Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 122, 23 May 1922 — Page 8

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1922.

PERSONAL WORKERS DO NOTABLE SERVICE IN REVIVAL MEETING

at the Sunday school and do some-, thing." The last thing he said when he started for home, he said. 'You are not forgetting my boy, Ernest?" His boy was going to college down at Shenandoah, . twenty miles across the country. He went to class that nftornnnn anA wasn't foplinf well

Some of the features of the work at' d he undreSBed and went to bed.

the tabernacle are almost hidden from

view of the audience, but when they are noticed, they stand out in relief. The accompiisnments of the person

al, - who silently ana easily, talk to

They were going to have a class party and the boy changed his mind and put on his sweater and dressed warm

and put on his big dog mittens and started for home, seventeen miles. He

reached there about half past five or

the members of the audience about i six in the morning, rapped on the

coming forward and giving their heart to Jesus Christ, are almost, always unnoticed. They do their asking for "trail hitters" without fuss, they encourage those that are on the verge of a decision, but need just a little more courage to come forward, and they work earnestly at the real heart of the campaign. But when their work is noticed, they stand put, clearly marked from the audience by the number of times they have come down the aisles with another person. Sometimes even the number of persons that can be seen to leavea section to come forward is noticed," and some definite personal worker can be seen to have accomplished the result. . - . T ' " Work to' Be Seen 1 1 But most often everything passes

unnoticed, only the person appealed

to knowing that someone had given them a friendly word of encourage-

door.

His father looking down, said,

"Who is there?"

He said, "It's me, Earnest He said, "What's the matter with you, son." He said, "Father, I'm such a sinner I can't rest." "How did you get home?" He said, "I walked." It was seven below zero and one of his toes was frost- bitten. He Bald, "Come in, son. They called the mother, prayed witli him, brought him to the meeting, he gave his heart to God, went to Shenandoah, Iowa, graduated; he is a missionary in India, he is preaching Jesus Christ today. Shoots Arrow Of Conviction. God shot the arrow of conviction seventeen miles. As soon as the fa-

Jther got right he became concerned

i ior ine ooy. xne ixra can ao mat,

The results of one worker, however, girt of 18 years, were noticed." For several days she had been seen coming down "front with people, and once she accompanied a weeping girl, whose tears were a marked contrast to the cheerful smiles and grins of many of the trail hitters. It was Just such an occasion as Mr. Sunday had described in one of his sermons, and a he prayed for the con verts that night he seemed to make a special reference to the needs of that girl. ' '- , . ; v ; ; Thlrty-Blxl trail hitters' 'in three weeks was the record that the girl had made, and the weeping girl was but one of the great number -that were not church members. Besides ten who were not members of any church but had given, her their names to be handed to a minister. , Interested In .Work 1 ; In one day 6he . had .; secured six trail hitters, and had been given three names by - persons who, were not

Christian, but were ready to come for

ward -and make, a. public confession of a belief In Christ. -,

"How do you do it?" she was asked. But she had no answer for the question. Congratulated on her record, she could only say, "Oh, but I love to do it."

GOD WORKS

(Continued from preceding page)

used to drive in miles and miles every night and the spirit of the Lord ; used to say to him, "You go and ask him to give his heart to me." The Lord said, "If anybody is offended because you ask, ' they are r going to hell any way. so you had

better clean your skirts of It and go

',' and ask them to take their stand.'

Finally he said, "Lord, I will speak

- to him." That night he wasn't out. He said, "I will go out to him."

That night a snow storm arose and

he drove out to the fellow's farm

The fellow was coming out of the barn and he said, "I've come out to

, ask you to be a Christian." '

He said, "You mind your blankety

; blank business, when I make up my ; mind to be a Christian, I'll be it, I

want you to understand. 'Go and do j your blankety blank business." 0 - Change Takes . -.' - Place Later. And my friend said he felt so offended when the fellow didn't invite him in the house that he went

back to the town and he got a cold

which almost killed him. Later on

, he went to a city to preach and there he gave the invitation one night and

down the aisle came a bright, keen

cut,, snappy fellow and he took him by the hand he said, "Don't you ; know me? Don't you remember Mr. Benedict This i3 Mr. Benedict?" He said, "You don't know how i glad I am to see you." i He said, "I wish you would tell me what It was In my sermon that moved . you." - . t; He said, "Nothing, I've never heard . a song that moved me as a sermon that moved me, but," he said, "when

you came to my home ten years ago and stood in my barnyard up to your knees in snow the tears chilling on

' your cheeks and told me that you

were praying for me . and I cursed you, I've never forgotten your face

from that day to this. I've been pray

' ing about it, I heard you was over

' here and have come 150 miles."

He said, "If you want to know what , has brought me down here on my knees, it was the tears that you shed down in my barnyard ten years ago."

You meet this community with an

i argument like that and the number ; of people that have taken their stand : will be nothing compared with what

" they have done. What this old world

needs is a little concern. Has Early ; ' Visitor. I was preaching In a town in West

era Iowa and one morning a man

"' came to the home where I was being

entertained and rapped. Six o clock

in the morning. I went down there

and found a fellow there who said t "Mr. Sunday, I am not living" right.' I said. "That's too bad."

He said, "What have I got to do?"

I said, "Just confess that you are

; not living right.

He said, "You don't believe I have

L to tell people what I have done?"

! "No, that is none of their business

: I said, "AU you've got to do is just

; admit by a public declaration that street.

Being. in agony he prayed more ear

nestly." Agonizing prayer will accomplish what nothing else will. I learn another lesson. I learn the possibilities of the human soul. I never looked into the face of a man or woman or a boy or girl but that I think-they are locked up caskets

of possibilities. You are a part of

Gods plan and bo am I. Insofar as I am in harmony with God's plan, is God's plan going to succeed. You are a part of God's plan. There isn't a prostitute or a drunk

ard -or thief . that wasn't a part of

God's plan and God's plan, so far as they are concerned, will never be perfect, but God will go ahead and work without them. God will work, but God depends on human agents. . God's been pleased to put this in an earthen vessel. God's put it in earthen vessel. What a terrific honor that God puts on ns! Why, my friend3, they say of Voltaire that he became an infidel by committing to memory a poem on in

fidelity, and that poem had such an influence on him. And men today

are stumbling over Voltaire's polished shafts of infidelity into hell.

Carney translated the Bible so that

240,000,000 people can read it in their own language and dialect. Finney, they say, turned nearly a million men and women and children to

Jesus Christ. Moody turned tens and

hundreds - upon hundreds of thousands to Jesus Christ, and although he is walking the streets of glory and sitting down at the feast of Moses and the Lamb, his name is still fra

grant and people are being won from sin through the memory of God's noble, saint, D. L. Moody. Learns Possibilities Of Soul.

so, l learn tne possibilities or a

soul. Then ' I learn this in the last place, God honors that spirit. He will honor that. Finney, said, "This

spirit of deep concern is the result

of clear views regarding God as God, Jesus as the Son of God, the Bible as the word of God, heaven for the saved and hell for the lost and sal

vation through repentance and faith

in the blood of Jesus Christ, rve

never seen a man who disbelieved in

Jesus Christ as the Son of God, but

he didn't spend his time criticiszing somebody that is trying to do some

thing for the word of God.

You go down to the pit and you

read, "No hope, if you can have no

concern," then don't come back and

tell me when you realize you are forever doomed. In all the twenty-one years I've been preaching, I've never been in a community where the people seemed more hungry for the gospel of Jesus Christ than here, and where they respond in great numbers

than they do here, and where they come with open hearts and minds and with, less " urging and pleading than

they do here.

It seems to me that God's in a hur-

rv to bless and save America. There

have never been such meetings held

in the history of Christianity as are' being held now. You are living in

the greatest age of the world, spirit

ually, financially, intellectually, as

well as the days of war and brutal

ity and outrage. Never have such extremes been shown as are being manifested today and how thankful we ought to be to God that his cause is keeping up with the rest of itt

Souls' Salvation Pleases Heaven It's astounding. I am humiliated every time I think of it. Nothing produces joy in heaven like the salvation of souls. No battles, oh, no! They didn't cheer up in heaven, my friends, over battles. No! Every time a submarine shoots a torpedo into a ship and it goes to the bottom they don't cheer up in heaven. No

picture that was ever spread on can

vas, no art, no extension of civiliza

tion, but there is joy in the presence

of God over one Blnner that repents.

So. that is what brings joy in heaven

today.

Therefore, if you want to make the bells of heaven ring, give yourself to God and then try and bring some

one else to the Lord.

Some years ago Mr. Sunday sent

me a clipping from a paper and in

it, told this incident of a very sue

cessful man who was a county treasurer and also cashier of a bank a

very successful man in business and in politics. And others were envious

of his prosperity. He had a beautiful home and he had one child that

he idolized and every afternoon af

ter the bank closed, he and this little girl could be seen, either riding in

her pony cart or walking in the

ther. The lawyer who defended her'

father at the trail begun to cast about

but made little progress in the matter. He made application to the judge

for a writ of habeas corpus and the

writ was granted and on Sunday morning, accompanied by an officer, her father in citizen's clothing started for the home. He reached there in the evening and as they led him

into the room where she was lying on the bed. the beauty came back and the luster came back and she

threw her arms around her papa's neck and kissed him and every time she did it she said, "I knew God would bring you home." All the time the doctor stood there and watched the changing conditions

of her epres. He saw the pupils of her eyes begin to dilate, he whispered, "She is dying." Finally, her little arms grew weak and they dropped exhausted by her side and the doctor Baid, "She is going."

The father fell on his knees and buried his face in his hands and sobbed, and sang her favorite hymn. "Bear Me Away on Your Snowy Wings." , - Oh, there was so much power in the prayer of that little girl, it stirred that community. God touched the heart of the judge, of the lawyer. God brought her father across the state at the expense of the coun

ty that he might stand for just twenty-six minutes by her side, have her look into his face and say, "I knew God would bring my papa home." I told you they are in the prison of condemnation, all of our pleadings and tears won't open the doors and bring them out, but in the days that remain there are tens of thousands that are held by sensuousness and pride and lust, and they want to bo free. Let's go in the name of the Lord, Jesus Christ, and do our utmost that they may join us in the song of liberty from the power of the devil.

Billy Has Heavy Week Of Sermons Ahead of Him Rev. Wiliam A. Sunday has another heavy week ahead of him. Tuesday morning he preaches at Anderson, Ind., to the American Legion there.

giving his sermon on "Americaniza

tion."

Besides his regular sermon during the week, the revivalist will speak on

Wednesday morning at Campbells

town, on Thursday at Spiceland, and

on Saturday at Liberty. Friday morning has not been filled and presents the only open date, when Mr. Sunday will have a chance to rest. On Saturday, the closing day of the campaign, he may have to deliver four sermons to take care of the crowd. Mr. Sunday does not usually visit the surrounding towns during the last week of the campaign, but this week he has almost all of his time filled up. Extensive preparations are being

made at Spiceland to greet Mr. Sunday, according to word received from C. W. Anderson, pastor of the Methodist church there, and Theo. Foxworthy, pastor of the Friends meeting. The program at Spiceland will begin at 9 o'clock so as to be completed by the time that Mr. Sunday reaches there to preach at 10 a .m

THREE CENTURIES OF HISTORY BEHIND FAMOUS OBERAMMERGAU PASSION PLAY

PYRAMID BUILDERS MUNCHED BON-BONS, SAY CONFECTIONERS

(By Associated Press) CHICAGO, May 23 Kipling has observed that "when Egypt hewed the snhvni's visaed favoritism eovemed

kissage;" now from the National Con.:'- """"

m a a. i a a laiui ruv iju viv.iv.j. vvucju luci v iur .u lj

lecuoners association cuiucb a tiaw- . - . , . , , . , - . ment which reveals another condition rt, P" ln' h,! a" 1

which obtained then "even as it does

CHINAMAN, TRAVELER DESCRIBES STRANGE SIGHTS SEEN -ABROAD

An old Chinaman on our cargo boat, who declared he had been to Shanghai, told now the foreigners there feasted. Men and women all sat together at a long table. The table wore white clothes and was covered with fine bowls and foreign chopsticks. A man would not sit by his own wife but, chose to sit by the wife of some other man. The men all drank wine out of foreign wine cups, and before they drank, they all stood up and held their cups out to the women. Some of the women and small wine cups and drank with the men. Some of the men smoked tobacco that was rolled into

long tubes, and others had their to-

Dacco in rolls of white paper.

His cousin was working at the inn,

and he was invited into the cookhouse,

in this age."

The statement, which announces the

candy show and confectioners' conventions to be held here this week, incidentally calls up visions of Pharaoh munching bon-bons while decreeing

the destruction of Hebrew Infants.

For it asserts that the Egyptians made

candy as well as pyramids. It asserts further that the taskmasters who bade their vassals make bricks without straw, themselves made candy without sugar.

In fact," says the statement, "there

are some who contend that Noah invented candy and that his sons were

the first manufacturers of confection

ery. Sugar ana chocolate were un

known to the Egyptians. They used honey as their sweetener and flour and crude starch were the basis of their confectionery. The first notice of chocolate was when Columbus carried back to Spain samples of cocoa.

Chocolate was popular among the women of Mexico in 1648. The first chocolate was sold in England in 1657 and in France in 1661. The French were the first to mould chocolate into hard tablets. Ancient Sweet "In the middle ages what we would call candied fruits was the principal confection. They were boiled In honey. As a business the druggist

was the first candy maker and for two centuries candy was sold in drugstores. Sugar at that time was considered a drug, and from coating drugs with sugar the pharmacist learned to coat nuts and other things. In the sixteenth century sugared

roses were considered the best of con

fections. It was not until the seven

teenth century that sugar became a big industry and it was in the latter part of the century that confectioners were recognized as a distinct class. The first chocolate machine was

made in 1703. In the first half of the eighteenth century the first real candy factories appeared. It was about that time that lemon and peppermint drops became popular. Cocoanut was first used for confectionery in the eight

eenth century.

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Seven hundred persons are participating: in the production of the famous Passion Flay of Oberam-

Anton Lang, the potter of Oberammergau, top, as the Christus, carrying his cross; below, left. ' Martha Yeit as Mary, the mother of Jesus, and right, Paula RendL as Mary Magdalene at the foot of the cross. mergau which was' staged for the 1 first time in twelve years recently. '

the wine that was left in the bottom

of the cups. Soon after tasting the wine he forgot all about where he was

raid tried to go out on the street alone

He could not tell whether his feet were trying to climb up bis body, or whether his head was trying to bite

his feet. When the feast was eaten, the m6n and women went into, anotuer room, where some foreign men were making a noise on all sorts of foreign frames. When the men made the noise all the people jumped up and ran about the floor. When the noise stopped they always stopped, .too, and then they would stand still and hit their hands together. Then the women would grab the arms of the men and they would walk around the room, talking and laughing, until the noise began again. Forgot Clothing. Some of the women had forgotten

part of their clothing, but so his cousin told him they did it on purpose to please the men. When the noise was not going on some of the

men were not running about the floor with the women, they would go into another room and drink wine at a long, high table. The wine they drank there did not taste so good to him as the wine they had at the feast. The men were always in a hurry to drink when they were at that high table; for they would pick up a glass, open their mouths and try to throw the wine down their throats. When everybody was tired of running about the floor each man picked out his own wife and they went away in foreign carts. Some of the men who had no wives kept drinking the wine and burning the tobacco tubes

until it was almost time for the city gates to open. Then they went off down the road, holding to one another's arms and all trying to sing a foreign song.

Sunday School Classes To Visit Tabernacle Two more Sunday school classes have made plans to attend the tabernacle in a body. On Thursday night the Good Cheer class of the First M. E. church, and on Friday night the Parker Memorial class of the First Baptist church will attend.

FINDS VEGETABLE DEVIL FISH, CLAIM; ALSO DEATH ORCHID

i you want to renew your vow and that

there are tnmgs m your lire mat youj know ought not to be there. That ; is nobody's business what those ' things are, you go tell it to the Lord." 2 He said, "All right. I will do it." He 1 said to me, "Will you pray for my ; boy?" ; t- I said. "Is your son home." ; "No, he has gone to college." I I said, "Yes, -I will.' He came to the meeting in the afternoon and he did it. And he came to the meeting at night. He said, "I jam going to be pf more use to the church than I've ever been. I Just I joined the meeting house, I am go- : lng to join the prayer meeting and 'the Sunday school and the Sunday t morning services and- the- night serv'ices. I am going to take up a class

One day when she was at school.

they took a circuitous route and took

her around to the county jail. Her father was proved to be an absconder and he was arested and they took her to the jail, and when she looked at him, through the bars, she said, 'I know my father didn't take tho

money." Beauty Fades From Cheeks.

The beauty faded ' from her eye3.

the luster from her cheeks. She and her mother had been compelled to go and live in a little hovel, and Bhe'd often said to her papa, "Isn't it too

bad any little girl has to live in place like that?"

She was tossing and rolling on her bed and they said she was dying

over broken-heartedness over her fa"

BUYS 1,250,000 SHIRTS. .

FROM WAR DEPARTMENT (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, May 23 Sale of ap

proximately a million and a quarter new and reclaimed olive drab flannel

shirts to H. D. Bob of New York at

$1.50 each was announced today by

the surplus property division of the

war department.

The use of blank space in separating

words in writing was not begun until the tenth century.

TENTS TO ACCOMMODATE CHURCH DELEGATES ANDERSON, May 23. Several thousand persons from many parts of the world are expected to attend the twelfth annual International Camp Meeting of the Church of God, which will be held in Anderson June 18 to 25. Two hundred tents will be erected to accommodate a portion of the visitors, it has been announced.

INJURED BY EMERY WHEEL NEW ALBANY, Ind., May 23 Roy J. Beeler, 20 years old, was probably fatally injured when an emory wheel

he was operating at the plant of th

The story has never been substan

tiated, but there are at least two

plants known which, like the fabled upas tree, have the power of killing large animals. One is the so-called vulture lily of Borneo and Sumatra. The plant stands six feet high, and grows in patches, each covering a space the size of a large room. The leaves are enormous, being ten or twelve feet long.

A dog and a goat, brought close to one of these clumps, both became violently ill and died, and the explorer who tried the experiment was so ill that it was all he could do to get out af the range of the paralysing odor of

the plant. 1 Death Orchid. The other, and even more terrible, plant Is the death orchid which grows in Venezuela, beyond the head waters of the great Orinoco river. This was discovered by an orchid hunter called Grayson, who was directed by Indians to the lonely spot where this plant grows. Grayson says that the odor was so strong that he at first perceived it miles from the place where he eventually found the plant. ' The Indians refused to accompany him farther, say

ing that to do so was to court certain death. Grayson, however, insisted up. on going forward, although his head was spinning with theopium-like fumes thrown out by the plant.

At last he reached a point from which he became aware of flowers of

great size and gorgeous coloring, glowing through the tree trunks ahead. He was just able to crawl away, and the next thing he knew he was being carried in a little by his men. For weeks afterward he was seriously ill, and very nearly died from the effects of the terrible fumes.

VACUUM TUBE USED

IN RADIO WORK IS

SIMPLE APPARATUS The vacuum tube is still a puzzling piece of apparatus to ' a great many who have become interested in radio, when in reality it is comparatively simple. In the first place, there are several different types of tubes, chief of which

are the tubes put out as radiotrons.

lhese tubes are also known sometimes as Cunningham tubes. Among

the various types of these is the U. V. 200 type. This is a detector tube only and the U. V. 201 Is an amplifier. The difference lies in the fact that the first tube has a small amount of rare gas left in it. while the amplifier tube is exhausted to a very high degree. This Is sometimes what makes the tubes a golden color. Needs Care in Connecting. A few suggestions relative to the installation and care of a vacuum tube will not be amiss. A vacuum tube has four contacts that must be connected correctly or the tubes will not

operate. By looking at the socket that comes for a tube it will be seen that there are four binding posts, marked G, P, F. F. G stands for the grid. P for the plate and the two marked F are the points for the connection of the filament. As the tube fits into what I . , X ? 1 A I A

A proposal that the government issue a representative coin or a bill of small denomination bearing a

typical American soldier's head has

C. Hegewald Foundry company explod- been made to the American Legion

ed. A fragment of the wheel struck' of Massachusetts." The coin in honor him on the forehead, fracturing his of the soldiers would be known as skull. jthe "Doughboy dollar."

FREE STATERS RECAPTURE KILKENNY CASTLE

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is known as a bayonet socket, it cannot be put in incorrectly, but the beginner will have to be careful to see! that the binding posts are connected properly. Usually the beginner burns out his first vacuum tube in a short time, sometimes as soon as the set is connected. Then there is always the attempt to get a new tube for the one burned out, and usually a few words with the dealer. These tubes are tried out and are correct before they leave the factory, and usually the dealer himself tests the tube before it leaves his hands. If a vacuum tube is used with care and connected correctly it should last several years. Try Out the Filiament First. If the set is a home-made one the best plan is to connect the storage battery first and try out the filament. If the tube does not light you will know at once .that there is something wrong. Never - connect the B battery until yo uare absolutely certain the wiring is correct. If the B

battery is conected in such a way that

the current will flow through the

filament, the filament will last just about as long as it will take you to wink your eye. When this happens, the best thing to do is to throjw the tube away and buy another. There have been firms that made a business of repairing burned out vacuum tubes, but, owing to the patent situation, they are no longer allowed to do this sort of work. As the best vacuum tubes that were repaired in this way were unsatisfactory and had a very short life, the beginner will do well

to realize that when a tube is burned out it is absolutely useless. Any circuit that uses a vacuum tube should be equipped with a grid condenser and a grid lead. The latter piece of apparatus is not used in all sets, but it will be found that if the value is right louder signals wili be received on less battery consump

tion. The grid condenser is absolutely essential and -can not be dispensed with.

MUSIC FOR REVIVAL

CAREFULLY HANDLED BY SUNDAY'S PARTY

Being agosped pianist Is a trick in Its self, but to work in a musical organization that is a part of the Sunday party takes something more than that. The two pianos that make up the "battery" which carries the chorus and the audience across at the tabernacle, are both out of sight of the audience, and the only impressions that the regular attendent gets is that of a volume of sound coming from some place. He has little idea of how the music is actually turned out, and perhaps even less of the persons that can make it. At the right hand piano, facing the audience, is Bob Matthews, the king

i of them all. and pupil of George A. j Brewster, who was until his retire-"

ment, the ace In the revival world. Uses Back of Book It is Bib who makes all of the runs, and variations that are not always drowned out by the volume of the chorus. On occasions when a heavy run is desired, and the chorus is bursting forth with all of its power, he has been known to use the back of a song book. But there is more to playing than just adding runs and thrills. In the first place most gospel song music is written in four parts, and such music no matter how well played would never be heard above the chorus, and not even give the chorus a very good guide. The musician must therefore

i be able to get into his song enough.

more notes to make tha melody itself carry, so that even the auditors In the rear of the tabernacle can get the undertone of the piano as it leads the music. It takes a strong piano to stand up-1 V der the punishment that the pianist f.' gives, for every note must be hit with all the force that the player has at his command, and every bit of volume that the piano, has must be brought Into play. Must Have Swing

I To see Miss Kinney or Bob in action

reminds one more of a trip hammer than anything else, for the music must have perfect rythm. or the chorus even with its perfection of rythm, bfcae of its mass, will lose its way en

tirely. But the music is not a series of notes of the same strength, it requires accent, and that the players must give if they are to carry the audience with them. Every once in a while Mr. Rodeheaver will suddenly turn and ask that a song be transposed to another key, either higher or lower, and the two players must carry it through in the new key as easily is in the older one. Very often they do not use a book to start them off. Consumes Energy It takes a fund of nervous and physical energy to carry through even a sin

gle program of music, but when that must be repeated two or three or even four times a day, and sometimes for extra long periods at a service, the strain on the plaper can well be imagined. , Bob Matthews has been playing first piano since 1919 when Mr. Brewster left the Sunday organization. Before that he played second piano, so that he has been in the business almost since he first joined the Sunday group. Miss Kinney, who was a music

teacher at one time before she joined

the Sunday organization, began play- fc inn. V. I 1 . T1 k

i Life me otruuiiu piauu w iifu jrnj u nai m promoted to the first instrument. T. Lead Chorus In the fall of 1918, while Mr. Rotleheaver was in France with the Y. M. C. A., Bob Matthews lead the chorus, and she played the second piano. That was in Providence, R. I. She began her regular duties at Davenport, Iowa in September, 1919 "Pete" Peterson who plays the second

piano when Miss Kinney is forced to

play first, began his musical education after he joined the party in 1914. He has been playing the second piano as alternate but a few years, and still continuing his lessons, practicing on the instruments at the tabernacle in odd times. Bob and Miss Kinney are both real musicians, in that they not only play but compose music. Bob has had several pieces brought out by the Rodeheaver company, and Miss Kinney has written songs and musical plays for the schools where she has taught.

Ixiak Free State troops photographed during the final assault on Kilkenny's famous castle.

Grave of Stevenson Lies

On High Mountain Top

On the summit of Mount Vaea, on Opolu, Samoan Island, a cemented monument, in accordance with native design, has been erected by native labor, over the grave of Robert Louis Stephenson. On the side facing the east are carved his own words: "Under the wide and starry sky. Dig the gave and let me lie. Glad did I live and gladly die, And I laid me down with a will. "This be the verse you grave for me; Here he lies, where, he longed to be; Home is the sailor, home from sea, And the hunter, home from the hill." Chiseled on the tomb are a thistle and a hibiscus flower .typical of his countries.

CHANCE TO ATTEND FREE SUMMER GAMP

An opportunity will be extended to one young man of this community to attend Camp Knox this summer, P. H. Slocum, secretary of the Richmond Community Service, announced Tuesday. All expenses will be paid by the government and an excellent course in military training will he , offered. Young men who are Interested are asked to get in touch with Secretary " Slocum. President Harding has endorsed the summer training camps in a telegram sent out from the White House to governors of the various states, urging

them to call attention to the opportunities presented for young men to obtain military training during the coming summer at the citizens training camps. The text of the president's-telegram follows: "Apparently all agree that every young man who is willing to prepare himself for the defense, of his coun- . try should be given the opportunity. To this end I suggest that you bring to the attention of the citizens of your state the opportunity now presented to them by the citizens' military training camps which will be conducted during the coming summer.

Without any cost or military obligation to themselves the young men ac

cepted for these camps will be given training which will be of inestimable value through the physical and mental development received and which will unquestionably increase their valup to the nation and to the communities in which they live."

OIL WORKER TO START ON HIKE TO PALESTINE HAMMOND, Ind., May 23. Joseph

tsraKos oi nuiiing, an employe oi arfTiL oil company, started from the Chicago Q

city naii xnesaay morning to walk to s Palestine. He will ship from New York to Cherbourg and make the remainder of the journey afoot,