifications of a 25,000 a year man?" Here is his recipe: Well, the man who earns $10,000 to $25,000
element at present.
its neighbors on the east coast o the Adriatic a route to the sea. "Italy, as one of the big five, can not refuse to carry out the program agreed upon as in the interest of world safety. It can not insist on making no concessions while demanding compliance with the league's orders from others. Even if the disposition of Fiume should not be entirely to Italian liking it can not afford to defy its allies who are struggling with a long list of perplexing problems, some of which are even
more complicated than is the versy."
are forced to doff our caps
The story is the network of crimes and their eventual punishment, and everywhere triumphant we find the creed that in the breast of mankind burns a spark of the Divine. The portion of the tale dealing with the kidnapping of Fleur-de-Marie from
her home with Mrs. George by Screech I
Owl, the blinded schoolmaster, and the imp Hoppy, is a novel in itself. How these wretches wait for the innocent girl; convey her to Paris by coach; and thrust her into the arms of the police, and who, in turn, deposit her in prison, is exciting reading. From prison she is released by a written order, only to fall a victim to a band of hired ruffians, who try to drown her in the Seine. As she is floating down the river, one of her old comrades from Saint La z are leaps in and eaves her life. Next we see her in a great Paris hopital, and it is
at this juncture that the Grand Duke
sardine-can key and shaped it into a
hook by cutting half of the oval handle off and bending the straight piece to a curve and catching into the screw eye." Al Evans, the popular mine host of a hotel on Long Island (location deleted by advertising department), went down the road one day and stuck up a large sign reading, "OneHalf Mile to Evans Hotel." The first man to arrive after the sign was up walked in from a distant town. "Al," he said, ' that sign said it was a half-mile to your hotel from that point and I'll swear it is a good two miles." "Well," drawled Al, "It's only a halfmile If you are coming in a good, fast car, but, of course, if you are walking it may be two miles."
A letter was thirty-seven years making a nine-block trip in Washington. It wouldn't be exactly fair to blame all that on Mr. Burleson.
Indiana News Brevities
4,1,81 Ul LY, pa5L; ' T. ol .'her; discovers that she is his own son, so well merits the sobnquqet of i lanfrhtor. firiH hoor . , trKmnny, tn
POINTED PARAGRAPHS
GEE! BUT THAT BOY'S POPULAR! Pittsburg Gazette-Times. General Leonard Wood's expert testimony that an
"Tusitala. a Teller of Tales," and the
esecret of whose spell lies in the eternal child in us, answering to the corceries of a master story-teller. The book in question is a labyrinth of oxciting and dramatic happenings, which clevc-rly woven together, embody the author's unique philosophy that the quest for good may be made quite as seductive a crusade as the quest for evil; the only difference lying in the goal toward which one turns his steps. Certainly the story
Fiume contro-i b,ears utihis theo7' f.or we are swept
ofter page, chapter after chapter, pntil ' his creative resources seem limitless.
Never for a instant does our interest lag. When the book is finished we feel that had Sue so ordained he could have evolved just as many more plots with an equal degree of ease. He opens his narrative with a scene in the slums of Paris, where Fleur-de-Marie, a beautiful girl of the streets, is
being viciously attacked by the Slastfier, a brute of the underworld. A triv-
i army of 050,000 officers and men is sufficient for the
a year must first of all know his business from i United States will make the war department more de-; ial quarrel between the two has arisen, v, i .. t i...- j j i . ,. mini and the man is about to strike the
tilt: jjiuuuu up. i-ictie buiciiMes are pu;u uecause: Itiujmcu iu
of ability to so systematize and organize that!
the same effort will produce greater results, and so organize operations that neither effort or material or time is wasted. Mere drivers are not valuable. . .It is organization,, system, ease, and
CAN sfAND ANYTHING BUT THAT
New York Post. Boston is getting along fairly well with her police on strike, but she shivers with apprehension over what might follow a walk-out of her librarians.
daughter; and bears her In triumph to
his magnificent palace to be transformed from a fugitive of streets, to her Royal Highness, Princess Amelia. Here for a brief period, we behold our little Fleur-de-Marie, the idol of the court, and sought in marriage by a prince of the realm. But the stigma of the past is ever freh in the girl's mind. She cannot 6halre it off. Though she adore her lover, she refuses to wed him, saying that she "loves him too much to give him a hand that has been touched by the ruffians of the city." Poor, brave Fleur-de-Marie! She at last seeks peace in a convent; and when she dies there, we have no regrets that her blameless but troubled life is ended. In the meantime what of Germain? We search for him through an equally ingenius train of happenings. With all M. Rudolph's wealth and astuteness it is no easy task to find this missing boy who is lost in the great city of Paris. But he is found.
Like Goualeuse, the young hero has kept his soul unsullied by evil. Urged to rob his employer, he has not only
KOKOMO William LemaEters, 65, a farmer near here, died suddenly in an automobile Wednesday while enroute to undergo an X-ray examination. GREENSBCRG Tax levies in tho various townships in Decatur countv will be approximately 60 per cent lower than the ones for the year 1&18, according to County Auditor Barbe. PETERSBCRGH The Alabama Oil company, at a depth of 2,240 feet, on the Dave Gribb lease five miles west of here, drilled in an oil well late Wednesday. VINCENNES A carload of flour, 2.000 bags weighing 50,000 pounds, was wrecked and strewn along the B. and O. railroad, near Vincennes,
SDeakine of strikes, we are unauall- Wljen. tne car collapsed Wednesday.
fiedly in favor of shorter hours fori lraflc was delayed for five hours. campaign orators. I , TT ! DECATUR H. R. Moltz. J. D. SIGNS OF APPROACHING AUTUMN j Pai!e-V and Harve Smith of this city, IN THE CITY. j b&ve taken oyer the Monroe telephone Women laying aside their furs. j P?31- Monroe is about six miles south Pyramids of torpid derbies and ! of here. CThe chestnut roaster's wobbly whis-l 'OBLESVTLLK Ground was broktle at the corner, trying to tell you en Wednesday afternoon for the nev that the worms are done. academy, which the Seventh Day Ad"Aw, wait till the White Sox get CT;tlst Conference of Indiana will
hnld nf the Reds!" uul'u noT Ol mis Cty.
-A. Alexander Thomas.
Dinner Stories
Willie seemed deep in thought. A puzzled frown marred his chubby face. "I can't make it out!" he muttered. "Make what out?" asked his mother, who had been watching her little son with an amused smile. "Why everyone calls little brother a bouncing baby." "Well, isn't he?" smiled mother. "No." said Willie. "When I dropped him this morning he didn't bounce a bit."
ROCHESTER Trustees of the eight townships in Fulton county have filed petitions with the state tax board asking for an increase of taxes, totalling 545,000.
helpless creature when suddenly a Jrefused but hag g'lven information
The Debating Society
stranger intervenes, and by superior
strength and wit, lays low his assailant. The newcomer is a M. Rudolph, who styles himself a painter of fans. Although poorly garbed and speaking the jargon of the pavements, we speedily realize that he is something other than he pretends; and in this supposition we are soon justified, for we
presently learn that in truth M. Ru-
against those who plotted the crime, that they might be brought to justice. As the result of this good deed, however, he has been hounded from one end of Paris to the other. At last he. falls a victim to a monster of crime, Jacques Ferrand, a corrupt notary, who casts him into prison on a fictitious charge. Here he is no
favorite, for by scorning to mingle
THH
From the Christian Science Monitor.
i HE alumni raster of no college in the United States,
Is no doubt safe to say, embraces as many names
as would bo found on the membership lists, were
it possible to compile them, of the debating societies common everywhere in the later years of last century. As usually conducted, the neighborhood or village debating society was an open forum, primarily for the discussion of most questions in which no one was particularly interested. But it was maintained particularly as a meeting place, in the long winter evenings, for young people seeking entertainment. To those more passive members of the debating society, who, from choice or otherwise, were always the "audience" or the "jury", the forensic display afforded only an excuse for "going somewhere," differing little in their estimation, perhaps, from the singing school, the donation party, or the lecture on the "Yosemite. Their ambition seldom was to enter avidiously into a discussion of the vexing problem: "Resolved, That there is more pleasure in anticipation than in realization." Economicand social problems, even of such moment, seemed to concern them little. But there were others to whom the weekly meeting of the debating society was something more than a social occasion. These were the young men and young women who, probably from predisposition, took an active part In the discussions. And theirs were no mean or casual efforts at oratory. Many who have participated in or listened to s'ch contests will testify that those who won did so because they were able, first to array fact and premise, and then to summarize logically and forcibly. These tyros were those in whom the fires of ambition had begun to glow, youths who, barely out of their teens, had felt the first promptings to seek larger opportunity, perhaps some calling more useful than they had dreamed of fir" their arHcf year.' Tt should not be imagined that
these early efforts at oratory and argument were spontaneous or impromptu. Assignments of subjects and "sides" were made a week or two in advance, and there were long days intervening, in which the speakers, white following a plow or hauling grain or wood, outlined their discourses, arranging them, in the evenings, into introduction, argument, and climax. Yes, thee were climaxes in those days, and the perorations were sometimes giddy. A close observer, if he were himself a etudent, could name, almost infallably, the oratorical model of each contestant, whether Webster, Clay, Lincoln, Garrison, Ingersol, or any one of a dozen others. Perhaps some who had visited the county seat, at the time of the closing argument of .a closely contested case on trial in court, had heard and admired the oratorical flights of the county prosecutor, or the leading counsel for the defense. The unadorned periods of some judge's charge, delivered without emotion, may have appealed particularly to another There were imitations, possibly unconsciously rendered, but which, no doubt, might be embraced in that category of flatteries regarded as the most sincere. Possibly this great popular forum, for such Is certainly was, Is a thing of the past. But its graduates are everywhere where men and women are engaged in the great work of solving the problems of the hour. In the courts as judges and attorneys, in the halls of congress and in state legislatures as lawmakers, on the rostrum and in the pulpit, or perhaps, less conspicuously, in other callings the young men and young women of a few decades ago are making use, perhaps unthinkingly, of talents roughly forged and crudely but effectively tempered and sharpened in the schoolhouse forum. One wonders, when hearing such a speaker, or in reading what he has written, with style and emphasis all his own, who was the model, as orator or logician, in his debating-society days, whom he unconsciously characterized when he won the unanimous vote of ftie Judges for the affirmative.
dolph is no other personage than his j with the ViCious creatures about him
Royal Highness, the Grand Duke of Gerolstein in disguise. The Slasher, however, does not know this, and neither does his pretty companion, and we soon find tho three cronies seated
amiably at a cafe table relating for;
one another's amusement the stories of their past lives. Rudolph has little to say. He is an artisan, - he declares. The Slasher frankly admits himself to be an escaped convict who has served in the galleys for murder; but with the inconsistency of human nature, he announces that while he has no scruples against murder, he will not steal. Fleur-de-Marie, or Goualeuse, as her comrades term her, is a 16-year-old waif who has never known any parent save Screech Owl, a cruel woman from whom she has fled when a child; nor has she any home save prison walls and the haunts of vice. Nevertheless, despite her vile surroundings, she has kept her soul untainted and is essentially pure of heart, being the victim
he incurs their wrath and suspicion, until at length they dub him a spy and resolve to murder him. From this fate he is saved by the Slasher, who appears in the prison just in time to fell his assailants and pilot him to liberty. Eventually he 13 restored to his mother's arms and to his pretty sweetheart, Rigolette, whom he now marries. The skill with which Sue constructs his story, introducing character after character, and bringing these varied elements into a unified whole, is a marvel of artistry. It is also interesting to note throughout the novel the author's knowledge of medicine his handling of drugs, his portrayal of hospital practices, and other technical touches relative to his profession. Wherever such data can be turned to use he does not hesitate to employ it, fearlessly setting forth in black and white specific evils of the day that should be righted. Nor does he
shrink from proclaiming to France.
of environment and circumstances, i as did Dickens to England, the defects
rather than in votary.
Observing this, Rudolph, whose aim is ever to give another chance to those in whom good is apparent, transplants her to a home in the country, where, under the care of Mrs. George, his old nurse, she may grow up in a wholesome atmosphere. At the same time he binds the Slasher to him for life by offering him his hand with the remark- that the convict has honor and a heart. . Here our story begins. Rudolph, we soon learn, has two aims in venturing incognitl into the filth of Paris. The first is to discover, if he Jan, the whereabouts of Mrs.. George's son, Germain, who has been taken from her in. Jiis youth, by.a, vicious husband. The second is U trace, if possible, his lost daughter, who is
i supposed to have died in infancy. It
and penal systems of
Boston, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. John Kine and rm
I Everett, of Winchester, Ir.d., spent the 1 1 . 1 . . . ' '
rt-n.-uu un .mt. ana Mrs. carl Kilgus Miss Leatha Phillips and Jerome Merkle visited friends at Cedar Grove last week Mr. and Mrs. Walter Benner shopped in Cincinnati. Friday Ed Compton and daughter were in Cincinnati, Sundav Miss
The man called on the great detec-1 Mary West, of Richmond, spent Sun-
tive who had never failed to make i nay with friends Foster Cole, of good. j Hamilton, was the Sunday guest of
"Sir," said the man, "I want you to Miss Edna Stanford Mr. and Mrs.
locate some missing articles for me." Adam Eby entertained at dinner Sun-
"Easy, replied the great detective. I cay Mr. and Mrs. William Dillman
u here did you lose the articles?"
"My wife put them away when she
was housecleaning." replied the man. "Can you find them for me?"
"You are asking the impossible,"
sobbed the great detective, as he covered his face with his hands and shook with brief.
For the first time in his career he
was foiled.
utnie.ui.cj mis, vi lutnmona; Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley Beard and children,
Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Yeart Ago Today
, The local Red Cross Corps was to take an active part in the Fall Festival, it was announced by officials.
The Centennial anniversary of the founding of schools in Richmond was observed by teachers and instructors. Announcement was made of a
wrestling match between Charles Olsen and Charles Postl. of Milwaukee, two of the country's foremost grapplers, to take place the opening night of tho Fall Festival. An eight-legged pig, belonging to a farmer near Fountain City was placed on exhibition all during the Fall Festival.
POSSE SHOT WRONG MEN?
ot college Corner; Mr. and Mrs. E. A.
Campbell and son Paul, of Campbellstown; Miss Lydia Poindexter. of Indianapolis; Mr. and Mrs. Z. H. Stanley, Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Beard, Misses Josephine Starr. Mary Beard. Messrs. Earl and Jay Stanley Miss Susie Kitchel and William Jenkinson left Sunday for Bloomir.gton, where they will attend Indiana University Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Staton spent Sunday in Cincinnati.. . .Misses Lucile Porterfield and Edna Stanford are attending Earlham College Miss Bess. Doty spent Sunday with relatives at Mt. Carmel Mrs. A. E. Kutter spent Tuesday in Richmond Mr. and Mrs. Claude Ballenger have returned borne after a motor trip through the northern part of the state, Misses Jeanette Shumate, of Cincinnati, and Fay Boreing, of Cottage Grove spent Saurday with Miss Jennie Miller Mrs. Harry Peck returned
home from Goshen, Ind.. Monday.
An automatic fire alarm Invented In Europe is operated by the light of the flames when a fire begins.
SAVANNAH, 111., Sept. 18. Enraged Savannah citizens, forming a nosee
Wednesday for capture of three holdup ' ley's Honey and Tar Compound, for
CUT THIS OUT . IT IS WORTH MONEY DON'T MISS THIS. Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mail it to Foley & Co.. 2S35 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, 111., writing your name and address clearly. You will receive in
return a trial package containing Fo-
of the legal
his country. . A voice so boldly upraised at a time when injustices were many, must have won a hearing, and we honor Sue not alone as a pionee in the novel-writing field, not alone as a prince of story-tellers, but as a reformer of the social and political evils of his generation. Copy right. 1919, by the Post Publishing1 Company (The Boston Post). Copyright In the United Kingdom, the Dominions, Its Colonies and dependencies, under the copyright act, by the Poet Publishing- Company, Boston, Mass., U. S. A. All rights reserved. (Published by special arrangement with the McClure Newspaper Syndicate. All rights reserved).
, .-"All Sorts and Conditions of Men,"
by vv alter Besant, as con nsed by Mr. Charles H. Lincoln, will be printed tomorrow.
men, snot and killed Louis Bluhm and! coughs, colds and croup; Foley's Kid-
wounaed peter Cymbal, both of Chi- ney Pills for pain in sides and back; S) CO It 4 a niw KtltAnJ . v. . i. i , . . , . . . . a
I Z, m Mci.cicu mai. mey rneumausm, oacKacne, Kianey ana
I nreaupon the wrong men
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