Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 127, 14 April 1916 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1916

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Published E v ry Evening Except Sunday, - by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, Notfh Ninth and Sailor Sts. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr.

In Richmond, 10 cents a week. By mall. Id advanceon year. $5.00; atz months. $2.60; one month. 45 cents. Rural Routes, in advance one year. 12.00; six months. $1.25; one month. 25 cents.

Entered at the Post Off ee at Richmond. Indiana, as Seeond CUiSS Mail Matter.

We Need a Woman Police Officer. The Women's Federated clubs are back of a

good movement in asking the board of metropoli

tan police commissioners to appoint a woman police officer. Mayor Robbins has gone on record as favoring the innovation.

. Women police officers have proved their worth in cities where they have been added to the police department. Their usefulness lies not

so much in chasing and , catching crooks, but in I the higher duty of police work, namely, in pro-

:' tecting girls, in preventing them from falling ! into evil ways, in safeguarding girls who need

the attention of a mother. The Richmond police force is below the limit j with respect to the number of men on the corps i now. Instead of appointing new male members, i the board of police commissioners ought appoint S a woman. I The field before a woman member of the force j is as wide as the city. Hundreds of girls today need the supervision of a police matron ; scores of others will be kept in the narrow but honest path by the counsel and advice of a woman police officer whose heart will go out to the unfortunates that need her assistance. Many of the tragic incidents that are given publicity and that make unsavory scenes in our police court might well be prevented. The service of a woman police officer will go far in this direction. A delinquent girl, or one who is on the verge of taking the step into the abyss will listen to the motherly advice of a noble hearted woman whose duty it will be to prevent wrong doing and moral lapses rather than hunt down offending girls and women. A woman police officer is a moral asset to the whole city. We predict that merely the presence of one woman on the police force will be a greater deterrent against some forms of iniquity that are current in Richmond than all the legislation and all the disciplinary action of the police. Let the police commissioners engage a woman; give her a trial, and if the experiment is a failure, the city will not be a heavy loser by the innovation. In other cities, women members of the force have been a success. The same will obtain here.

Twelve Ways to Make a Million; Get Busy! Many American fortunes have been founded on a small invention that supplied some necessity in every household, was cheap to manufacture, and could be disposed of without an expensive .sales department. There are at least twelve chances to perfect a necessity that will have a general sale and whose manufacture ought. not entail a big investment, according to W. R. Hotchkin, a director of the Cheltenham Advertising Agency. He mentioned them in a speech on "The Sales Possibilities of the Unknown Want," before advertising men in New York. Here they are: 1. Invent a new automobile fuel cheaper than gasoline and as good, or a carburetor that will convert kerosene or some other inexpensive fuel into thoroughly efficient power. 2. Invent a the that is absolutely puncture-proof and as anti-skid as a chain. 3. A non-leakable- fountain pen, easily fillable. with an ink well that cannot be upset, and that works automatically for filling the pen. 4. A shoe that fastens with a couple of snaps instead of laces or buttons. f. A quick-fitting corset that clips tight to the figure without lacing. G. A moth-proof wardrobe for summer

homes, with an attachment to remove the smell of camphor or tar from the clothing. 7. An automatic; rug beater that can be set up in the yard, and that will vibrate by electricity and hammer out the dust. 8. A window screen that rolls up like a window shade, easily detachable. 9. A secure, easy to remove window shade bracket that will not damage the window casing. 10. A man's collar that won't choke him while being worn, that can be attached without buttons that rub the neck and have an affinity for the dark spot tinder the chiffonier. 11. A twin bottle containing iodine, the best antiseptic known, with means to apply it neatly, and a quick remover of stains. 12t A method of supplying the market with a means, of using carrot flakes, the beauty of nature, better even than wheat or corn, and as yet undeveloped.

If you believe that ail chances to make a fortune are gone, here's an oportunity to change your opinion and also a call to get busy. Improvement on any of the twelve "Unknown Wants" will make you a millionaire.

Tanner Daily Puzzles

The Tragedy of Art. New York is paying recognition today to Ralph Albert Blakelock, driven insane because an unappreciative public twenty years ago, failed to buy enough of his pictures to enable him to buy food for his family. Twenty years ago he begged "art lovers" and art dealers to buy his work, but they were too stupid to see his genius. Today they have rescued him from an insane asylum and are hailing him America's foremost painter. Blakelock went to the hospital for the insane at Middletown, N. Y., penniless and broken, after he had lost in a struggle to sell even enough to make a meager living for himself and family. He comes out of the hospital honored as a member of the National Academy of Design and hailed the leader of American art. What a sardonic commentary on America's appreciation of art and of genius ! How belittling the thought that Americans drove this man into insanity! What recompense can America give this man now, when he is 70 years old, crushed in spirit, with the flame of his genius dimmed by mental feebleness, and his artistic genius destroped by seventeen years in an insane asylum? Not too Old to Enjoy Life. Many persons, retiring to private life after a successful career, vegetate in their homes, close their eyes to the world, let it move on, and in the fulness of their days are gathered to their fathers. They worked hard, perhaps they slaved, to make the last days easy. But when the October days came they could not force themselves to draw on their savings and enjoy themselves traveling or indulging in other forms of profitable recreation. Walter D. Cowles, a retired farmer and contractor of Amherst, Mass., and his wife, although both are beyond 60 years, are not letting their

old age keep them from enjoying the fruits of!

their thrift and economy. They have just returned from a trip to South America with the satisfaction of having visited every country in North America and South America from Alaska to Patagonia, and all in Jour years of travel. In Paraguay they penetrated a district seldom visited by a white man, traveled through jungles and down turbulent rivers, taking several narrow escapes from death with an equanimity of mind that puts to shame younger men and women. This old couple ought arouse retired persons to an enjoyment of their money. What is the use of accumulating thousands and then not enjoying the pleasures it will buy? Why slave for years for the money that will buy recreation, if, after you have attained it, you intend to stick in the same narrow groove? If drudging toil and economy thwart your outlook on life and leaves

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THE CALIi OF THE W ILD. Here is Weary Willie on his summer jaunt. He has heard the call and left his winter haunt. If he follows on the track till he cannot wander back. Do you think that we should worry? Well, we shawnt. Find another tramp. ANSWER TO YESTERDAY'S PVZZLE. fpper right corner down under gun. Upper left corner down under sailor's arm.

CLASS GIVES PARTY AT KINDER HOME

ABI.NGTON. Ind., April 14. A party was given at. the home of Miss Cuba Kinder, Thursday evening by the school, hunch, consisting of cocoa, cake and candy, was served to the guests. Music and games featured the occasion. Those invited were: Misses Bernice Dye, Mabel Wood, Myrtle Miller, Jeanette Merkanip, Elsie Rugh, Effie Wright, Helen Wood, Doris Dickson, Ksther Hale, Emma Miller, Anna Woods, Coleen Plankenhorn and Mary Sills; Messrs. Robert

Merkamp, Emory Rhine, Roy Higgins, Roy McMath. Verling Rugh, Hugh Knoll, Buddy Basson, T. J. Wright. Fred Higgins, Jesse Miller. Waldo Wadsworth, Clyde Williams, Otis Stevens, Walter Woods," Bertie McMath, Donald Dickson, Everett Mullen. George Ewalt and William Parker. League Gives Play. The Robinson's Chapel Epworth League gave a play here Friday night entitled "Lodgers Taken In.".... Mr. Barney Wood of Richmond, spent Saturday with John Wood and family. . . . Miss Inez Turner spent Saturday night and Sunday with Miss Cuba Kinder. . . Mrs. Margaret Dye, of Indianapolis, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. John Wood.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY

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Life Told by Three Women Who Learned from Experience

The Change of Life is a most critical period of a woman's existence, and neglect of health at this time invites disease and pain. Women everywhere should remember that there is no other remedy known to medicine thawilf so successfully carry women through this trying period as Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs. Read these letters:

you only one. degree above a miser, better spend i oinS through the Change of life. I found "it very u , -i ',. ,i have ahvays spoken of it to other women 'who suffer more of the money while you are still active and have had them try it and they also have rocehed 1

have less when you are old, for you do not in

tend to use it anyway

Philadelphia, Pa. "I sta rted the Caange of Lif3 five years asfo. I always had a headache and backache with 1 taring down pains and I would have heat flashes very bad at times with dizzy spells and nervous fceliugs. After takhiff Lydia E. Pinkham s "Vegetable Compound I feel like a new person and am in bettor health and no more troubled with the aches and pains I had W'foro I took your wonderful remedy. I recommend it to my friends for I cannot praise it enough."" Mrs. Makohret Guassma 750 N. Iihiggold St, Philadelphia, Pa, Beverlv. Mass. "I took T.vdii T'. lJr.l-i-,

Vegetable Compound, for nervousness and dyspepsia, when I wns

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GENERALS MURDERED.

MEXICO CiTY, April 14. General Manuel Calasox and General Francisco Pacheco, two of the leaders in Emiliano Zapata's revolution hare " been murdered at Tepextlan, according to official messages received at the war office.

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ENGINEER ACCEPTS PLAGE IN- FOUNDRY

CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., April 14. diaries - Eichlor. stationary engineer at the municipal electric llrht plant.

coming week Mrs. John Caldwell spent Wednesday la Ccnaersville, the iTuesi of her sister, Mrs. Kate Higgs. .... Dr. and Mr. Harry Zehrung of Connersville spent Wednesday with tho former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. 1 H. Zehrung Mrs. J. E. Brooks and .Mrs. John Dcdson were in Rich

mond Wednesday Born to Mr. and

nas accepted & position as cluer en- j Mrs. Walter Waddell. a son, weight gineer with the Drop Forge company j ten and one-half pounds; name, Horand will enter upon hia duties the j ace Vinton.

MISS NAPIER ADVANCED.

MILTOX, Ind.. April 14. Miss Alice Napier, who was formerly the stenographer at the Doddridge Decorating factory, was recently made secretary of the new company, the - Doddrid&teBeck manufacturing company. She has employed Miss Marie Schoblin. of Brookville, as stenographer. The increase if business made it a necessitv.

Spaniards pronounce all vowels.

good results from it." Mrs. George A. Duxijak, 17 T.Mi-,l-rr Cf 1J,..1 Tf.. '

Erie, Pa. "I was in poor health when the Change of Life started Tvith rac and I took Lydia E. Pmkham's Vegetable Compound, or I thin!: I should not have got over it as easy as I did. Even now if I do not feel good I take the Compound and it restores me in a short time. I will praise your remedies to every woman for it may help them as it has me." :Irs. K Kissuxg. 031 East 24th St, Erie, Pa.

No other medicine has been so successful in relieving woman's suffering as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Women may receive free and helpful advice by writing the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Such letters are received and answered by women only and held in strict confidence.

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