Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 248, 22 August 1912 — Page 4
PAGE FOUK.
TJIJE BJCIIilOND PALLADIUM AD SUN-TELEGRAl.THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1912.
The Richmond Palladium and Sun-Telegram Published ad 0rnd by the PALLADIUM PRINTING OX Issued Every Kventna; Except Bunaav. Office Corner North th and A street Palladium and nun-Telegram Phone Business Office, ; Maws liejrlment. im. RICHMOND. INDIANA
8UB8CKIP7ION TaTOMM In Richmond ff.Ot par year (la vance) or lOo par wee. , RURAL itrftJTBS One year, in advance M-5 Six month. In advance ........... ! af..monta' ln advance K 5dre" c banted as ofteo a both new and old addresses w,t iven. . Subscribers will (.lease remit wlta , peclfled term; name will not tr until payment U received. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS igne year, in advene f-JS via months. In advance .......... J 'One month, lo advance 1 . Entered at Richmond. Indiana, port office as second class mall matter. ( New Tork Representatives Payne A jTou:i;, 30-34 West 33d strec and i85 Went 12nd street. New York, N. T. Ctcaro Representatives Payne & Young-. 747-748 Marquette Building-. Chicago, ja The Association) of Ameri icaa Advertisers has a mined and certified to the oircnlatloB af thl pobli cation. T.H fic'tres of crrcalatioa aontained in tha Association's report only are guaranteed. Association of American Advertisers No. m- .Whitehall BIdg. R. T. City State Ticket Nominated by Indiana Progressives Governor, Albert J. Beveridge, Indianapolis. Lieutenant Governor, Frederick Landia, Logansport. Secretary of State, Lawson N. Mace, Scottsburg. ' Auditor, H. E. Cushman, Washington. Treasurer, B. B. Baker, Monticello. Attorney General, Clifford F. Jackman, Huntington. State Supt. of Public Instruction, Charles E. Spalding, WInama. Statistician, Thaddeus M. Moore, Anderson. Reporter Supreme Court, Frank R. Miller, Clinton. Judge Supreme Court, First Division, James B. Wilson, Bloomington. Judge Supreme Court, Fourth Division, William A. Bond, Richmond. Judge Appellate Court, First Division, Minor F. Pate, Bloomfleld. Electors at Large: Aaron Jones, Lucius B. Swift. Contingent Electors at Large: John Overmeyer, W. L. Stahl. This Is My 42nd Birthday DANIEL R. ANTHONY, JR. s Daniel R. Anthony, Jr., who represents the First district of Kansas in the national house of representatives, was born in Leavenworth, Kan., Aug. 22, 1870, the son of Daniel R. Anthony, who was for many years prominent in public affairs in Kansas. The younger Anthony was educated ln the Leavenworth public schools, the Michigan Military Academy and the University of Michigan, receiving his university degree in 1891. After completing his university career he traveled extensively abroad and then returned to his native city to follow in the footsteps of his father as a newspaper editor and publisher. After serv ing two years as mayor of Leavenworth, Mr. Anthony was elected to congress on the Republican ticket in 1906 and is now serving his third term. Congratulations to: i Anthony N. Brady, noted American I capitalist, 69 years old today. ; Maud Powell, the violinist, 44 years old today. Melville E. Stone, general manager I of the Associated Press, 64 years old today. Butler Ames, representative ln conJ gress of the Fifth Massachusetts disi trict, 41 years old today. James O'Connell, president of the Inj ternatlonal Association of Machinists, I 54 years old today. E. H. R. Green, son and heir of S Mrs." Hetty Green, America's richest i woman, 44 years old today. Joseph E. Ralph, director of the I United States Bureau of Engraving t and Printing, 49 years old today. This Date in History AUGUST 22. 1776 Lord Howe, the British cominlander, landed 10,000 men and 40 guns near Gravesend, L. I. 181S The Savannah, the first steam vessel to cross the Atlantic, launched ' at Colears Hook, New York. 1828 Richard Peters, who was secretary of the Continental board of war ! throughout the Revolution, died in ; Philadelphia. Born there, June 22, 1743. ' 2S4t New Mexico annexed to the United States after a protracted war. 1S49 Venice surrendered to the Austrians after a long siege. 1851 The yacht "America" won the famous cup in the international regatta at Cowes. 1864 Fort Morgan, Mobile Bay, surrendered to FarraguL 1870 President Grant proclaimed ; the neutrality of the United States in the France-Russian war. 1878 The Independence of Servla proclaimed at Belgrade. 1911 Da Vinci's famous painting, the "Mona Lisa." stolen from the LoujjTe, in Paris.
Hymn of Armageddon.
Important epochs in the history of any nation bring forth great achievements ln music, literature and art. The crusade now on to restore popular government to the American people has produced a striking literary classic from the pen of George Sylvester Viereck of the staff of Current Literature, which is entitled, "The Hymn of Armageddon." This poem, which Is to be set to music, has attracted nation wide attention and has been reprinted in thousands of newspapers. The Viereck masterpiece follows: Though Hell spit forth Its snarling host we shall not flinch nor quail, For in the last great skirmish God's own truth must prevail. Have they not seen the writing that flames upon the wall, Of how their house is built on sand, and how, their pride must fall? The cough of little lads that sweat where never sun sheds light, The sob of starving children, and their mothers in the night. These, and the wrong of ages, we carry as a sword. Who stand at Armageddon and who battle for the Lord! God's soldiers from West are we, from North and East "and South, The seed of them who flung the tea into the harbor's mouth, And those who fought where Grant fought and those who fought with Lee, And those who under alien stars first dreamed of liberty. Not those of little faith whose speech is soft, whose ways are dark, Nor those upon whose forehead the Beast haB set his mark. Out of the hand of Justice we snatch her faltering sword. We stand at Armageddon and we battle for the Lord! The sternest militant of God whose trumpet in the fray, Has cleft the city Into three shall lead us on this day. The holy strength that David had in his, the faith that saves, For he shall free the toilers as Abe Lincoln freed the slaves. And he shall rouse the lukewarm and those whose eyes are dim, The hope of twenty centuries has found a voice in him. Because the Beast shall froth with wrath and perish by his sword, He leads at Armageddon the legions of the Lord! For he shall move the mountains that groan with ancient sham, And" mete with equal measure to the lion and the lamb. And he shall wipe away the tears that burn on woman's cheek, For the Nation's council hence the mothers, too, shall speak. Through him the rose of peace shall blow from the red rose of strife, America shall write his name into the Book of Life. And where at Armageddon we battle with the sword Shall rise the newborn commonwealth, the City of the Lord.
Pride in Family.
The American of less than a quarter of a century ago had a fine scorn of ancestry. He lived strenuously in the present and enthusiastically for the future , and was calmly in different to his antecedents. The past meant little or nothing to him. But within the past few years he has begun to take pride In his ancestry and the genealogists are now actively engaged delving into musty family histories and records and drafting "family trees"; hundreds of thousands of family reunions are held each year and the family historian is always a very busy man at these gatherings. Histories of more or less prominent families are now weekly features of many Sunday newspapers, and among the most popular organisations in the country are several patriotic societies, both for men- and for women, to obtain membership in which one must trace his ancestry back to the Revolution and prove that he or she had a forefather who served under Washington. Today hundreds of the famous Harlan family are holding a reunion at Glen Miller park. They have come here from all parts of the country and no king, nor duke, nor earl in all Europe is prouder of his family than these Harlans. They come of good Anglo-Saxon stock and can trace their ancestry back hundreds of years. A healthy pride of family is a splendid thing for it tends to good citizenship. A man who is proud of the stock from which he has sprung will live to uphold the honor of the family.
Mr. Buggie "Regular.
The Republican Press of the state is highly indignant because Fred Buggie, Republican candidate for elector from the Sixth district, has announced that if elected he will vote for Roosevelt and Johnson. Until last Monday the Republican press and state leaders had been confidently announcing that Mr. Buggie would be "regular." He is consistently "regular," in our judgment, right now, and we fail to comprehend the Old Guard yelps that Buggie has turned traitor. We base our claim to Mr. Buggie's regularity in the fact that he was nominated as a Roosevelt elector at the Republican district convention last spring and he has now publicly stated that if elected he intends to obey his instructions and vote for Mr. Roosevelt. He would be most irregular if he voted for Taft. It will be amusing to watch any efforts of the Republican state committee to oust Mr. Buggie from the ticket.
A STUDY IN SMOKE. Beauties That Greet the Eye From Any of Pittsburgh's Hills. Robert Haven ScbaufSer, writing in the Metropolitan, says: "1 never come within range of the unique spell o! modern Pittsburgh without wishing that I might personally conduct thither the sage who so mendaciously declared that there Is nothing new under the sun, for Pittsburgh is something new. "From any of the city's hundred hills one can enjoy more varieties of smoke In an hour than there are kinds of cloud ln a month. These range all the way from fairy shavings of ice and curls of driven enow, through geological strata of pure cream, mischievous, evanescent ringlets of bluish white, smudges faintly tinged with olive, aerial bushes of delicate rose, trees of orange and rusty red. through a hundred tones of gray, from the most ethereal fawn to sheer brutal dirt, then deepening to a black as rich as the glossy, tarry coal from which It sprang. "One convenient thing about the smokescope is that you can enjoy some part of it wherever you happen to be. Looking west In the canyon of Fourth avenne one morning, the lower parts of the office buildings were quite obliterated by a dense, low lying bank of Boft, dusky smoke. But as the eye traveled upward this cloud began to thin until, when it reached the cornices, every detail of them stood out sharply in the sunlight against a sky of pale sapphire. Such effects are as Interesting as they are characteristic of the place." Entertainments in London are attended by 200,000 persons every Sunday.
A Certain Quick Relief for Indigestion or Up-Set Stomachs
Why suffer the tortures of Indigestion, Sour Stomach, Gas, Belching or other stomach up-sets? There is a certain quick relief and permanent remedy for these disorders Brown's Digestlt tablets will give relief almost instantly. One dose makes your stomach feel fine. It stops fermentation, prevents distress, digests all the food and restores your tired worn-out stomach to a healthful condition. Dlgestit is perfectly Harmless even a little
IRON AND POWER.
The Link Between the Metal and the Great Nations. In the sixteenth century the greatest iron making nations were Spain, France and England, abd beyond all fear of contradiction these were thu three countries which were then reckoned greatest, says the London Telegraph. While Cortez was carrying the flag of Spain into the then unknown world and while the great galleons were bringing home to that favored nation treasures beyond the wildest hopes of the adventurers the myriad forges were alight ln Catalonia and the armor of Castile was enabling a handful of men to seise the riches protected by many thousands of natives who had reached a high state of civilization, but knew not the methods of manufacture of iron. And so it ever was, and. much as ws may in theory and in sentiment regret the fact, so it is today. We hear a great deal about the reasons for the rise of modern Germany as a world power. It is worth noting that that country has risen rapidly into prominence as the iron and steel output has increased by leaps and bounds. In the olden days it was the same. The Romans carried into Spain the knowledge of working Iron and steel, and upon that foundation Spain rose to the might and majesty of a great world power. There is a good prospect that teachers in state-aided secondary schools of England and Wales may see the commencement of a superannuation system this year. child can take it without fear of bad after effects. Don't wait until you have another attack of indigestion, but get a package today. Try it after eating, and just see for yourself how it helps your stomach. We are so confident that Digestit is a perfect remedy for stomach up-sets that we guarantee it to please you in every way get a package and if you don't like it we win give your money back. Conkey Drug Co.
Heart toHeart Talks. By EDWIN A.NYE.
THE TRESPASSER. In a New York tenement where 25 cents for the gas meter is a problem and rent day is a tragedy a poor woman drew on her meager savings of dimes and pennies to summon a doctor for her baby, whose suffering was intense. The doctor said the babe must have the fresh air of the parks. Whereupon the mother took the child to Central park, which, valued by financiers as worth a billion dollars, belongs to the people of New York. She saw an unoccupied lawn and took her baby there. Mother and child lay down upon the grass ln the shade and soon were both asleep. Scarcely were the slumbers begun than the majesty of the law appeared. A park policeman awoke the tired mother, worn by the sleepless nights In the hot tenement, and demanded her name and address. He placed her under arrest and notified her to appear next morning In the court. Terrified and weary, the poor mother went back to the stuffy, noisome "home" to spend another sleepless night. In the morning she left her baby with a neighbor and appeared before the magistrate, where she confessed to the heinous crime of trespassing on the people's premises. The court fined her $1. Weeping, the woman said the doctor's bill bad taken all her savings, whereupon she was remanded to jail. As she started to go with the policeman a probation officer who had witnessed the trial interfered and pleaded with the court to remit the fine, which the court did, but sternly remarked that the law must be enforced. The probation officer afterward took the matter up with the park commissioner, who commended the park policeman for the arrest. the requirement to "keep off the grass" is proper and there must be a penalty. But just the sameMercy and discretion are never out of place. Surely should the future historian of the first quarter of the twentieth century come across this story of how a poor mother with a sick baby was arrested for trespassing in a park owned by the people and remanded to Jail he will pause and moralize on the subtle cruelty of the age. Loses His Grit. "Isn't that fellow ever going to propose ?" "I guess not. He's like an hourglass." "How's that?" "The more time he gets the less sand 4 has." St. Paul Pioneer Press. "Were all medicines as meritorious as Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy the world would be much better off and the percentage of suffering greatly decreased," writes Lindsay Scott, of Temple, Ind. For sale by all dealers. Birds That Carry Their Young. The woodcock, it is said, has been known to carry away her young when threatened with danger. She places them on her spread feet, pressing them between the toes and the breast. A naturalist says many woodcocks also carry their young down to marshy feeding grounds in the evening, returning before dawn. In fact, they have no means of feeding their young except by carrying them to their food, for they cannot convey their food to them.
Health and Beauty Helps By Mrs. Mae Martyn
C. L.: The hot sun and wind will not injure your skin, even though It Is delicate, if you apply a spurmax lotion each day. This lotion Is made by adding 2 teaspoonfuls glycerine to pint witch hazel (or hot water), then 4 ounces spurmax. Powder and rouge are unnecessary when the spurmax lotion is used, and if you apply the lotion every day you will find that it banishes tan and freckles and dispels the oily, shiny, blotchy condition. The spurmax lotion is invisible when on and is not affected by wind or perspiration. Myra: Each night apply pyroxin to lash roots with thumb and forefinger and they will come in long and silky. Your eyebrows will grow thick and heavy by rubbing on pyroxin with finger tip. Be careful and don't get any where hair is not wanted. Dorothy D.: No harm results when delatone Is used to banish hairy growths. Just make a paste with some delatone and water, spread over hairs and in 2 or 3 minutes remove, wash the skin, and every trace of hair or fuss has vanished. Rarely Is It necessary to use more than one application of delatone. B. A. Of course you cannot make your hair look bright and pretty, because soap was never Intended for shampooing, as It causes the hair to grow streaky and brittle. Dissolve a teaspoonful canthrox in a cup hot water and you will have enough mixture for a delightfully soothing and invigorating shampoo. The lather created by canthrox allays scalp irritation and dissolves dandruff and excess oil, and after rinsing well, the hair and scalp are clean and sweet, while the hair dries quickly, with an even, rich color, and beautiful gloss. Nothing compares with canthrox for keeping the hair silky, brilliant and fluffy in hot weather. Mrs. J. R.: Boils indicate a poisonladen blood, and you can hope for little relief until the poisons are eliminated from the system. In pint alcohol pour 1 ounce kardene, then put in Vt cupful sugar and hot water to make a quart. Take a tablespoonful before each meal and you will soon be rid of your bolls.. This tonic will clear up the skin and give you healthanil energy, and should be kept handy
SOILED POSTAGE STAMPS.
If They Are Ink Splashed They Wont Do to Put on Letters. "How dirty can a postage stamp become and still retain Its usefulness ln the eyes of the government?" was a question propounded to muddle the already overworked brain of a busy man. Happening to meet a postman who was collecting mall, the man handed him a stamped letter. "That won't go," said the postman. "Stamp's dirty." As was his wont on special occasions the busy man resorted to sarcasm. "Since when." be demanded, "did the United States government become so immaculate that it requires none but unsullied stamps stuck on its letters?" "Well, they've always been pretty particular," returned the unperturbed postman, "but there are some kinds of dirt that count for more than others. That stamp's got ink on it. Inky stamps don't go because an ink spot could be used to disguise a canceled stamp." "Then I suppose every stamp I happen to drop a speck of Ink on is wasted?" "Oh, no. Turn it in to the office where you bought it. and after a certain period you will get your money back." "How long will that taker the man asked. "About three months." "I'm afraid I cant wait," said the man, and over the discredited stamp be stuck a spotless stamp. New York Times. SCARS THAT STAY. They Come From Cuts That Go Down to the True Skin. There are people who tell you that everything ln the body Is changed every seven years and that there is no part of it which was there seven years ago. This does not mean that we slough the whole thing off at once, as a snake does its skin or a deer Its antlers, but simply that the innumerable and tiny atoms which are used up by the daily wear and tear are replaced by fresh atoms supplied by our food and drink, which keeps the body going, just as coal and water keep the steam engine at work. But these changes are so minute and gradual that the form of the body remains the same, although such things as scars take a long time to disappear, and sometimes they remain for life, although they always lose a great deal of their prominence. You have noticed that if you cut your finger slightly it will soon heal up and the scar will soon disappear, just as the marks of a superficial burn will gradually go away, but if the cut is deep the scar remains. This is because it went down to what is called the true skin. Any cuts or burns on the outer skin are gradually pushed up and worn or washed off, just as the bair on the back of your head wears off without your cutting it and grows again, but anything that goes down to the true skin, like tattoo marks, always remains. New York Sun. Punishing Bachelors. This punishment of the bachelor has been common in many ages and countries and extended down to the early days of our own history. In Connecticut in 1G3C a law was passed which would not "allow any young unmarried man to keep house," and Hartford taxed "lone men 20 shillings a week" for the "selfish luxury of solitary living." In 1G82 a special town order gave permission for two bachei lors to keep house together, "so they carry themselves soberly and do not entertain idle persons to the evil expense of time by dsy or night, while as late as the eighteenth century a general statute of Connecticut forbade any householder under penalty of a fine to "give entertainment or -habitation to single persona without special allowance of the selectmen." -Forum. in the house, as its use often prevents serious sickness. I. X. L.: You' can obtain quick relief from burning, smarting eyes by frequently dropping 2 or 3 drops of a plain crystos eye-tonic in each eye. This harmless tonic is made by dissolving 1 ounce crystos in pint cold water. For soreness or for removing foreign particles, as well as for granulated lids, it is unequaled. To dull, listless eyes it will give a youthful charm and sparkle, and Its occasional use frequently overcomes the need for wearing glasses. Esther H.: You cannot expect to have a clear, fair skin so long as you continue using greasy creams and J smother the pores 'With powder. Make j up and use this plain almozoln creamjelly, followed by an application of j the spurmax lotion (see answer to C. i L.) : Put 2 teaspoonfuls glycerine into pint cold water, then all 1 ounce almozoin. Let stand for several hours, then apply to skin and massage in well. This almozoln cream-Jelly will rid the skin of pimples, black-heads, blotches, fine lines, sallowness and other complexion upsets. It also discourages hairy growths. Grace W.: The discomfort you suffer from overfatness can be easily remedied if you will get 4 ounces parnotis and dissolve In y pints hot water, then take a tablespoonful 3 times each day. This harmless treatment gently dissolves fatty tissues without inconvenience and does not call for dieting or violent exercise. You can reduce your weight to where you want l nrtst VAMP floah will he firm and the skin free from wrinkles. No possible danger results from using the parnotis treatment and there need be no fear of the fat returning once the treatment is discontinued. X. L.: An excellent hair and scalp tonic for summer months is made by adding 1 ounce quinxoin to pint alcohol, then H pint water. This almost instantly soothes the burning and stops irritation. Its continued use puts the scalp in a healthy condition and encourages a beautiful growth of silky, brilliant hair. It is a good idea to shampoo occasionally with canthrox (see answer to B. A.), then use the quinzoln tonic once or
FORUMOFTHE PEOPLE Articles Contributed Jor This Column Mast Not Be in Excess of 400 Words. The Identity of All Contributors Must Be Known to the Editor. Articles WiU Be Printed in the Order Received.
To the Edttor: Miss White's article "Enforce the ! Curfew Law" is timely. We are all familiar with the types of young girls ! evervwhere. in village and citv. who
parade the streets and by dress and A woman wlth raight-laced puritanlactions solicit the vulgar attentions cal ideas a to tn conduct Tonus of men and boys. Among ourselves : ,adi8 wouM unquestionably do more we say. it is awful; It ought not be'harm than Th Pition deallowed, and we don't know what their mand8 a "pman of u"on-
Qf mothers are thinking about! course the parents are to blame. It is the mother particularly who should watch her daughter tenderly during the critical period of adolescence, and give her such information and advice as will enable her to protect herself from the snares of the world. Such mothers are in the majority, but beside these there are two other types. the indifferent and the ignorant. To
the former her children are no morein tw degrees from Columbia Unlthan calves to the cow. The latter i verslty, is Bead of Waverly House, a means well but needs enlightenment, j detention home for girls and is chief
She is the type who threatens and scolds, thus driving her daughter farther from her. instead of drawing her nearer the mother heart. Just how to reach the wayward daughters of these indifferent and ignorant mothers, is a difficult problem, for it Is hard to find a substitute for the natural maternal sympathy and devotion. But reached they must be if the community is not to be the sufferer from their misdemeanors. We do not question but that the police force is doing its best to cope with the situation. It is not their fault that the problem is not solved. We should not expect strange men to look after naughty little girls of eleven or even fourteen years. Nature did not endow
When You Think
Of the pain which many women experience with every month it makes the gentleness and kindness always assooU ated with womanhood seem to be almost a miracle. While in feneral no woman rebels aBalnt what she regard as a natural necessity there is no woman who would not gladly be free from this recurring" period of. pain. Dr. Jierce'a Fsrorlte Prwcrltloa mmke weak wameat arroartf aef mlek women we, mad ilrmm tkm freerfaaf trim mmlm. It mmtabilaha fgaiarltr, aaftrfoee Imtlmm. rmmtloa, mletaUoa mmd earea t maim trealwe. Sick women ore invited to consult us by letter, . All eorresoondeaoe strictly orivste and sacredly con
fidential. Write without (ear and without lea to World's Dispensary Med ioel Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. If you want a book that tells all about woman's diseases, and bow to euro them at heme, send 31 ooe-oent stamps to pay cost ot wrapping and mailing ei, and we will send yon a frt copy of Dr. Pierce's great thousand pae illustrated Com mo a Sense Medioal Adviser revised, up to date edition, la handsome French oloth binding.
We believe in doing fair, square things to all no better rule than this. It's the principle which floats from the flag-staff of our business, the principle that is interwoven through every thread of our business fabric it's the principle that wins. We'll Take Our Chances for Reward on Our Fidelity to This Rule. White and Colored Granite Corduroy, wool finish, at 25c White, and Colored Alpine Novelty Cords at. .25c White heavy welts at 25c 36-inch Extra Heavy Auto Linen, worth 40c at 30c 36-inch Natural Color Dress Linen at 25c Lace Bed Spread, Special at $1.50 Lace Bed Spread, white bolster to match at. .$3.00 Satin Bed Spread, cut corners, bolster td match at $4.00 Satin Bed Spread, cut cornerK bolster to match, at $5.00 Your Confidence Is Safely Bestowed at ARcgTPTO foil THE NEW BETTER VALUE STOKE 918 Main Phone 2068
Richmond Dry Cleaning Co. CASH BEALL, Prop. MEN'S SUITS, Dry Cleaned, Pressed and Delivered $1.00 LADIES' LONG UNLINED COATS $1.00 SKIRTS, PLAIN OR PLEATED 75c New up-to-date plant, 7th and South H. Phone Your Orders, Wagon Will Call. Phones 1C72, 2411, 1906.
Bran $1.25 per 100 lbs.; $25 ton Middlings $1.35 per 100; $27 ton Oil Meal $2.00 per 100 lbs.
lo
162-164 FL Wayne
men with the gift of understand tag children. What is needed is the beat possible substitute for that motherly sympathy and personal interest of which these unfortunate girls have been deprived. This substitute could best be found
! in a woman police officer, whose duty would be not only tn enforce the laws pertaining to the conduct of children ana young people on ine street, out especially to be a friend (with all that the word Implies) to the girls who come her way. A passing thought will convince one that this office would be a difficult one to fill successfully. rlence, sympathy and tact and that maennabie sometntng wmcn is summed up In the terra charming personality, that something which appeals to all classes and ages and fans Into flame the divine spark in every Individual. Such a woman is Maud Miner whos success ln dealing with fallen girls has brought her national fame. "Miss Min er is just in her thirties. She has takprobation officer of the New York ju venile court. Many a girl who had started on the downward path because nobody cared has found in Miss Miner a loving and faithful friend. A woman police officer Is a new adventure In the world-wide' endeavor to mitigate the social evil. No one claims that she can take the place of a devoted and intelligent mother, but progressive cities have considered her a valuable substitute. Richmond is a progressive city. Richmond has a woman on its school board. Cannot Richmond progress a step i further and have a woman on its police force? A WOMAN READER.
IEME
Ave. Phone 2652
