Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 79, 12 February 1920 — Page 12
PAGE TWELVE
. THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, FEB. 12, 1920.
WILSON IMPROVING SAYS PHYSICIAN'S LETTER TO PRESS
BALTIMORE; Feb. 12. The Baltimore Sun publishes a copy-righted dispatch from -Washington in which is given an interview with Dr. Hugh H. Young, of -Johns. Hopkins. Hospital, at Baltimore on the -condition of President Wilson. T Dr. Young has been one of the physicians in attendance on the president. - -Dr. -Young In part said: "From tlte .very .beginning, the medical men associated with the case have never had anything to conceal. When I first saw the president In October, a crisis bad arisen - of ouch gravity, owing to the development of. prostatio obstruction, that ar emergency operation to relieve this situation was contemplated, bnt by a fortuitous and wholly unexpected change In the president's condition, the obstruction began to disappear. . The Improvement In this respect, which has been steady, is now complete. The president was organically sound : when I Saw him first and I found him not only organically sound when I visited him last .week but, further, all the organs were functioning in a perfectly normal, healthy manner. Improvement Steady. The president's general condition and specifically the impairment of his left arm and leg have Improved more slowly, it is true, but Burely steadily. There have been no setbacks, no backward steps, and rumors to this effect are rubbish. , "As you know, in October last, we diagnosed the president's illness as cerebral thrombosla. which affected
his left arm and leg, but at no time
was his brain power or the extreme: vigor and lucidity of his mental processes In the slightest degree abated.
This condition has from the very firtt
shown a steady, unwavering tendency
toward resolution and complete ah
. 1 m 1 j ...lu. ik.
nui yiiuu. ine increasing uiimy ui we left arm and leg, greatly Impaired at first, have closely followed on this improvement The president walks
sturdily' now, without assistance and without fatigue. And he uses the still
Slightly impaired arm more and more
(every day. '
"As to his mental vigor, It is simply 1 prodigious. ' Indeed, I think in many ways the president is in better shape 1 than before the illness came, "You can say that the president Is able-minded and able-bodied, and that he Is giving splendid attention to af
fairs of state and that we have every assurance that he will become prog
ressively more active in these matters with the advent of spring and - sunshine, which cannot now be long delayed."
QUARTETTE OF SMART HATS MADE OF NOVELTY STRAW
If you don't care for lisere or milan or leghorn there are any number of other attractive straws which will please this season. The rough novelty weaves are going to be in very nigh favor and then there is that lustrous cellophane which is the last word in modern millinery, but feathers or satin facings are f eatwed on all of them.
Rows and rows of cellophane make the youthful hat at the upper left. A bandeau covered with flowers of ribbon and tulle forms the trimming. The brim is faced with brown satin and a brown feather fancy is placed artistically at the back. The hat at the lower right is a draped turban of braided straw with two large clusters of aigrettes. It is a smart suit
hat for the matron and just a bit too old for the young girl. The black hat at the upper right is a distinctive model for street and semi-dress wear. It is black with a deep upturned brim faced in black glycerined ribbon. Coque feathers, 1 lany of them, sweeping downward over the cheek, is an illustration of what is new in the trimming line.
A new publication of the American Legion will take the place of the
American Legion weekly next week.
as the result of action taken by the
national executive committee at Indianapolis Tuesday afternoon. The
committee ordered the discontinuance
of the weekly after the issue of of
February 13, and relieved the board of
directors and George A. White, editor,
from further duty. A new board of
nine directors will be appointed to
take over management of the new publication, and the nature of the new publication will be decided by it.
The new board of directors has not yet been appointed by Franklin D'Olier, national commander. It will be composed of "newspaper, magazine and advertising experts," however, as the executive committee directed. The weekly has been published at Washington, D. C, for some time, and it is possible that the new board may change the place of publication. It is believed likely that the new publication will be issued weekly. The committee retained the old financial system which has been supporting the weekly, whereby $1 of each member's dues will go to the publication, 75 cents of which will be devoted entirely to the publication. The publication will, therefore, be sent to all paid-up members.
ReduceWeiMHappily
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Gladstone firmly believed that Homer was a real man describing historical events. '
SORE THROAT fcr Tonsilitis, gargle with warm salt' yrater, then apply
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HARDING CAMPAIGN STARTS IN INDIANA
INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., Feb. 12. Harry M. Daugherty, Columbus, opened the fight in Indiana Wednesday, for Senator Warren G. Harding, of Ohio. He came here accompanied by W. H. Miller, Columbus, and met Patrick J. Lynch, clerk of supreme court: Judge Vernon Van Fleet, of South Bend,, and other well-known Republicans who favor Senator Harding. Daugherty quickly straightened out the misunderstanding regarding the Indiana Harding management. Following a visit of Miller here last week, it was reported that Lynch would have charge in Indiana. Daugherty announced Wednesday that Judge Van Fleet is to the the Indiana manager. Lynch is to be bis first lieutenant. The arrangement Is regarded as satisfactory by Senator Harding's friends Judge Van Fleet is the Thirteenth district member of the state committee. In view of the fact that Judge Van Fleet is known not to be a member
of Governor James P. Goodrich's organization. It was pointed out that the attempt of certain of the followers of Major General Leonard Wood to make it appear that the Harding Indiana campaign is to have the support of the governor, is unwarranted.
Warren Elliott Will Be Given Military Funeral Plans for a military funeral for Warren Elliott, who died recently In Panama, are being made by members of Harry Ray Post, American Legion. Elliott was in the army at the time of his death, and at the . request of his mother, the post will give him full military honors at burial. A meeting of a committee, of which Harry Smith is chairman, will be held Thursday at 7:30 p. m.. In the Commercial club rooms, where final detlals lor the funeral will be arranged. The date . of arrival of the body is not known.
No traces of the settlements established in 986 in Greenland have ever been discovered.
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