Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 26, 11 December 1919 — Page 5
RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, DEC. 11, 1919. PAGE FIVE
THE
OlFNINF nrilY HfiHT
PINK MOW INSTEAD OF RED, It! TALK (By Associated Press) LONDON, Dec. 11. Nikolai Lenlne, the Bolshevik premier, la an address before the first all-Russian congress at Moscow, as quoted in a wireless dispatch from Moscow, declared the fun damehtal problems confronting the soviet government were organization in the villages and the gaining of the " . adherence of the ''middle" peasants.
He claimed progress in stabilizing the
soviet system. Criticising the middle peasants, des
ignated as "well to do" for "exploiting
the hungry workers, he said: "A peasant owner who has a margin of grain la accustomed to regard it as his own property, which he can sell freely. To sell the margin of grain in a hungry country is to convert oneself into a speculator and an exploiter. The peasant who exploits is our en
emy. Not all the peasants by far,
understand that free trade In grain is a crime against the state." A peculiar problem is presented by
the "Kulacks" or well to do peasants.
according to Lenlne. "In the mass,
he declared; "they are on the side of the capitalists and are not content
with the revolution which has taken
place. Itw4U be necessary to wage a
long struggle yet against this group. The mass of the middle peasantry
stand among those who exploited others. Here is our most difficult
task. Has No Chance Now. "For the present there is no choice
We must assist the workers or tho leant hoeltnttnn will rlTa vlotnrv Intn
the hands of the land owners and I P capitalists. To spread this idea is our first and fundamental problem." Progress in the movement for the organizing of land communes and guilds was claimed by Lunlne. "I must say. however," he added, "that there have been many detects. Everywhere old exploiters have crept into soviet agriculture, and they must bedriven out or placed under control of the proletariat." Assistance of persons possessing technical knowledge was admitted as necessary to the soviet system. "It is impossible to construct communism wthtout a supply of technical skill and culture, which, however, are concentrated in the hands of the bourgeois specialists," said Lenine. Courtmartial Disapproved in Case of Lieut. Colonel t (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Dec. 11 Courtmar
tial sentence of dismissal imposed on Lieutenant Colonel Vlrglnius E. Clark, signal corps, formerly head of the engineering section of the aviation service, has been disapproved by President Wilson and the officer restored to duty. He was tried on various charges not involving his official activities, specifications not having been made public. The president held that the evidence adduced did not warrant conviction. Colonel Clark was decorated by several of the allied governments at the close of the war for distinguished service in technical and experimental work connected with aviation.
0
COAL? NO. JUST CARLOADS OF SUGAR
3
Uft
' A? ! yX f-' T,. tTJi.
3S I
8ection of receiving yard filled with sugar beets at Ogden, Utah.
The material in the picture above doesn't look much like the snowwhite sugar for which we ask the
grocer every day ana dont -rt. But that's what the piles shown produce. The photo shows rart of
the sugar beet crop from the region around Ogden, Utah, hauled into Ogden
VILLA REPORTED BETRAYED BY HIS MEN FOR RANSOM
Heart Problems
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl nearly twenty-one years of age and keep house for my father. He and my grandfather, who lives with us, are the only near relatives I have. My greatest desire is to become a trained nurse and I feel that if I had the chance to take up training I could
make good, for I am strong and per
fectly healthy and like the work.
Many of my friends have told me to stay at home, but I feel that it my father needs me in after years I can always come home and care for him.
but now I am eager to grasp the op portunity to make something of my self.
Would you suggest a hospital as the best place to take training, or a school?
THANK YOU.
Since you havo eo strong a desire to
become a nurse you should fulfill your ambition. A nurse has a great opportunity for service, and since you are interested along that line you can do more good in a big way than by staying at home caring for your father and grandfather. I can see that you are needed in your home, too, but surely your father will be generous and will want you to . develop In a way which will make you happy and worth while. Doubtless he can get some one else to keep house for him and your grandfather while you are ebspnt. It seems to me that a hospital would be the place for you to get training.
-- - 1 S$Jk y
She Married An Average Man
BY ZOB BSCKLKT
happy, woman, without home, without love, cannot writ successfully. Yon need some one who understand! you, who has no greater Interest than you, whose only Interest la you " , "No, Eric, that la not what I want That sort of love would ha as much a slavery as interference with my lib. erty" would be! Freedom is what 1 want Freedom to work; freedom to meet people and gather observations and experiences! What you have In mind, my dear friend, would bring
lassitude to mind and body. It wouldsi not create ambition; it would stifle it."
Eric was deeply hurt by this; I felt it In his silence, the suffering in his face. Then he turned toward me and I saw something else in his face, something unpleasant, something vindictive. "J, told you before you went to At!antic City that I would prove-you do not love your husband and that he does not truly love you. I'm sorry to tell you this, but you force me to it. Now listen, dear " (To be continued.)
Wireless communication Is successfully maintained through a growing
tree.
Fcitkfcl Gardener is Hois Reaping Benefits of Work Home and vacant lot gardening is proving more popular and successful each year, and it is now in the winter months that the faithful gardener and thrifty housewife are reaping- goodly returns and putting a crimp . in the high cost of living, officials of the Patriotic Gardeners' association, as
sert. "The amateur, but enthusiastic gardener, who undertook backyard gardening for the first time three years ago, has now become the city's efficient Intensive farmer, so great are his returns," said a statement by the association. "The possibilities' of a backyard spot, 70x80 feet are brought out by Mrs. George Crane, 317 Campbell avenue, tn a most lucrative way.
From 36 tomato plants she sold five bushels, and used all summer for the table, besides canning 12 quarts. From her small patch of green beans she sold two bushels, besides canning 40 quarts and the corn yielded likewise, for all the summer she supplied her table as well as gave away to her neighbors, and still canned 24 quarts. Cabbage enough for winter as well as
bushels of sugar beets and carrots, to say nothing of her strawberry bed, 8x12 feet, and her raspberry bushes, which yielded enough for table use. all clearly prove the benefit that can be derived from intensive gardening and home canning in the . combat against high prices. PETER J. KRUYER SUICIDE BY MORPHINE. IS VERDICT SOUTH BEND, InL, Dee. 11. Peter J. Kruyer, late collector of revenue for the Thirteenth district, committed suicide by taking morphine, according to announcement made by Coroner Earl P. Warner, following the receipt of the analysis of the contents of the stomach by a chemist at Indianapolis.
1,000,000 LIVES LOST ANNUALLY through clogged kidneys and bowels, causing headaches, kidneys, liver and stomach complaints, which lead to every ailment the human body ts heir to. It is the duty of every person to keep their inner organs cleaned, and it is suggested the use of Dr. Burkhart's Vegetable Compound, Internationally known for 30 years, all drug gists 25c a 80-day treatment. Adv. .
I took a long walk with Eric Sands today. He begged it of me on the ground that I am going to do my work at home again, instead of at Athena's, now that mother-in-law has gone. "I shall not see you so often now," he pleaded, "and and I must tell you the thing that burns in my brain day and night, Ann! I am going to speak plainly, dear, and you must face the facts." He had never used the endearing word before in just that way. It thrilled me, for Eric is one of those men born to be a lover.- He can vocalize a single syllable so that it melts your heart to tears. He can look at you without a word so that you feel you must crumple up like a paper against live coals. I may be wicked to admit it, but when he touches my arm to steady me over the curbs, or wraps the fur closer round my neck, an idiotic, delicious thrill runs through my body. If, coupled with this native tenderness Eric had a certain strong quality In all he docs he would be the most dan
gerously lovable itin I ever saw. And
if only Jim, who has strength, had some of Eric's gentle devotion, he too. would be irresistible, "a woman's man.
not a man's man," as he is. Ah, well nature takes care of her averages. "You, Ann," Eric went on, "are a
woman who must have freedom. Tour husband will never be willing for you to have it. Why, he doesn't even give you love. He forces you to minister to him. And when you don't he sulks. When you reach out for self-expression he tries to thwart you. You long for Independence and he makes you a slave." I was silent a moment while something whispered in my ear: "There are many kinds of slavery; even love can smother and clog If it grows so insistent that it debars strength." ""But I will not be a slave, Eric," I answered. "No one can force me to play the part of the ivy clinging to the oak, for I shall not submit. I shall keep on with my work, no matter what. Why, I got another oheck this morning $16; think of It! " I tried to mask my uneasiness and
vague sense of guilt under a semifrivolous manner. "Your husband Is not the sort of man to brook rivalry. The more success you have the more fiercely will he resent It," said Eric, with tender insistence. "Then I shall find some way to escape," I cried vehemently, realizing fully for the first time how precious
my work has grown to me. "But the dreariness of such a course 1" urged Eric. "A solitary, un-
Christmas Gifts That MEN like Are the practical, useful ones that are sure to be remembered a long tune because of the excellent service rendered
General Villa, a recent picture. The state department ab Washington is interested in the report that Gen. Francisco Villa, Mexican bandit and rebel, has been made capt by his own men and will be held by them while they negotiate for a huge ransom from General Carrama. Villa's forces have conducted most of the bor ' r raids on U. S. frontier towns.
ART BRINGS $1,277,000 (Jly Associated Prefs) LANARKSHIRE, Scotland. Dec. 11. Hamilton Palace, seat of the late Duke of Hamilton nnd Brandon, who was premier duko of Scotland, Is being dismantled, and even the furnishings sold at auction. Remarkable prices have boon realized from the sale of pictures and Jewels. The total aggregated the equivalent of $1,277,000. Most notable among the paintings Avas that of the "Beckworth Children," by Romfiey, which brought $260,000.
MAKES $34 IN 3 DAYS (By Associated Press) PRINCETON, Ir.d., Dec. 11. The continued strike of bitumnlous coal miners has not worried at least one man in this community. He is Paton Woosley, of this city, who declared recently that he made $84 in three nights hunting fur bearing animals. Woosley used a close-up method, his only weapon being a 22-callber relolver. When he finds a coon tree, he climbs it and, sitting on a limb, shoots the animal at close range when it comes out to investigate.
HUMAN FLY RESTRAINED. (By Associated Press) WABASH, Ind., Dec. 11. "Human fly" and other dare-devil stunts cannot be done in Wabash any more. A court's decision to this effect, was made recently when Harry H Gardiner, "human fly", came here to perform his feats. Nine Wabash ministers appealed to the court to restrain the man from giving his performance. The climbing was too much of a nerve -strain on the onlookers, it was held.
Chester, Ind.
Miss Luclle Huffman of Chester and Harry Brown of Fountain City were
quietly married at the parsonage of Rev. L. F. Ulmer in Chester Tuesday
evening at 6 o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. Brown went to their new home in
Fountain City immediately after the
ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Warren Stlgleman spent Sunday, the guest3 of Mr. and Mrs. Solomon Stigleman at Cambridge City.... Mr. and Mrs. Dan Boyer were Sunday guests of the latter's sister, Mr. and Mrs. Doddridge at Pershing Mr. and Mrs. George
Heatt attended the funeral or tne latter's step-father, Frank Hunt, at Fountain City, Tuesday. . . .The funeral of Mrs. Rogers, wife of Captain Rogers was held at the home of her son near Lynn. Sunday Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hall. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Kittle and daughter and Mrs. Amelia Hemning p.ll of Richmond were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Martin. GOVERNOR'S PAY r.iAY BE BOOSTED COLUMBUS, O., Dec. 11. The governor's salary would be Increased from 10,000 to $25,000 and that of the lieutenant governor from $1,500 to $2,600, if a bill Introduced in the house of representatives by Representative Bakowisky, Cleveland, is passed.
6WEATERS All wool, slipovers, all Shades, $6.00 Values 84.08
Vigraifs Ladies' Shop 923 Main St. "For Better Values"
GLOVES Centemerl Kid all shades, $4.00 Values $2.98
CHRISTMAS Suggestions A few of the many practical gifts that are to be found in our store at lower prices.
Briefs
NOTICE Electrical Workers, open meeting at T. M. A. hall Friday, Dec. 12. Come.
A hydraulic brake for motor vehicles which acts upon all four wheels at once is an English invention.
NOTICE RED MEN Special meeting Sunday at 2 p. m. All members are requested to be present. The team will confer the warriors degree on 10 candidates. For a century and a quarter the manufacture of cotont thread has been an industry. MEN WANTED To do roofing work. 45c per hour. , See Murray at Rex Hotel between 6 and 7 this p. m. or National Automatic Tool Co. in morning.
HOSIERY All shades, all kinds from15c to $2.00 pair.
CAMISOLES New Camisoles, silk and satins; $1.50 values, 93c.
KIMONOS
Pretty styles, good quality Crepe, all shades $1.98
HANDBAGS 100 Sample Leather Handbags, $2.00 values 98c.
COATS 75 Sample Coats, $30.00 values
Shop EIy jp Shop j J l Early I f1 in the fjjjrf Day (r
OVERCOATS Single and double breasted Ulsters, ' Uusteretts, Waist Seams, Chesterfield, Belt all around and half belt fashions for every man. $20, $25, $30 to $40
SUITS One, two and three button sacks with belt all around, or half belt and plain business Suits. Single and double breasted models. $20, $25, $30 to $40
MACKLNAWS A real comfort Coat for the men who work out-of-doors. New patterns. Well built. $10, $12.50, $15
MALLORY HATS Mallory is a known Quality. Authentic in style and dependable for color and wear. The line Includes a number tor any type of dresser. $2.50, $3.50, $5.00
Ladies are especially invited to come here. We believe they will appreciate our values even more than the men.
The Weisbrod Music Co.
The Weisbrod Music Co.
Dresses
100 All-Wool Serge Dresses, Navy only. All sizes, pretty styles; $25.00 values
S14.75
ii i
SUITS
50 Sample Fur Trimmed Suits, all shades, 'clever styles up to $50.00 values
$29.75
BLOUSES New Georgette Blouses, all shades, up to $8.00 values $4.98
FURS At a Discount of 25
(SKIRTa 100 Sample all-Wool plaid, stripe, Jersey flQ OCT and Serges; $15.00 values p0.i7d HANDKERCHIEFS IN CHRISTMAS BOXES, 25c TO $1.25 A BOX
The Llndeman Is the medium priced player piano of dependable quality. We would he lad to have you call and bear the Llndeman piano or the Linieman player at any time. Seeing is believing it will cost you nothing to Investigate come in and see for yourself OUR TERMS Our terms are much easier than you can get elsewhere. Just a small payment down, the balance in easy monthly payments.
Piano prices will positively advance 20 January 1st BUY NOW!
A Few Good Used Upright Pianos at Bargain Prices FREE Music Rolb, Bene 4 with all Player Pianos
OPP. POST OFFICE
K
if Gift Supreme B'-Ih One the whole family will enjoy the whole year pSP j-M;' 'round. Why not select that Xmas Piano or jfEjHfey Pt Plajjfer Piano now? Take advantage of our pres- 1 A Musical" W&mBi r Music
Eastern Indiana's Only Exclusively Complete Music House
PHONE 1655
