Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 315, 18 October 1919 — Page 6

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HE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, OCT. 18, 1919.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Suuday, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Street. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, aa Seo ond Clasi Mail Matter.

HRMHER OF THE3 ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the OM for republication of all new dlcpatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the locl news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.

Ban on "Red" Immigrants The oveivhelming majority of 284 to 1, which the house gave to the bill extending for one year wartime passport restrictions so as to keep radicals and undesirable aliens out of the United States, is representative of the temper of the American people. They are satiated with the doctrines of these misguided people and angry at their plots to overthrow our government and kill our public officials. They believe that we have enough Reds in this country now without opening our ports wide to the bolshevists who are ready to leave Europe as soon as they can obtain unrestricted entrance into America.

Ambassador Davis at London and the American consuls at Archangel, the Hague, Amsterdam and other European ports reported some time ago preparations of "undesirables" to enter America as soon as the passport restrictions were removed. Congressional action has checkmated the influx. Many of our alien workers, who do not speak or read English, have been corrupted by the pamphlets and newspapers, printed in foreign languages, and circulated by the bolshevists within our own confines. We cannot incur the hazard of an increased immigration of men and women of this ilk to encourage and further the work of their associates in this country. We have underestimated the secret workings f the I. W. W. and bolshevist propaganda in this untry, looking upon it as an idle vagary of a

problem is so involved that it cannot be solved justly and fairly by the methods of a republican form of government. Let us develop this spirit and deprecate the

employment of methods devised by aliens who; have not enjoyed the opportunities of developing! under a representative form of government. ! Intense loyalty to our republic and faith in its j efficacy will accomplish more than recourse to anarchial organizations and employment of bol-j shevist principles. j

Condensed Classics of Famous Authors

Nature Notes of Roosevelt Of all Theodore Roosevelt's many books, those devoted to natural history and observations of animals, birds and fishes will, with the possible exception of "The Winning of the West" and "The Naval War of 1812", most tenaciously hold their place in American literature. These nature notes the product of the holiday time of an extraordinarily busy career have a charm of style which Mr. Roosevelt's writings reveal nowhere else in so rich a measure; and give evidence of that warm and intimate love for wild life that one finds in the writings of Audubon, Thoreau and John Burroughs. Roosevelt's soul was saturated with the beau

ties of nature

CHURCHILL

El jtiL&& .KMbi.

Winston (. hurt-bill

If Winston Churchill did not succeed in his attempt to become Governor of New Hampshire, he has had a far different result In his appeal to the suffrage of American readers. His books have appealed to the public in increasing numbers as the years have gone by, beginning with "The Celebrity" In 19S. and ' Richard Carvel" in 1S9!. He later laid a firm foundation for the favor he has enjoyed In "The Crisis," 1901. and "The Crossing." 1904. "Contston." 1906: "Mr. Crewe's Career," 190S: "A Modern 'hroni' If." 1910; "The Inside of the Cup," iyl3: "A Far Country." i:n5: "The Dwelling Place of Light." 191T, show his continued activity. The universities have "shown th approval of his honest purpose and wowing power by giving him an honorary A. M., a Litt. D.. and an L.L. D. He lias a beautiful summer home at the colony of artists and folk of letters at Windsor. Vt., or Cornish. N. H. (where you arc in one town if you go to the. railroad station, the other if you visit the postoff ire I . There President Wilson spent one of his sadly Interrupted vacations in the authors house, llarlakendcn Hall.

THE CRISIS BY WINSTON CHURCHILL Condensation by William Howard Taft, ex-President of the United States

The scene is laid in St. Louis between 1 S57 and 1SG5.

Stephen Brice. of the Rrnh min class

Whenever he wrote of birds and: of Boston, after his lather's business

their songs, a lyrical quality ci-ept into his prose failure and death, came with his

that revealed the poet naturalist at hrs best

gether. She is surprised into a betrayal and full realization of her interest in him. Hopper eludes Colfax and creepes into Whipple's outer office. By corrupt transactions with

Federal quartermasters, he has be-

jn ' mother to St. Louis, there o study come a rich man and the real owner and inaction law in tio nfTwo -.f tnc of the Carvel hucdm.ce it fini-i -ir-.

the early chapters of "The Wilderness Hunter" . father's friend. Judge Silas Whipple. Jginia alone and threatens, unless she iuPO rl rnoviv pvmiUitP bits of dprir)tivp writ- VirSin-ia Carvel, the only child of I marries him, to betray her father to tneie are many exquisite DltS OI aeripme Will , Colonel Comyn Carvel, was beautiful 'the Union authorities as a spy. Brice irtg in which the Colonel reveals a knowledge of j and distinguished. The Colonel was I appears, strikes Hopper down, defies hirH lifp Vinf i little sVinrr of pvtranrrlinarv when ' ?f old Mar-Vland family. He was the j him with a counter threat of prosecuoira Hie tnat it, ntue snoit or extiaoramaiy wnen, ,eading dry K0ods merchant ot- stition for corruption. This rids the one stops to Consider the many branching activi- j Louis and a veteran of the Mexican j story of Hopper.

' , ' . , I coltax goes South after Virginia has Judge Whipple was taciturn and ab- hrni.an . Tr s u

So much the naturalist was Roosevelt that one 1 Pt- He concealed a generous heart 6 r V ! tinder a forbidding exterior. He slent tequently captured as a spy. Brice

onstanuy Jinus liuii leaving liib main uau ui ins i m ins otlice. He was a black" Renub-1 identihes

THE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DAILY TALK THINGS WE DROP We are dropping something all the time. And somebody Is picking up or. at least, giving a glance to all that we drop. None of us hold anything for very long. It's how we hold It while we hold it that counts. It matters a great deal, however, where we drop what we have earned or learned or held. If we drop the best that we are, it should be dropped everywhere. But if we eliminate that which keeps us from attaining our best, then that should be dropped as far away from folks as possible and buried. A thought, a word, a prayer! We can drop these where we will, and their influence will go on forever. Our habits may be dropped if we only will them to be and new ones formed in their place. We can drop our old and useless selves and build anew from the place wherein we failed. And we can also drop useless baggage and travel the better for it. Every clay we cling to things that ought to be dropped, and not until they are. dropped do we realize how unessential they were Hut this little talk is about dropping the fine things that live in everyone. I think that Walt Whitman had this thought In mind, when he wrote: "I find letters from God dropped In the street, and every one is signed by God's name. And I leave them where they are, for I know that where'er I go. Others will punctually come forever and ever."

Good Evening BY ROY K. MOULTON

ties of his crowded life.

Repub-1 identihes him and then intervenes

hunting narratives to plunge rapturously into i iCan- He secured clients because i with Sherman to save his life. Mean-

,1 :4-: e t, j-., l,t- c., .,,1 1-,Q , . "V""-7 ' is sent oy cnerman to

ucsct ijjliuus ui 111c imrauuiY iciiv o uiig a.iiv.1 .u . in- iuuk ounuay dinner at colonel (

SO. THIS IS PEACE I Mr. Amasa Tubbs of Oil City, appeared at the police station the other evening with a picture frame draped about his neck. He told a pitiful tale of how Mrs. Tubbs had grabbed the picture of Mr. Tubb's father off the wall and had slammed him over the bean with it because he had objected to having Mrs. Tubb's sister and five children come to live with them. He was advised by the police to take his troubles to Versailles. Erasmus J. Harks and Lucius Dinwiddle of New Canaan are both indoors suffering from various wounds Including buckshot. About a week ago Mr. Hanks started to move the line fence one foot further toward Mr. Dinwiddle's house and Mr. Dinwiddle

opened an offensive with his squirrel (

"So we can put 'em cn over our heads, ma'am." "Oh, yes, thank you so much," said she, and walked on. For perhaps fifty paces she went with the contented look of one to whom information has been imparted. Then she stopped suddenly. "Why. of all things!" she gasped. "That impudent young rascal!"

"Then you insist that the officer arrested you while you were quletlv fttending to your business?" inquired the judge. "Yes, your honor. He caught me by the collar and threatened me with horrible things unless I accompanied him immediately to the police station." "Hum!" remarked the judge. "And you say you were quietly attentiiu to your business at the time, raakine no noise or commotion of any kind?'' "Certainly, your honor." Again the judge looked doubtful. "And what is your profession?" "I'm an appropriator, your honor."

J -u,. n? Ua ,-,b-,Vo- 4V.it n-Wirmc eis- wh?re the discussion over

, . . , . . ,, , -4. J , .1!simah neanng on vim hers him and invites him to become American rival of the nightingale. 1-or instance, a plainness of speech that only the his aid. in "The Wilderness Hunter" after describing .f.riondi!11 of ,h,p, two. ,me...Tho Ftr' clones with the visit of

. muiu ' mauf uossioie. coionei t v rem t,, i ... ,u v-i.;,,.

ot

how he had killed a prong-horn buck, Roosevelt ' Carvel was the highest typo nays this glowing tribute to the meadow lark's j feelcXn's mother

An ftnnroririatnr0 Of what0'

rifle from an upstairs window. The i ..p.. ,), T,lr.r,i' rccciic -o-

Car. Ti.,. Ti. j: , , . . ... , ----- i ...K ! ."-w.

' -. iviM ii ii uinaicn?a. i uere ne i snerin ana inree uepuues nave i honor. The newspapers, perhap? slave-; meets Lincoln again. Lincoln remem- lished a league to enforce peace and, trriho mP a h,irriar

are patroi'ing me neignournoou. i Reports come in from Spinks Cor

ners that seven suitors for the hand of i Miss Tearline Pash, the village belle, engaged in a general offensive at the

M. K. church oyster supper the other

diseased minds. Revelations in Gary and

t.' where have brought us to a sober valuation

of the extent and the virulence of the menace. We are beginning to see that anti-American propaganda, printed in forty of fifty languages, and intended to inflame the minds of our foreign workers, is undermining faith in the integrity of our government ond inevitably will lead to dire consequences. If the wartime passport restrictions had been removed, the bolshevist agitators would have re

ceived re-inforcements from alien agitators in Europe, intensifying our problem and increasing ithe potential menace to our institutions. Even organized labor, which under the leadership of men like Gompers, has put up a solid and united front against radicalism and its sinister effects, is menaced by the bolshevist movement. Bolshevist leaders know if they can secretly pcri'son the minds of the members of the American Pctleration of Labor, it will not be long before they can obtain executive control of its organizat kn. Farsighted labor leaders appreciate the sinistermoves the I. W. W. leaders and bolshevist

agitators are making to oust them from office. The rank and file of organized labor is waking up to the danger. The exposures of the bolshevists in northern Indiana proves only too plainly that they were planning to attack the very fundamental principles of organized labor and to wrest

j'rom it the victories gained in many a hard .trugg1. What will organized labor have if a bolshevist regime wins the day? Assuredly nothing but the sad memory of knowing that the very principles? for which it fought valiantly and long were snaiched from it in the very hour of success. Bolshevism is a foe of the whole social state. All of us are involved in the fate of the movement. Xrtne of us can escape the paramount duty of stamping it out effectively and quickly. Developed in a foreign country, fostered here j mainly by alien malcontents and agitators, designed to snbstitute chaos and ruin for order and law, bolshevism offers nothing that can appeal to an American citizen. We have an inherent love for law and for the adjustment of our difficulties through conferences and onderly processes. We believe that no

achievement as a singer:

Lansing Utters Plea for Leagae in Present Form

ALBANY, N. Y., Oct IS. Robert

House, for the pardon of Colfax. Lin

coin had heard of the circumstances

ner reduced fortune with disnitv and' Aftf-r a r-nn, .v.i..t, ,u. ,-,!i.t. ,:s.,. ,c 1,;.- v,iotnr

, , . . .1 ..,...-11 ui. iv IU3 .aifomi-T wi.v .iw. t " : T l ,- 9 rt. TAA

r t-oa Ipno-th varietv nower and rieh , 1 V ."""R ,UIU i icveaiea to irginia the constant sor-i without succeeding in making an ar- r T f Vu US song nas lengtn, aiiei3, power anu rit,nja spirit of sacrifice m his interest. row nf Lincoln' ,n,.i r,rt t,ic ,Wt. I .t for the adoption of the League of Na

tions in us present toria u i: r r.n other reason than that to reject i; would be to discourage future attempts

; to obtain only of action among the na-

itions in an effort to avoid lr.terna'ion-

..c , r r ryy wuiure m interest. r0w of Lincoln s soul and his deep I rest. melody, and there is in it sometimes a Cadence ! MH'halet Hopper, was a New Eng- ( sympathy for the southern people, he I f onH1-.P- inp-nrpsihlv trmchincr Vet T tnc;f'r' 111 Colonel Carvel's employ. In-; pardons Colfax and leaves Brice and Slim McC Of Wild sadness, inexpressibly touching. let 1 . dustnous and saving, he was unscru- j Virginia to that mutual confession of 'drug store

:Carthy, who runs the village

up at M. Pleasant, is hav-

Cannot say that either song would appeal to ; l'ulou-' ard mean, valuin? only finan- ; love of which eacli had long been con-ling trouble of his own these days all j . . , . .. - ciai success and cherishing jealousy of . seious. Thev were married t rno lwacl ,-,-,0 walked in I

others as it appeals to me ; ior to me it comes ior- others' good fortune

m'or Inlm hm V. o Vinnrlr-orl momnrhm nH nccn. : '-'ait-me c oiidX, tue fon ol a

v laow. was lrcmia s cousin He ran Am-i,....,

Ciations J with the sight of dim hills reddening in race horses, he fought gamecocks. He '.' The story is well told

ihe rWn. with the. breath of pool mornir.fr winds !-d,u d,U),mMMins maoience. lie not forced and

. - - ceiled ea society Based on slavery was

UlOWing across lonely plains, With the SCent ot'fUvinely appointed. Masterful,

ageous, adventurous, afhletu

but their honeymoon was darkened 'and knocked a bottle of hair restorer

rich with the sudden taking off of the Great off on the floor and. according to the

1 al conflicts." in an address on "The

Power of Democracv'

local paper. Slim has had to use a!l.ulB; 3 '-'' "-

ltTll II1U' 1 wil tt, 1 .. .1 .....r ,

before the New

Friday

ecretary Lansing expressed !h be-

i lief that "if every nation v. ore a de

ls.

The plot is

maintains one's inter- ciay for a week now in order to keep'

est to tt'.e end rri-.ii.n Ttrir-e j. Itha Viirnto n A nr,i i-vi 1 c Hnu'n p:inl?h !

COUI-- r.lOKt ton nerfeet Tha n.llinr enoatc I oil h i yr. In Pet arrmr-d In wa i t : I-10Cra V m reality. a itl!5 repuUT.

.i - " - . J O , itnivorril rirtii'fl trniil.l Virt in i.-i-nrri.

flowers on the sunlit prairie, With the motion of 6ld mP Z w "a ti'ue Cava er e : lee,.'"8,'-0f;he anXi' "ovpllStS to n the village folks when they came m I ; ,hV(f- at and no a goal towar.'l - nanusome, ue as a tine ( . ,ialier, u.-e- avoid this danger. irginia s charac-, for a package of epsom or a postage , 1 ' '' ,.I'lt 1 a,' , 'l Prv hnrsps with all the stroncr thrill ot eno-er less except for war. ;.r u w.h.nc ut ko ' .which the world looked witn lov..r.-c

ine eents ot tne story sport with; easier to endow with attractive fail-! the natural antagonism, in tradition jngs. Judge Whipple and Colonel Car- FOOLED THEM TO THE END and convictions, of the Puritan Steph-i vcl are admirablv drawn. (Richford note in Tioga County 'n B"c anl 'he Lady of the Cava!-; The story weaves in an accurate' Herald) iers. irgima Carvel. They met first j arid valuable description of the causes! He was a man of perfect health, and at a slave market. A beautiful quad- nf the war and r.f the kind nf nonn'p ; it n- o e- Vic hnoct thtit Vio novpr Viiel

and buoyant life.'

Look at These Resources

As for resources, America earily leads the j " ' l'ufL" Lr,- , ".au ; that tought the war. St. Louis, the ! employed a physician, and it was quite jsaings ot soon. Brice determines to confluence of the two streams of west- remarkable that his death came so

duv tne girl irom a lite ot shame with ern immigration from the North and suddenlv. that although a phvsician an intending bidder and then free her. ,hp South, was the place to studv the, was called, life was extinct before he irginia, through Colfax, also bids for mixinsr but or.nflirtinc- elements nf n,iri,rH.,i

gold, as European countries have been, OUr stock ho girl to use her as a maid. Brice, people before the Civil War. It was I

"UJai 101 ine pieaoing mouiei the author s home. He reveals their GOING TO HAVE A POKER PARTY, of the slae, persists in his purpose, faults and their virtues with impartial! MAYBE and to . irginia s great disgust, outbids ,,or.. ne maintains the just balance.! John Nichols is making arraneethe other two, and manumr s the girl. ? avowedly and really takes the Lin- ments to soil his house on West Main Soon after, on her father's insist- coin view of the contest which n h :Gtret -Wni-e.lv lV Va i Record fr

Since this outflow will tend to bring about the f,n.'.'e' vir5inifh I'S'tmgly invites truiy says, has now become the Amer- " '-

i.ir- iu r."'.'. .-iini nan view Dotn norfn and soutn. j An opera without words has just him but finally dances with him. They The picture of Lincoln is inspiring, i been successfully produced in Paris, meet again at a fancy dress party in The glimpses of Sherman, Crant and There are already plenty of operas

men sue appears in UK- costume 01 l.vnn are v v d and true tn life nvithnnt m.Ki,.

The book is written in a most enter-1

world.

Instead of having been partially drained of

is almost uncomfortably large. The latest statistics recording a decrease in our stock of the metal are encouraging rather than alarming,

gradual deflation of currency which ail authorities recognize as desirable.

eyes striving to devise methods by jwhi.-h it might he attained. I "Until democracy become? thn sandling policy of civilization, other means !to insure to the world a continuing state of international peace must be found." the secretary said, in recommending that the League of Nation j have a trial in its present form.

KESSLER TO TAKE FIGHT UP TO SUPREME COURT

Our flanking machinery, long the laughing her colonial great-grandmother, and

stock of Europe, is now so efficient that Europe Son talks of taking a leaf out of Our book. 'he assurance lie would not be there. rr, -i 11 j i- i. His appearance prevents her giving I he American dollar commands an inordinate way to the wooing of clarence ct ipremium in Britain, in France, in Germany, in fax- . , , , . They meet again at the country yvustria. in Italy and elsewhere so much so, in- place of the carvels where judge deed, that measures are being eagerlv sought to 'hippie is convalescent and there . . . measure each other in d.seu.-s:on. correct the unbalanced situation, since so great a Through Judge v:,'prie and h-r girl .-licnarilir in tho intornatinii!il owlwnmn Vuirt friends, news of r.ri'e is constantly

taining style. It is charming and Sam Blythe has named twenty-five sustained in its interest as a love self-confessed candidates for the presistory. It is a great historical novel. jdency. Men's devotion to the public e.'opyrisht. idi'j, i-v th.- Post F'uhitrh- . weal will drive them to anvthing. ing Company, (The Boston I'ost). i 'npyrigiit In the Viiteil Kingdom, the

Dominions, its (. olonifs and dependen- . :-. u-id'-r tlipVi-o;;. riiji.t act. by the Post Publishing Co, Boston, Mass., L'. S. A All light? reserved. i Published liv sti"c lal arrangement with tht- MeClure Newspaper Syndicate. All rights p.scrvM.j

the ability of foreign countries to purchase goods here. Forbes Magazine.

POINTED PARAGRAPHS

thrust on her. Silas Whipple knew and felt Lincoln's greatness and leadership. Whipple noted Brice's ability and high qualiiies, but regrette d his Host on narrow

ness. Ho sought to broaden him by j f subjecting him to Lincoln's personal-!

ity. Under pretence of a business er-; . , , , rand, h - asked Lincoln to let the Richmond housekeepers

iMemories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Aqo Today

Dinner Stories

I INDIANAPOLIS. Ir.rt., Oct. !? George ;. Kessler. who was found guilty Thursday by a jury in ?he!b- ; ville of having murdered Miss Minnie : Mae Wilkins in Indianapolis on tvr jnirht of May 2. will carry hi- fiu-lu t-. , the Supreme Court, in an effort to es cape the life sentence imposed by j the jury, if ir becomes necessary. HiI attorney. T. Ernest Maholm and Fred j McCallister of this city and Claude '. R. Henry of Shelbyville. will go beI forA Judge Alonzo Blair, who prei sided in the case, Monday morning

with a motion for a new trial. If the new trial is denied it i thought Judge Blair will sen'ene Kessler and he will be taken immediately' to the penitentiary at Michigan City.

Fifty-eight concessions for prospecting gold and silver mines were grant-

The nicest little oh! lady you can imagine stopped to (hat with a sailor on Riverside drive ltst Sunday aiferCI. 1 l j i

..U. .. H'.'hr'l HKe 1 , nu , (hf Dutcll Ea,( ,nd body s grandmother. I rom the fresh-1 ness of her interest in the blue uni- J " form, her hrfme town is a place where fTP' 'TRTFI ?

ii sauu: is iaif. i eiuaps sue selected the wrong kind of a sailor to talk to or perhaps he was the right kind of a

TRY THIS FREE

LET THE PEOPLE RULE!"

port with Douglas. Brice was with Lincoln the right before in a tavern.

coat less, vestle

! ALTOGETHER,

The s'erl strike is costing the people of the United where haile.-

States $5,000,000 everv dav. And the people had nothing discussed the wisdom of asking Doug- ..." , .... . , las the great question., the answer to

ie UU U u Mdl Mils 1L, liui ua t- iiic tutr t;u 1 ivj cuu it.. Hence the large number of goats.

paid P,h i sai.or wliod merely made up his mind i Wonderful Invention Sent on 30 Days'

young man hear ins debate nt Free- ' ......... .....v., , -- - - , " ' ' ' rial DC,urc ,uu -

ine lllgtiesi price paiCI III HIP S'ate. . moci.--u mi n I'.-Jni " ri,-u :uiu . .

according to local grocers. , tne question, put wnen sue wanted i Simnlv send me vour name and I

CHAIN STRONG AS WEAKEST LINK Ohio State Journal.

which made Douglas Senate:' and Lincoln President. Lincoln's limpid intellectual honest. his pure logic, his lucidity of stylo, and his power of apt illustration, with his nobility of soul and purpose, impress themselves on

Members of the Commercial ciub ; W111" an" nlI'.v

announced that the club would spon-'bc said briskly: sor a 110 May Festival for the citv. i

to know why sailors' trousers were cut !wm send vou !ny new copvrighted rup-

about the ankies

We hardly think that the popular impression that young Brice and profoundly affect his

le present cabinet is the weakest ever got together is a

point of view.

Spirit of Insubordination is Abroad in the World

Trom the St. Louis Globe-Democrat.

R

Missouri was saved feir the Union

just one, and we guess the explanation lies in a general hy Frank Blair and Nathaniel Lyon, feeling that, one Burleson leavens the whole lump. Under their leadership the Cermans of St. Louis captured a camp of Hie

golden youth of St. Louis mobilizing as confederates. Colfax was among those' taken but refused a parole and escaped to the Southern army. These

disturbing events brought Brice and . mission to law. That submission may be voluntary or Virginia together again. He sought to I forced, hut. iirless it Is vnlnnta.rv It 1s not healthv. it is lender the Carvels service, which Vir-

The city council passed a bill appropriating ?3,0im.i to the Reid Memorial hospital, after Mayor Schiilinger vetoed it on the grounds that if was "illegal, unbusinesslike and unjust."

ECENTLY a jurist, in defending the courts, said ; . , ,, . . . . , . , i ginia resented. Mrs. Brice and Vir-

that outbreaks of violence and riots, such as I . , . . . , . .. ... , .... ?lnia- howeei, soon Decame mterest- ; 'oyal submission to law and the will of the majority is ed in the nursing of wounded soldiers have been so frequent in all sections of the coun-, fundamental of democracv. and democracv is and of Judge Whipple, whom a fatal

try of late, do not; indicate loss of confidence in the courts j , " f rA - ., u m illness had overtaken. Brice as a Lieuike very essence of organized cociety, because, until man . . . ... , ,.,,, on the part of the people. Persons have been lvnched ! , . . t. . . , . . . . . , tenant was in the battle about lcks- . . , . ' , , . . . ' has reached the stage where he does what is right because burg ami found Colfax badly wounded whose pumshmeni by the courts nobody doubted. The ; ,t ,g r,ght hp ja not vet civilizPd. This vave of dpfiance in the captured city. He sent him Jurist declared th.it it indicates something much worse i uf authority and repudiation of agreements that fall to north to St. Louis, where he was ban that. In rewals a general defiance of law and un- j be checkp(1 lQdustrial ig tQ J?- . willingness to submit to discipline and rule. This is not j ccm(1 ' rea use ulss cause.

suown oy riots onij. nut oy striKes or tne nature ot many

Opinion expressed by a number of local mercharts was almost unanimous for a Fall Festival in 1 y 1 o . and many letters reashod Secretary E. F. Harris.

ihat have occurred and of two that are now in progress, j that of the local unions in some of the printing trades in ! New York and th.i strike of the longshoremen. Both of ' these, like the mine strike in southern Illinois recently,;

Our problem is much deeper than that of agreement -Virginia was enthused by his patriotic .

aevotion to ine cause sue iocu ana

the result.

their engagement was

upon a working system between capital and labor. It

is the problem of bringing our people as a whole into a Brice was wounded in the campaigns trulv democratic state of mind, to a realization that civil- after Vicksburg and also returned to

ization is founded upon order and submission to law. and : .'.' ... . ...

are In defiance of the authority of the higher bodies to i 4h ....... - . ... .. , ' . i i ne cnmax or tne story comes at tne . T , , i , . , - lhat ,,s hlShest form is an order which results from the death bed of Judge Whipple. Colonel which these local unions belong, and this defiance is I . . 4Ki, ...i,-i, i..i, j r,n-ci th,-, in the rohei armv re.

Prompted by the spirit of general defiance of law and . ,!prp Wp must nQt on,y retum tQ that general of Uirns to see his daughter Hearing ; of

Whinnle's illness, he visits Whinnlo's

mind which respects law and authority, properly consti-! office, where he finds Virginia and Coluted. which we had before the war, but we must advance fax. In the latter's hurried withdraw-

There can be no or-! to a still higher manifestation of it if we are to have gen-: l1,10 haSP a fip-v,?vh? ?rove to.be t ; h.lmlialot Unnnor Virginia ann Rnee

not founded upon law and sub-1 t ine democracv and either industrial or social peace. unexpectedly to each, are thrown to-

restraint

There is in thin spirit great danger to the country

danger to al! organized society.

.unized society that .

AWAY WITH THOSE ACHES AND PAINS Keep Sloan's Liniment handy to put the "feel good" Lack Into the system ALL it needs is just one trial a little applied uithout rubbing, for it penetrates to convince you of its merit in relieving sciatica, lumbago, neuralgia, lame muscles, stiffness, bruises, pains, aches, and strains, the after-effects of exposure. The congestion is scattered, promptly, cleanly, without effort, economically. You become a regular user cf Sloan's Liniment, adding your enthusiasm to that of its many thousands of other friends the world over, who keep it handy. Three sizes at all druggists 35c, 70c., $.140.

ture book and measurement blank.

;Vhen you return the blank I will send ! you my new invention for rupture When it arrives put it on and wear it Put it to every test you can think of The harder the test the better you

will like it. You will wonder bow you ever got along with the old style cruel spring trusses or belts with leg straps of torture. Your own good, common sense and your own doctor will tell you it is the only way In which you can ever expect a cure. After wearing it o0 days if it is not entirely satis factory in every way if it is not t-asy and comfortable if you cannot actually see your rupture getting better and if not convinced that a cure Is merely a question of time just return it ami

you are out nothing. Any rupture an-

YOU CAN'T WORK WELL WITH A COLD Relieve it with Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey NOBODY fikI7to be around a person suffering from a heavy cold. It exposes them needlessly. You crin take care of your job and keep business and social engagements shortly after you begin using Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey. For it is prompt in W , I - : XJ. I UI !!....

!TU -'H" -"-y piianoe that is sent on 30 davs' trial inflammation, case breathing, and f., . . . - , . ,

driving away irritating coughs. Use it give it to the kiddies. Don't suffer a minute longerthan you have to. The ingredients used in Dr. Bell's Piue-Tar-Honcy are highly beneficial in promoting the relief cold-sufierers 6eek. Safe and economical. At all druggists. 30c., 60c.. $1.20.

before you pay Is worth giving a trial.

I Why not tell your ruptured friends of this great offer? W'e refer you to any Bank or Trust j Co., in Kansas City. Easyhold Co . J 431 Koch Bldg . Kansas Citv. Mo. ! Adv.

Give the Family R2D215 Correct those tardy bowels natural!?. Smoothly, comfortably with Po-Do-Lax. Liven the lazy liver. Keep the family healthy, pink cbeeked. free from constipation and Its dangerous rssiJt. 60 c. PniRRifta everywhere.

UNITED STATES RAILROAD ADMINISTRATION Director General of Railroads PENNSYLVANIA LINES SUNDAY, OCT. 19 EXCURS ION TO CINCINNATI

I

.65 n ootid Trip

Including War Ta

Excursion Train leaves Richmond 4:45 and 5:05 a. m. Central Time.