Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 104, 2 May 1922 — Page 8

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1922.

WORK AMONG GIRLS 1 HAS LASTING RESULT AFTER REVIVAL OVER "Wednesday and Thursday noons, In

the Reid Memorial church, there meets a group of young women from the businesses of Richmond. The girls come at any hour from 11 o'clock in the morning to one in the afternoon, are served with a lunch that costs them a dime, and then in such time as they have Mrs. William

Asher of Sunday party talks to them

to his chief usher. Who is that assistant usher you have helping you? I don't like his looks who is he?" Do you know who he was? Charles J. Guiteau, who shot Garfield. He prayed and the fashion of his

countenance altered. If a man lives , in sin. or a woman, you can tell by

I looking in their faces they are Bervilng some devil. You can tell! You ican tell by looking in their faces

that they don t like the Lord. Beggar Picks Right Man. Two men were walking down tho streets of London some years ago. One was William Penn's father, a renowned philanthropist and Christian. The other was a shrewd crim1 1 l..... ...... m4 t ehMwJ 1 1 1 namail

For seven years Mrs. Asher ha3:Ray, and they were talking about re-

aisle and publicly avow his faith in Jesus Christ, the Son of God, and take his stand for the Lord. She'd prayed In secret and the Lord had rewarded her openly. Do it!

"Lord, teach us to pray.

I just wanted to bring it to you. I promised your boy if I lived I would; now I am here." The father summoned his carriage and they summoned the family physi

cian. They drove up in front of the

One more- verse, John XIV, "and , beautiful home and the mother came

i whatsoever ye shall ask the Father; out "Any news from Gettysburg?

in my name, that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son."

Not my name! You can cry in my j she read it she said,

name for a month and the Lord won t ihe?

Any news from Charlie?

He showed her the note, and when

Well, where is

been starting groups of business girls

to meeting at noon, as her part of the work of the Sunday revivals. Work is Continued. "What has become of the groups in other cities after you have left?" Mrs, Asher was asked. "What Is done after the revival campaign is over, is a matter for the girls themselves," Mrs. Asher replied. "But in many of the cities the work has been carried on, and there are

ligion, and Penn's father said there

was so much transforming power in the gospel and in prayer that you could see it by looking into a person's face, but Ray didn't believe a word of it and asked for a practical demonstration, and of course Penn was too much of a Christian to offer himself as an example, although a better one couldn't be found throughout the kingdom and they were walking the streets discussing the matter, . and

anywhere from 35 to 40 such councils j looking up they saw a hobo coming

all over the country, from Los Ange

les to Tampa, Florida and New York City."

Mrs. Asher described some oi tne

down asking alm3 of passerby, and said Ray: "Yonder comes a man who lives because of his ability to read the hearts of people as it is revealed

of he asks either of us alms, and,

if so, who."

And they purposely stopped in front of this mendicant. He looked

organizations that have been "carry-j in their countenance. Now let's see

ing on" since they started by a bunday revival. In New York the woman who wa3 head of the girls work for Mrs. Asher

- became so interested that she had into the hard lines and the face of

been instrumental in keeping together j R&yp made by his legal action, then

lour groups wmcn meet at iuc """"jne turned, ana looKea into me neav-

hour for discussion. One of the groups eniy Iace of penn's father, and again

has an attendance or over a mousana i ne scanned the face of the great law

JKrls. while the others run several! yen Then he turned again and look-

LAndred. Since the campaign was;ing lnto the face of William Penn's Weld in New York in the spring of;father with his hand outstretched, he

said: "O man, with God and heaven in your face, please give me a penny."

Ray said: "There must be some

thing in it; he didn't know what we

were talking about.

"As he prayed he fashion of his countenance was altered. His raiment was white and glistening." If you want to change it, get down in prayer and share the blessings that will come to you. Prayer Brought Big Success. Do you know that the great revival of 1857 and the one that went

around the world started in New

1917, the councils have now lived for

five years. Philadelphia Club. In Philadelphia, an organization was effected at the close of the campaign of the girls who had become interested. About 1,000 girls became charter members. The organization now has a membership of about 3,500 and in the eight years since its formation has established four centers where the girl3 meet, and now owns in its own name two buildings where the girls meet. . "The whole purpose of our work Is to stir up the responsibility of the working girls," said Mrs. Asher. "We

want to teach them tnat tney nave two obligations, one to their employers, and another to God. "The slogan of our work is 'Others," and we use the expression 'Together' (To-Get-Her) as one of our principle expressions. Naturally we want to reach the girl that is not a church girl, for she is more in need of our help than any other. . . "But the work is all voluntary, and depends for its real success upon the work that the girls themselves do. It is not a substitute for the church for the whole organization is inter denominational."

hear you. You can cry in the name of the president, and the Lord won't hear you. You can cry in the name of the king and the Lord won't hear

you. You can cry m tne name oi tne bishop, In the name of the pope, and the Lord won't hear you, "whatsoever

ye ask the' Father in My name." You can ask in the name of the banker, he won't hear you. "Whatsoever you ask the Father in My name," said Jesus, "that I will do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son." If you don't ask it In Jesus' name you won't be saved. There has never been a sinner that was saved that

didn't get salvation through faith in Christ, and there never will be a sinner on earth that will be saved, who turns his back on Jesus Christ as his Savior. Whatsoever you ask in Jesus name shall be granted. I went to "God one dark, stormy night thirty years ago in Chicago, and I said, "O Lord for Jesus' Bake save me." Power of Christ Saved Soul I prayed and God reached down and saved me because I went in the name of Jesus Christ. He has blessed me because I try to live In the name of Jesus Christ and I pray in his name. "Whatsoever you shall ask the Father in My name." Two or three things give you the right to a name. If you are in business it comes if one partner binds the other. Then there is the birthright. Your children have a right to your name. You are their mother and father and they have a right to your name. Your wife has a right to your name. The law gives her that right and she is- entitled to a widow's dow

ry, a third of the estate, because she bears your name. She is your wife and the mother of your children. "Whatsoever you ask the Father in my name!" And so I have a right to use the name of Jesus because it is God's appointed way for a sinner to be saved and there is no other way and that gives you the privilege. God wants me to be saved, and

He gave His only begotten son that

"Down there under a tree, dead!"

She screamed and fainted. They carried her in. They nursed hr to health, and when . she became convalescent they said to him, "Charlie was our only child. That was his room where you have been, and he was about your age, and your eyes looked on him last, and your ears

heard hia voice, and you say your father and mother are dead and you have no relatives. We'd like to adopt you; we'd like to have you take Charlie's room and all that would have been Charlie's will be yours when we get through with it. Will you do it?" He went in the name of Charlie,

the son, and he moved the father. When you go in the name of Jesus Christ, I tell you God Almighty will lean over to hear what you've got to say. That's the name they listen to up above! "Whatsoever ye shall ask of the Father in my name, that I will do." You ask Him today for salvation see how quickly you get it. Ask Him to forgive your negligence and your indifference and your prayerless and your powerless life, and see the benediction of God that will flood your soul like a California sunshine.

LITTLE TALKS ON THRIFT by S. W.STRAUS, President American Society for Thrift.

I York, in John Street church, when a whosoever believeth on Him might be 'fow Q . Trrm iari end niorip-ori finH saved. That is the reason why I

LORD TEACH

(Continued from preceding page)

a Christian worker 1 owe to my good old father and mother." He said, "When they were alive and I was a boy at home they used to read the Bible and pray twice a day, and many times father would go into the closet and pray. And when we children were playing he'd always -put a handkerchief out in front of the door and whenever we saw that white sentinel

on guard then we'd stop our laughter and our play and we'd wait until he came out and if we had occasion to

v v,o r-naat -we'd ilr it nn tiD toe. 1

lest we might disturb our father and

that they would pray every day for

a world-wide revival, and they got other people interested and all the city became interested until they filled places with new meetings and the spirit leaped to Philadelphia? It jumped to Baltimore and Washington and out to Pittsburgh and Chicago, St. Louis, Cincinnati, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Denver, San Francisco, and It leaped to the isles of the sea and never stopped, even, at the Antipodes, but came sweeping around until out of the great awakening of '67, eight and nine millions of people swept into the kingdom of God Almighty. The church needs .a spirit of prayer. God knows, if there ever was a time when people ought to get on

their knees, it is now. We want to pray as never before that God Almighty, will bring glory to His name; and He will. But let us pray! Now a great revival started there. I've looked carefully into the liver of all saints from Genesis to Revelations; every one of them knew how to pray. Iv'e looked carefully into the lives of all saints of Pentecost until today in New York; they all knew how to pray. Some were Methodists, some Baptists, some Episcopalians, some Lutherans and some Catholics, some one and some1 another,

but they all knew how to pray, and

man or woman wno nas ever

i h i i i - i i i ii im i iii.i mil rm rv mi tt i K uuw

t ii hora'PPn cmr "

nrea me wu --y t0 pray. in our old cities and con

ratner anu ine ; tinents they all knew how to pray.

T Tfl TTl MT1 H I llUJPUilCl 111 0 -

that, I walked to do what I am doing. It Is no credit to me, but to my good old father and mother." Begin each day with prayer and I will tell you the devil won't be dragging so manv of our boys and girl3 away. In Mathew XVI, I read, "And when he had sent the multitudes away he departed into a solitary nlace and there he prayed."

No doubt he asked God to help him feed them, now he wanted to get auuav to thank God for the fact that

he had had the privilege to feed them. AlwavB ask God to help you do a thing, then don't forget to thank him. He no doubt asked the Lord to help him, then he wanted to get away to thank him that he'd had the privilege. My friends, pray for success. I believe in that. But don't forget to thank God for the success, because the success was not by might nor by power, but by God's spirit, and givs the Lord credit. It all comes from God. There Is nothing of ourselves. Not at all! It is God that gives us the food to eat. wo fn't make the seed grow. The

God that gives us the water to drink and the wood and coal to warm us, is the God that gives the sunshine, it ; isn't ours. Thank him for it! God Does Many Things For Us. Supposing the sun dont come up, you can summon all the world tomnrmw mornlne and they couldn't

make it come up. It is beyond their

. power to do that So the Lord Is doing all these things for U3. In John XI, I read these things. "And when they had taken up the stone away from the place where the ! Hpart was laid. Jesus lifted up hw

and said. 'Father, I thank thee

i that thou has heard me, and I knew

that thou hearest me always, but because of them that stood by, I said' I and when he said this he cried in a ' loud voice, 'Lazarus, come forth!' and

hp rame forth bound head and foot

; bound with a napkin and Jesus said, 'i .nose him. and let him go.'"

think that is one or tne iinesi examples of the power of God, and if the church would only keep in touch with the Lord we'd have power and pray, and God would hear us always He said, "I thank you, Father, ' that you hear me always." Always! : So, if the church (God) would do that : way, benedictions and blessings would

t come to us. , T , TV . . I Now I read this in Luke IX, And i as he praved the fashion of his coun- : tenance was altered."

There is someming iu "

It was a master stroke of the devil when he got the people to quit pray

ing.

must go in His name and if I don't I can't be saved. The Lord is deaf and dumb to anybody that goes in any other name or any other way. Jesus said, "he that climbeth up some other way is the same as a thief and a robber." Do you know how you treat thieves and robbers when they come around. Well, you know how the Lord will

treat you when you try to climb up by certain cults they are no good! I believe in your, morality. I believe in virtue and -character, and all thos9 things to the very limit. I believe in them with both hands in the air, but they don't save your soul. That'B what I mean. Take Care Of the Wounded So I believe all that you believe,

and I go with you as far as you go, then I will go farther than you go, because I go the way of the Lord wants me to go. At the close of the battle of Gettysburg (Have you ever been

over the battlefield of Gettysburg? Take it from me, if you ever have the opportunity, don't miss it. It is the most marvelous battlefield on earth.

They've got within a few feet of

where every commanding officer stood

They've got within a few feet of

where every regiment and company was in the great conflict. And where every famous general fell; they've got monuments there. It is th9 mot accurately marked battlefield in all the world Gettysburg). At the close of the battle of Gettysburg committees were organized

in all the towns around about to care

HOW SUNDAY

(Continued from Preceding Page) out instead of up toward the roof, the efforts to have all babies cared for in the nursery in the Friends Meeting house, and the constant w. Vmg about coughing, are only a few of the external means used to save Rev. Sunday's voice. The contrast nn the muscular action used by people not used to speaking to such large spaces and that used by Mr. Sunday for actual talking is very noticeable when seen close up. Except when he is unusually emphatic, he does not expel his breath with any force, the sound waves being carried by their own vibration and not by the force of the breath. While Mr. Sunday thus is saving himself for the endurance of hours of speaking day after day without end, other speakers from the platform wear themselves

out in a few minutes from the very

torce of their muscular action in speaking. Needs Weekly Rest But the thing upon which Mr. Sun

day counts more than anything else

to keep him in the 'pink of condition

is the weekly rests he gets on Mon-

I day, when all activities are stopped.

vvnue he is in Richmond he is try

ing to get the rest that comes to him only at home, by a weekly trip to Winona Lake for over Monday.

But Mr. Sunday is not the only per

son who takes such care of himself.

All of the other members of the party get a change of some sort over Monday. While they do not always follow the same rules which Mr. Sunday lays down for himself, each has his own way of taking care of himself. -Bob Matthews plays golf as much

as possible on Monday, and any other days that he can. Homer Rodeheaver plays a first-class game of tennis, and now is taking up golf as a sport for exercise. Albert Peterson gets about all of the exercise he needs looking after the tabernacle and Mr. Sunday, while Miss Kinney takes to the woods for nature and bird study.

Thrift and industry invariably go hand in hand. An old proverb expresses the thought very concisely as follows : "Industry is fortune's right hand, and frugality her left." If you would understand the

significance of this mighty truth begin a plan of systematic saving, and note the added enthusiasm with which you apply yourself to your work. It may be difficult to save at first, but it will become a positive pleasure as success continues. Tasks that

were once performed as perfunctory duties become exalted to the plane of real inspiration. Hence the thrifty man invariably becomes an industrious one and his accomplishments multiply. What is true of the individual in this case also may be said of the nation. People who have been proverbially thrifty such as the French, the Belgians, the Danes and the Dutch have been uniformly industrious. The man who accomplishes the rudiments of thrift practices by beginning to save money, simultaneously begins the prac-

, f , , $v - V r

tice of thrift of time. He eliminates the little periods of idleness that are so destructive tc

erhciency andi progress. He is j not afraid of hard, steady work. He understands the value of sustained effort, of steady applica

tion. The thought of idleness is as abhorrent to him as the suggestion of squandering money, 1 These are facts that make of thrift practice a most important function in our industrial life. The wage earner who practices thrift is a better employe, he is steadier in his work, more settled

in his habits, more fair minded in his public attitude, and withal a far more valuable man than would be the case were he not of a thrifty bent. These facts are of special interest at this time when the entire industrial world seems to be on the threshold of more active conditions. Hard work and industry are tlje qualities so much needed throughout the world today. When we encourage thrift we are encouraging many kindred practices from which the individual, the nation and all mankind will receive untold benefits.

REDEDIGATE OLD CITY HALL IN PHILADELPHIA & AS HISTORICAL MOVE

(By Associated Press.) PHILADELPHIA. Pa., May 2. The old city hall, one of the Independence

1 Kmiaro oxnnn of till 11 din PS w&a re-ded-

icated today as a prelude to a series of historical celebrations which will culminate in the Sesqui-Centennla! exposition in 1926 commemorating the 150th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. ' The building, completed In 1791 and once used by the United States supreme court, was erected from th

proceeds of a lottery instituted In

1789. ordered by the mayor. Twelve thousand five hundred tickets were issued, 3,687 of them drawing prizes amounting to $50,000. It was provided that one-fifth of the profits be devoted to Dickinson College. The city

hall has just been rebuilt as part of the restoration of the Independence Square buildings. The United States supreme court occupied the back room on the first floor, while the first floor was given over to municipal offices. The first session of the court was held February 27, 1791. John Jay presided as chief justice, having chosen that office when Washington asked him to take any post to the new Federal government, he preferred. John Rutledge, William Cushing, Jomes Wilson, John Bliar and James Iredell were associate justices. Later John Rutledge and

uuver naiswonn sai in mis room as h!sf -inaHoPH anH Rnshrrwl Washing

ton. Samuel Chase, Thomas Johnson, William Paterson and Alfred Moore as associate justices. Mayor J. Hampton Moore, under whose administration the building was re-dedicated today, covered the old city hall when he was a young reporter for news from the offices ecu- i pled by the mayor of that day and by some of his staff.

Sight and Scent Harmonies By FREDERIC J. HASKIN

WASHINGTON, D. C, May 2. Isj danger to those testing its delights, your nose educated? Can you tell, for ?t has been used for some time as an

The score for a color composition is

One of the biggest Tarces in the " l"ccnl"7" r"uu" mrch today is a prayer meeting. H vr 0 & " whether

vnn Ljri mmhw, anrt ran theV WOre blue or Krav- " aS

sit up fifteen or twenty, you think ilH J " fV They . v,! ,a w, ,,. sdidn t want to know which side he was

v f .v j T nil, i u 1111 auu lumioiri

to his wounds and help him

the rest of them? ' Playing golf on Sunday and going to the Theatre on the Sabbath and those things. What do they care about God? I am amazed at God's patience! God Is Pleased Over Right Service "Lord, teach us to pray." When I pray I move men, when I pray I move God, but I will never move men if I don't move God. There are three things. Whatever you do, do it for the glory of God; do It because you believe It will please God to do it.

Everybody, I don't give a whoop who I yroues for

uu me, 11 v udi i uvi . uicyicaara juu j Admittance

men n is no creaii 10 you: it tuuwa you are not decent. If what I do pleases God and don't please you, then you are off. That

is true: isow, giory in uoa, ao everything you do because God wants

it done and the devil doesnt. Live for the glory of God. Have a surrendered will. The late President Garfield said; "The supreme aim and object of my life is to discover God's will concerning me, then to pray Him for grace to live in harmony with it, and run contrary to it." Don't say with your lips, "Not my will but thine be done," but with your life say, "Not your will but mine be done."

And a certain man was member of

a committee (I think It was in York, Pennsylvania), who was a lawyer, and he gave his time for days and days until some pressing business commanded that he resign from the committee. He went down to the office one morning; he said to his assistnat, "I am no longer chairman of that committee, and if any soldier comes in here asking for help, send him over to Mr. So-and-So, who has been ap

pointed in my stead."

instance, the difference between lav-, ender and garlic with your eyes shut? If not, you had better begin to give your nose daily setting-up exercises, for the long neglected sense of smell is coming into its own.

Perfume concertsare the latest contribution of science to aestheticism, and persons who have always depended largely on convention to tell them what to like and dislike in the category of scents are said to be at a loss when turned loose among futuristic perfume harmonies.

The perfume concert Is a recent

scientific experiment. It has long been held by some scientists that har

monies of color, ecent, or taste, are as capable of giving aesthetic pleasure

as harmonies of sound. If we enjoy a series of musical chords, they reasoned, why should we not enjoy a ser-v ies of perfume harmonies, or a series of blended colors. A dress or painting may be beautiful by reason of its colors alone. But both color and perfume have always been made to serve as accessories. They have been ignored as aesthetic stimulents. Yet both can be fixed in a scale, similar to the musical scale, scientists find. Using these scales, harmonious or clashing chords and sequences can be

evolved, just as in music. This, in a general way, is the theory of the scientists who have experimented with perfume and color. So far as the taste goes. It will be remembered that Huysmans in one of

) his novels, describes a liauor orean.

"So Billy went , to her home to This was made up of a scale of liquors preach. It was in an old tenement ; in glasses, and combinations were and he prayed with her and gave her ; formed and tasted by the operator, a little talk and read from tho Bible, i The svnmhonv of taste would seem to

VVhen her daughter returned that ! be a more far-fetched idea that the

generally written In advance, and the colors are projected on a screen in the combinations and order that the score directs. The concert is produced by an operator at an organ-like instrument with a key board, and stops which control different light rays. Almost anyone who Is not color

CHEFS WORK ON PLAN TO REDUCE EXPENSES, BETTER AID PUBLIC

(By Assoc'ated Press) CHICAGO. May 2. Chicago chefs are working upon plans to be presented to the hotel men of the country that will cut down expenses, reduce waste to a minimum and cater more to what the public really wants. The chefs who are members of the Loyal Craft of the Progressive Culinary association, an organization designed to work for the betterment of hotel service, are busy now writing

i papers on subjects of vital interest

blind or who is not entirely devoid of to hotel men an(i whjch mav result in a feeling for beauty can get some-1 radical changes being made in hotel

SUNDAY SEEKS (Cpntinued from preceding page) because she could not go to hear Billy preach. "He Prayed With Her"

evening her mother told her what had

happened. The daughter couldn't believe it. She thought her mother had had a vivid dream. "I'll show you the passage in the Bible from which he read," said the mother. "She opened the Bible and between

the pages from which Sunday had

concert of color or scent. It is especially far-fetched now in this country, for few aesthetes would be able to rig out a complete 'set of liquid notes for an organ. Scale of Soft Stuff More practicable, perhaps, would be a soda fountain organ, with a scale

I running from strawberry to vanilla.

read she found a $100 bill that Sunday -r, i. i -

IV. 1 i IUC1 C

time of the soda clerk's skill at har-

v. wrinkles from around

aii. -. tha .

a and wiu vs v - -

thing you can du,

eyes,

..si h. nraved the fashion of

his countenance was altered. That is the cure for the weakness f thP church. So ai we pray it will S i Change. A wonderful cure for it.

Mnnrtv was holding

Chicago in 1876

a meeung in

One day ne saiu

It won't go! you've got to pray it with your heart as well as your lives.

"Lord, teach us to pray," Then pray In assurance that God will do what he has promised to do. I tiave

read, "When thou prayst, enter in to the closet and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father who seeth in secret, and he shall reward thee openly." A friend of minet started a series of meetings one time in his church and he said he never made a request for prayer but that there was one woman jumped up. Something she'd say, "don't forget I have one boy that isn't saved." Sometimes she'd say, "don't forget John." -

I Keeps Up Her

Prayers Everybody knew when she got up who she had on her mind, and one day some women went to her and said, "don't you worry about John, you've got six other boys. They are all grown and they are In the church and they are elders." And she said, "worry about John! I gave John to God before he was born," and she said, "from the day I kissed him first until now, I have never forgotten to pray for John." My friend said he wasn't surprised when he saw John walk down the

And he was going over his mail

since he hadn't been in the office for

a long while. There was a rap on the door, and in came a Union soldier. He could hardly tell that he was a Union soldier, although he had a blue uniform on, and his hair was matted with blood, and his face was covered with dry blood, and he had his head bandaged up and his clothing was covered with dirt and mud, and he had been shot in the foot, and he hobbled along, and he had cut him a cane and had it in one hand, and he came in and asked to see this man. The fellow at the door said, "He isn't a member of that committe."

"I must Bee him," and he stood arguing when the man in the inner office heard him. He opened the door and saw this man standing there. He

said, "You look to me as though you needed more help than anybody that has come. I am sorry to turn you

down, but I have to begin with someone and if I make an exception in your case I will with the next man."

He said, "I just wanted to see you." He said, "I haven't time." He said, "I was with your son, Charlie, when he died. I held his hand and I promised him that if I lived I'd tell you." "Charlie died yesterday, and I know right where he Is. I know, because I tovered him up. I dragged him under a tree and I went and got some water for him in the canteen, and I know, and I held him while he wrote this note."

It was something like this: "Dear father: If this soldier reaches you, treat hhn kindly for my sake, He was with me to the last and made it

comfortable and got me some water

from the spring and helped me.

And it went on, and then shut off

abruptly as it was written, and the father had tears rolling down his

cheeks, and the soldier started to eo,

ine iatner inrew nis arms around

rt 1I i !

t,7w i "luer "orV m monies is enough for most people. 1T f J55: JaL m A complete symphony, consisting of a

f.miW X . 8 T !e!!io of aggros, adagios, colfamily who couldn t make ends meet. Q,o v,'

would knock almost any patron of the

into transports of indigestion.

The American stomach will have to

i be strengthened before the American i sense of taste can be very much de

veloped to appreciate the soft drink

pleasure from a simple color. concert, j

It is claimed, very subtle harmonies require a more sensitive audience. Of course, at any color performance, the person who is a critic and lover of colors can get much more out of the display than a person who is indifferent to the appeal of the spectrum. Civilized man is used to depending on his eyes for information more than his ears, nose, or fingers. For that reason, at least, the color organ has a chance for popularity. When it comes to the neglected. It seems likely that at first only a few sensitive souls will be able to enjoy fully the subtleness of a perfume concert. A perfume scale has been fixed by Dr. Septimus Piesse, a French chemist. He uses delicate and pungent

scents for the high notes and the

management The papers will be discussed at the National Hotel exposition here May 8, to 13. Anton Negri, a Chicago caterer an 1 president of the Loyal Craft, will present some of the problems that tb2 hotel men face. "One of the big obstacles we hav to contend with is the intermediarv between the 'real boss in the hotel and the chef," said Mr. Negri. - "The manager should learn the lingo of the kitchen. He should be in direct contact with it and know personally what the real conditions are. The chef gets the blame when he does not deserve it. The pound should be the standard weight. The hotel men of the country should unite and demand thatl congress make that the standard.

Then we would not have to buy car-

heavy scents for the low notes. I rots by the box and spinach by tho

"Billy heard of his plight. He asked a frioTlfl if tYicra wniilrl a hmt. .n.. rt '

- i- ... .1 i . . v l. i i .i auj , cl y L W j r .

out, iwiu muiicj iu iuc man wjinuui 1

his knowing it. He handed the' friend

two 520 bills, and he saw to it that they were slipped into the man's

pockets.

"Man Doesn't Know"

"The man doesn't know to this day

wnere the money came from. And 1 1 might go on and tell of incident after incident like that." Then we go on and meet J. C. i

Breckenridge, who is secretary of the assembly that conducts a course of lectures and concerts at Winona Lake in the summer time. "Billy Sunday is the Lord Bountiful

of his town," he says. "We were building a large assembly hall and we needed $10,000 to finish it. Billy Sunday came across with the money and "Ma" Sunday is here to supervise the

work. And there s not a thing he's going to get out of it, except the satisfaction of having done something worth while. And as we walk along there are pointed out cement walks that were built at Sunday's expense, under direction of "Ma", and a comfort station that is being constructed for the town by Sunday; and the committee rooms that have been installed over the Postoffice for the Presbyterian assembly, at Sunday's expense. ' In one place there- is a group of old buildings that is an eyesore to "Ma". They belong to the assembly. Wants Them Moved "I am going to have them moved somewhere else," says "Ma" "They don't look right here." The moving

will cost her about J500

concert

The color organ presents fewer difficulties. At least. It offers no internal

WEDNESDAY IS QUAKER NIGHT AT TABERNACLE

Wednesday is Quaker night at the tabernacle. All Friends are to meet at the East Main street Friends meeting house at 7 o'clock, and march to the tabernacle, according to plans laid down by the committee in charge, Tuesday. Edward Bellis, Timothy Nicholson and other prominent Friends will lead the procession. Delegations from different Ohio" and Indiana towns are expected to join the Friends in the procession.

example with the many things she

doe," says Mrs. W. G. Fluegel, wife

of the mayor of Winona Lake.

So, finishing our walk about town, we return to Billy Sunday's house and Nora Lynn has lunch on the table, consisting of roast beef and potatoes

and a salad and jelly and coffee. Nora

is agood cook. Son Argues for Water

With us Bits Paul Sunday, 14, son of Billy. He pitches on his school

team, Dut recently nis side lost a

Billy Sunday," says George DeHoff, j debate on the issue "13 Water More

Destructive Than Fire?" Billy argued

for water,

" Lunch being ended, let's start back

for the tabernacle in Richmond, folks

"Ma" wants us to stay for supper, but

postmaster of Winona Lake, "lives up

to his teachings here. About a year ago the men and women of Winona Lake got together to clean up the rooms over the Dost

office to be used for office quarters . we've got to be back in Richmond in

by the Presbyterian assembly in June

They swept and scrubbed and nobody

Ma" Sunday

him and said: 'No, sir, you don't go! j made complaint. And Your eyes looked on Charlie last: suDervised th work.

you stay!" ' "We do these things cheerfully be-

xno, ne saia, -i won t bother you. Icau3e Mrs. Sunday sets such a

time for tabernacle services

They call the building on South Fifteenth street Billy Sunday's taber

nacle

Wrong! Billy Sunday's tabernacle

fine is the little bungalow on the hill

Though a few of the odors of his scale

are not familiar to the layman, most of them are; so we quote the plan of the perfume keyboard: Patchouli to Civet Starting with the base clef, three octaves below middle C: do, patchouli; re. vanilla; mi, clove bark; fa, benzoin; sol, franglpane; la. storax; si, clove; do, sandalwood; re, clematis; mi, rattan; fa, castoreum; sol, pergulaire; la, balsam of Peru; si, carnation; do, geranium; re, heliotrope; ml, iris; fa, musk, sol, pois de sonteur; la, balsam of Tolu; si, cinnamon; do, rose.. . . Rose corresponds to middle C. The treble rises with re, violet; ml, cassia; fa, tuberose; sol, orange flowers; la, newmown hay; si, aurone; do, camphor; re, almond: mi, Portugal; fa, jonquil; sol, Byringa; la, tonka bean; si. mint; do, jassamine; re, bergamot; mi, citron; fa, ambergris; sol, magnolia; la, lavender; si, peppermint; do. pineapple; re, citronel; mi, vervain; fa, civet.

From this keyboard the skilled per

fumer can . draw harmonies by com

bming the essences into chords for

the. delectation of his audience.

It seems possible that man might

develop greater sensitiveness to per

fumes. - The Arabs cultivated the sense of smell as an Instrument of

pleasurable sensation. It is written

of their gardens that near the en

trance were planted pungent, not al

ways pleasant smelling, plants. Far

ther along the scents grew more softly

fragrant, and In the heart of the gar

den the perfumes blended so delicately

that only highly attuned olfactory nerves could appreciate them fully.

ine Arab garden Is possible to few

of us in this country. But we may

soon be able to achieve the same degree of stimulation that the Arab dio through perfume concerts emanating from tiny vials and tubes of essences. Keen Scent Not Essential

Develoning greater sensitiveness to!

perrume harmonies with a view to increasing one's capacity for enjoyment is not exactly the same as developing keenness of scent. The two should

not be confused. The primitive Indian had a keener sense of scent thanhe modern white man has, but It is doubtful whether the primitive Indian reacted with much sensitiveness to perfumes pleasing and displeasing. A modern man may, like the Indian, have a keen sense of scent and yet lack the nower of enioying delicate flower perfumes. A finely attuned set of olfactory nerves, however. Is a help in enjoying a perfume concert, just as good hearing is an aid to enjoyment of music. Given normally developed senses, the taste for perfume and color can oresumably be cultivated, like a taste for music. Imagine an intense evening, say ten years from now. The walls of the -oom would be a screen for color harmonies played throughout the evening sy an expert operator at a color organ. V pianist at an ordinary musical piano would accompany the color musician.

bushel.

There are many sizes In boxes an.l no two bushels are the same in the quantity they contain. There should be just so many pounds in a box or bushel. When we get a pound of ric we know we have a pound of rice, but it is astonishing the loss a hotel sustains in a year by being compelled to buy by the box and the bushel. "Can the fancy and foreign name3 be eliminated from menus?" is another topic that will be discussed during the exposition.

BRINGS 500 CARATS OF ROUGH DIAMONDS

(By Associated Press) NEW YORK, May 2. Bringing 5001 carets of diamonds in the rough with; him Prof. William LaVarre, of Har vard university, has arrived from Trinidad on the Vauban after a Journey of three months in search of diamond fields along the banks of the Mazaruni river in British Guiana. Mr. LaVarre who led an expedition for Harvard through the Amazon valley in 1916, described the rush to reach the new diamond fields as a second Klondike except that fever and tropical pests were subsituted for the

bitter cold and Arctic animals. "Every steamship into Georgetown the capital of Eitish Guiana brings from seven to 10 prospectors," he said, "and there are at least 9,000 blacks searching for diamonds in the creek beds and along the banks of the Mazaruni. They find stones sometimes, and then try to buy the town. Life is perfectly safe among the black prospectors, but the fight against fever and other tropical diseases must be constant." LaVarre stated that he was return

ed to British Guiana in three months backed by a syndicate for exploration purposes.

14

TO UNVEIL FORT WAYNE MONUMENT MAY

By Associated Press.) FORT WAYNE, Ind., May 2. The formal unveiling and dedication of the monument to Col. D. N. Foster, the ' father of Fort Wayne's park system," which has been erected by popular subscription, probably will take place Sunday afternoon. May 14, according to a recent announcement.

Perfume breezes, melting from one scent to another, would be wafted through the room by electric fans. A taste organ of the latest assortment of bootleg harmonies would be operated by the guests. Thus, would all senses, except touch, be provided for. Perhaps bits of silk", velvet and flower petals, with an occasional sample of nutmeg grater fox piquant contrast, could be passed around. This may seem a fantastic picture. But, remember, the color or gan is here. The perfume keyboard is ready for a master composer. And in ten years ?