Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 95, 2 March 1920 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1920.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every Evening- Excepjb Sunday,, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium , Building. North Ninth and Sailor Streets.
Entered at the Post Office at Illchmond. Indiana, as Seo i ond Class Mall Matter. V, MEMIIER OF THE! . ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Prai la rluiivelv tntttlad to the U9
for republication of all nws dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local
news published herein. All rights of republication of spe lal dispatches herein are also reserved.
politicaljeconomy and sociology, it stands in line for free soup. These are not war conditions. , Russia is unravaged. Bolshevism has had everything to work with that an empire so vast could supply. It divided the land according to its own doctrine, and the land is as productive as ever it was. Crops will grow when planted. It turned the industries
Reader Where can one find the line. "An old Quaker lady, In the time of the crusade. "Women and Temperance Work", by Willard. Telephone Did former President Tatt of Mr. Hughes Investigate an alleged scandal In aircraft construction? President Wllsrm Annnlntpd
over to soviet rule, and the same workmen are former Justice Hughes to investigate !
Answers to Questions
MARRIAGE SOUNDS KNELL OF FAMOUS TURKISH HAREMS
Where Bolshevism Broke Down Says the Kansas City Star: Bolshevism for the moment, at least, seems politically established in Russia, but industrially and economically it has not made the slightest progress and is as far today from being a going concern as it was in the beginning. It is a structure without a foundation. Bolshevism's failure in this respect is the
more pronounced because Russia offered the fair-
est field for its experiment that could have been wt Qmd Qf t wM
engaged in them as before. Capitalism took nothing, with it when it was banished nothing tangible. Yet Russia today is a vast poorhouse. Its land does not produce, its railroads do not transport, its factories are closed and bankrupt, its population loafs. Louis Narquet, a French writer, has given some figures on industrial 'production in a recent article in the Revue Bleue. The Poutiloff factory turned out five locomotives in five months as against thirty-eight under the pre-bolshevist regime. Twenty men used to make a locomotive. It now takes 158. The cost used to be 48,000 rubles, it is now 800,000. Other industries tell the same story. Bolshevism doesn't work, and
contrary to some fond expectations bolshevism
devised. It contains within its own borders i Bolshevism, whose political eloquence was all
everything a state needs to be self sustaining, conquering while capitalism's stock of groceries and is dependent upon the outside world for! held out, ha3 not since been able to talk hunger
nothing. If bolshevism were a sound doctrine out of the Russian head
Russia ought to be the most prosperous country in the world. It has every form of natural wealth that America enjoys and an even greater domain. But what is its condition? Its cities are starving. Its industry is paralyzed. It is frantically trying to make peace with the world so it can import necessities in which its own soil abounds. The granary of Europe, it has no bread to eat. With
Bolshevism is well aware of this failure. It has armies, but without an industrial organiza
tion behind them they cannot make a campaign. Aggression has been abandoned for this reason, and its only hope is peace, and with that attained its enemies will have to feed it. It want3 to resume trade with capitalism, that is with England and America, so it can import at a high price the
the allegations that more than $650,-
000,000 appropriated by congress for
the aircraft production division had
virtually been wasted. Some of these allegations were sustained and others were dismissed with the observations that "there is no law to punish men for inefficiency.' High School Pupil When was the School of Law of Indiana University established? In 1842. This was, it is believed, the first state university law school established west of the Alleghentes. For 12 years after 1877 the law school was suspended because of lack of funds. With this exception the school has been In operation since 1842. The school Is a member of the American Bar Association. F. C. Who were the first white men
to set foot on Indiana soil? On Dec. 3. 1678 La Salle and a party of 28 men i spent the night at a point near the present site of South Bend. It i3 be-1
ueved they wero the first white visitors on Indiana soil. In 1720 the French built a fort on the present site of Lafayette. T. D. What is the difference between avocation and vocation? Vocation is the regular calling or profession of a person, and avocation his occasional or subordinate occupation.
FIFTEEN DAYS TRAINING PLANNED FOR GUARD
(By Associated Press) WASHINGTON. March 1. Fifteen days field training and not to exceed
four days special instructions for officers and selected enlisted men are provided in this year's national guard training program, made public today by Major General Carter, chief of the militia bureau. General Carter recommended. In view of the present state
of appropriations that encampments be.
held before July 1, but said funds
probably would be available to hold them after that date.
nine at 7 o'clock. Clarence W. For
man. W. M.
Thursday, March 4 Wayne Council No. 10, R. S. M. Stated assembly Friday, March 6.- King Solomon's Chapter No. 4, R. A. M. Called convocation. Work in Mark Master's degree, beginning at 7 o'clock. Saturday, March 6. Loyal chapter No. 49, O. B. S. Stated meeting and initiation of candidates.
Masonic Calendar
Tuesday, March 2 Richmond lodge No. 196, F. & A. M. Stated meeting. Wednesday, March 3 Webb lodge No. 24, F. & A. M. Called meeting Work in Master Mason degree, begin-
Charles R. Crane
an inexhaustible timber supply it has no railroad things Russia is capable of producing at home at ties. Rich in iron mines it has no material tola lower price. That is bolshevism on its econ-
lnake locomotives with, no shops to build them omic side a complete failure, a recognized failin, no skilled labor. Setting up to teach the world ure even at the Smolny Institute.
Good
looa livening
BY ROY K. MOULTON
Today's Talk
lay s
By George Matthew Adams
V. t PEARY The other day a very great man "Joined the innumerable throng." His name was known to the entire civilized world because of but one thing he had a wonderfully elastic Will. He stretched It thru the direst experiences until he had achieved what he set out to gain the North Pole. Decades passed and nearly a thousand lives were given over to the ice and snowbefore Robert E. Peary won. For more than thirty years he kept at the job. Seven times he made attempts. Each time he went further than before and learned new things,
but each time he had to return de
AIN'T IT TRUE? "Ain't Nature wonderful?" A beautiful young flapper Asked me this yesterday. "Ain't it ain't it just," I replied, gazing upon The remarkable effects That had been produced On my fair companion by The enamel, the lipstick, The henna, the curling-iron, The rouge, the powder, The manicurist's buffer And the eyebrow brush. "Yes, Nature is wonderful, I'll be darned if It ain't. But It ain't half as wonderful As Art!"
Campaign managers never need fear , feated. After his seventh attempt, he
a "silent vote" with the women on the
job. Chris Morley wants to know who founded New York. We don't know that, but we do know of several people who have confounded it. Statistics are wonderful. If all the slide trombones in this country were made Into one large slide trombone it vould be a good thins, because there Wouldn't be enough wind to blow it. Poland's troubles are about to begin. She Is forming a senate. "Sir Oliver Lodge Will Speak With the Departed," says a New York paper. Ah, then, we may hear tidings of Berktnan and Goldman at last. An editorial says: "Faith DOES Move Mountains." But we doubt whether it will move the Beven-foot enow bank iu front of our house so tlip coal man can drive In. Nearly every man has, at some time In his life, entertained the optimistic idea thai he could get the right telephone number. SURGEON, DO YOUR DUTY. (From the Baltimore News.) The chairman of the flower booth was left open.
had organized a raffle for the benefit of poor Mrs. Muggins, and finally the oldest inhabitant was asked to buy a ticket. "What for?" asked the ancient one. "For Mrs. Muggins," replied the agent. "Didn't you hear?" "Oh, yes, boss, I heeard all right," said the fossil; "but what I want to know is what am I going to do with Mrs. Muggins if I win her?"
The young bride in the Saxe blue jumper bit her bun sadly. "Men the really too mean for anything," she said. "What is the trouble new?" asked the girl in the pink georgette sash, toying with an eclair. "Why, I asked John for a motor car today and he said that I must be contented with the splendid carriage that nature had given me."
wrote in his diary that he was utterly
discouraged
But no Buch man is really ever ut
terly discouraged. So Peary made his eighth attempt
This time. he was past fifty years of age. They set out in a small ship called the Roosevelt. Col. Roosevelt himself told them boodby at the pier. It was the intrepid Capt. Bartlett who answered back that it was to be THE
fPOLB this time.
And so it wast On April 6, 1909, the Star and Stripes were uplif'l at the North Pole. Peary gave all that he had in time and money and strength to attain his
;goal. Most men would have given up,
satisfied with the glory already attained from many attempts. But that was not Peary's way. He died poor, tho about half a million dollars had been contributed to him along with all that he had. But the name of Peary Is already Immortal! He put a new thrill Into the word achievement. Now we may all work with greater heart.
What's in a Name
(Copyright)
Dinner Stories
In the mountains of Sccotland.ai
Highlander and an American wpra Hudson
CECILY ! walking. In due course they came to i Time, 7:30 p. m.
Cecily, tnougn usea intercnangeaDty & basin in the hills from which a wonwith Cecilia, is an independent name derful echo could be obtained.
with an interesting history. bne comes, of course, from the great Caecilian gens which, curiously enough, was named for a plow-worm, a reptile supposed to be blind. Caia Caecilia Is said to have been the real name of the model rtoman matron, patroness of all other matrons, whose tomb is famous throughout Italy. Another famou3 Caecilia was the
Christian martyr whose body was dis
Having explained matters to his companion, the Scotsman proceeded to demonstrate. He emitted a shout, and after nearly three minutes the echo returned as per program. "Mon." Bald the Scot, "Ye can't show anything like that in your country." "I guess we can," replied the other. "Why, in my camp in the Rocky
mountains, when I go to bed I just
Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today
Endorsement to a safe and sane celebration of the Fourth of July was made b ythe Wayne County Medical Society. Announcement was made that Governor W. Ross Stubbs, of Kansas, a native of Wayne county, would be a guest at the Commercial Club banquet, slated for May. Appointment of a committee to prepare plans for the state convention of tho lodge, scheduled for June, was made by the Wayne Aerie of Eagles.
Labor Calendar
Meetings of local labor unions scheduled for Tuesday follow: Moulders, president, Fred Taggart, secretary; William O'Conner. Time, 7:30 p. m. Place, Druid's Hall. Carpenters, president, S. C. Lantz, secretary, Charles Griffy. Time, 7:30 p. m. Place, Luken's Hall.
Blacksmiths, 373, president, William
secretary. Fred Gertsner.
Place, T. M. A. Hall.
CR. Crane
Prince Farouk. When Prince Farouk, heir apparent to the Ottoman throne, recently married Princess Sabiha, one of the mltan'i daughters, his act practically made the imperial Turkish harem a thin of the past. Monog-my has been established at the sublime port as far as he is concerned.
Peter Pipher, Hagerstown
Pioneer, Dies at His Home
HAGERSTOWN, March 2. The death of Peter Pipher occurred Sun-
CHARLES R. CRANE has been offered the appointment as United States minister to Japan, named recently by President Wilson. He is a Chicago millionaire and world traveler
Crane has been before the public eye politically before. He was ap- . ! A 9 J. A, V.
appomieu i u v u d shortly after noon at his home on same post by ' , , . ,, . President Taft in Main street, where he has resided 1909, but was re- many years. Death was due to
called while on his I gangrene, with which he had been af
flicted several weeks. Funeral services will be held from the home Wednesday at 2 p. m. and interment will be In West Lawn cemetery. Mr. Pipher was 78 years old and is survived by five children, William, Florence and Luther Pipher and Mrs. William Wedekind and Mrs. John Bunnell.
In our country the ruler isn't re sponsible to the cabinet, hut voter have a way of holding him responsible for the cabinet.
CUT THIS OUT
OLD ENGLISH RECIPE FOR CATARRH, CATARRHAL DEAFNESS AND HEAD NOISES
"'For years I fasve tried. stU SsUie McBrlde, "To learn how a basbaofl was wen.' When faer chum said ene day "I've food tha best way
Was to iva al my
way to Peking. It 1
ia believed that his recall was at the suggestion of the Japanese officials, they resenting his appointment and the selection of his
secretary, a man who had written material construed to be anti-Japanese. Earlier in President Wilson's administration Crane was offered the post of ambassador to Russia, but refused it. Later he was asked to be a member of the mission headed by former Secretary Root which investigated the Russian situation.
1 1 Miami Students Elected To Scholarship Society OXFORD, O., March 2. Eleven students of Miami University, five juniors and six seniors, have been elected to membership in the Phi tieta Kappa society, in which excellence in scholarship is the only thing that counts. They are: Juniors Howard W. Allen, of Greenfield, O.: John II. Griffith, of Venedocia, O.: Miss Jessie Van Gordon, of Hamilton, O.; Miss Lillian Miller, of Dayton, O.. and Edward F. Potthoff, of Sharonville, O. Seniors Warren M. Foley, of Portsmouth, O.: Miss Helen Smith, of Dayton. O.; Miss Ethel Frost, of Norwood, O.; Miss
Nita Scudder, of Oxford, O.
EAT LESS MEAT IF BACK HURTS Take a glass of Salts to Flush Kidneys if bladder bothers you.
Miss Olivia Niemes, of Cincinnati, O. The. Phi Bel a Kappa society, an
nounces the following prizes to be awarded commencement wek: $20 to
Eating meat regularly eventually produces kidney trouble in some form or other, says a well-known authority, because the uric acid in meat excites the kidneys, they become overworked; get sluggish; clog up and cause all sorts of distress, particularly backache and misr.y in the kidney region; rheumatic twinges, severe headaches, acid stomach, constipation, torpid liver. eleeDlessness. bladder and ur-
caruon inary irritation.
The moment your back hurts or kidneys aren't acting right, or If Wadded bothers you, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good pharmacy;
take a tablespoonful in a glass of
the freshman presenting the best set j water before breakfast for a few days
of three themes in English: $20 to the sophomore who passes the best examination in physics, and $25 to the Junior or senior who writes and presents the best essay or oration on the subject, "The League of Nations and Its Moral Significance to the World."
lOFFEE sold by
I peddlers is lik?
ly to be ol inferior quality and full of chaff In roasting Golden Sun Coffee fwcuse scientific methods of blend ing and cutting which insure better flavor, less waste and therefore greater economy. j Th --O Woolson Spice Co, Tbledo, Ohio
If you know of some one who la troubled with Catarrhal . Deafness, head noises or ordinary catarrh cut out this formula and hand It to them and you may have been the means of saving some poor sufferer perhaps from total deafness. In England scientists for a long time past have
recognized that catarrh is a constitutional disease and necessarily requires constitutional treatment. Sprays, inhalers and nose douches are liable to irritate the delicate air passages and force the disease into the middle ear which frequently means total deafness, or else the disease may be driven down the air passages towards the lungs which is equally as dangerous. The following formula which is used extensively in the damp English climate is a constitutional treatment and should prove especially efficacious to sufferers here who live under more favorable climate conditions. Secure from your druggist 1 ounce . Of Parmint (Double strength). Take" this home and add to it U pint of hot water and a little granulated sugar; stir until dissolved. Take one tablespoonful four times a day. This will often bring quick relief from distressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and hearing Improve as the inflammation in the eustachian tubes is reduced. Parmint used in this way acts
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system and has a tonic action that helps to obtain the desired results. The preparation is easy to make, costs little and is pleasant to take. Every person who has catarrh or head noises or is hard of hearing f-hould give this treatment a trial. Adv.
WEDDING GIFTS In an unique and attractive line of the newest thing3 appropriate for such occasions. SILVER CUT-GLASS POTTER BASKETS PICTURES We show all the news things Richmond Art Store "Richmond's Art and Gift Shop" 829 Main Street
SKATING
J 1 UlligllL COLISEUM I i
i r
TO FLOAT POLISH LOAN.
Interred in perfect state after .uu poke my head out of the tent and years and enshrined in a church. It! shout, 'Time to get up! Wake up 13 she who is the patron saint of sac-) there!' Eight hours later that echo
red music. In her honor Philip I or France and William I of England each named a daughter Cecile, The Eng-
(By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, March 1. Negotiations for floating a loan of $50,000,000 for the Polish government in the United States have been concluded, it is announced today at the Polish legation. The loan will be handled through the People's Industrial trading corporation, of New York.
RECRUITERS TO BE ENTER. TAINED BY ROTARY CLUB Members of the First and Sixth division recruiting parties now in Rich
mond will be entertained at luncheon women take now and then to keep by the local Rotary club Tuesday the kidneys and urinary organs clean, noon. Several other features are thus avoiding serious kidney disease, scheduled for the Rotary luncheon. 1 Adv.
and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the
acid of grapes and lemon juice, com-i bined with lithia. and has been used1
for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity; also to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladded disorders. Jad Salts cannot injure anyone; makes a delightful effervescent lithiawater drink which millions of men and
Buy Your Clothes of GRAHAM TAILOR The Home of Good Clothes
Suits Cleaned and Pressed $1.50 PEERLESS CLEANING CO 318 Main Phone 1493 Work called for and delivered
VICRAN'S LADIES' SHOP 923 Main We specialize In Stout Sizes
lish Cecile straightway became Cicely,
and became enormously popular about the time of the Reformation. It was Cicely Neville, called the Rose of Raby, afterward the Duchess of York, Who gave the name greatest vogue in England, where she was known as Proud Cis. Her grandchild, the Princess Cicely Plantagenet, was a nun. After the- Reformation, strangely jiough, Cicely became a generic term ,br milkmaids and sank Into oblivion. "When It wa3 revived it came forth as Cecilia and was . straightway contracted to Cecily and Cecil. Cecily's talismanic. fctone is Jet, denoting sorrow, yet, if it is worn by r . z 1 11 t cn A sv nroQOrrO foot f TTTY1
Wecuy. n ia ou i V . : lustre tn tha half when fa.lod. streaW
misfortune, suffering ana Ganger oi
Wednesday is ner lucay - " ,'f "
travels back and awakens me."
The town councillors of Mudville '
BE PRETTY! TURN GRAY HAIR DARK
Try Grandmother's Old Favorite Recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sluphur, properly compound
ed, brings back the natural color and
nvcrv sort.
day and 3 her lucky number.
- An orang-outang seldom leaves a tree except for water-
CI T THIS OtrTIT IS WORTH MONE V Cut out this slip. !,cl0" ."S'S.SSl mail U to Foley & Co., 835 Sheffield Ave Chtcaro. III., writing- your name in re-turn a trial package containing Foley's Honey and Tar. for coughs -coldT and croup; Foley K dney PjUs ior pain In sides and back: rheumaJttsm. backache, kidney and bladder ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets a fwholeiome and thoroughly cleansing cathartic, for constipation, biliousness, SUdache and sluggish bowels. For fle by A. O. Luken & Co. Advertise-
home, which is mussy and trouble-
somev NowadayB by asking at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," get large bottle of this famous old recipe, Improved by the addition of other ingredients, at a small cost. Don't stay gray! Try itl No one can possibly tell you have darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenlv. Vmj damn" soft brush with it nd draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; oy Mu.muji uw hair disappears, and after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy and attractlvev Adv-.
Z The Quick Way to
Stop a Cougn J 4 TUs home-made syrup does the work In hurry. Easily pre- J Y pared, and saves about $. $ 4. . ;. t ""M"r-M'S"fr ;. : M"fr-;-fr-You might be surprised to know that the best thins you can use for a 6evere cough, is a remedy which is easily prepared at home in just a few moments. It's cheap, but for prompt results it
beats anything else you ever tried. Usually stops the ordinary cough or chest cold in 24 hours. Tastes pleasant too ('children like it and it is pure and good. Pour 2 ounces of Pines in a pint bottle; then fill it up with plain granulated sugar syrup. Or use clarified molasses, honey, or corn syrup, instead f sugar syrup, if desired. Thus you make a full pint a family supply but costing no more than a small bottle of . ready-made cough syrup. And as a cough medicine, there ia ' really nothing better to be had at any price. It goes right to the spot and cives quick, lasting relief. It promptly heals the inflamed membranes that line the throat and air passages, stops the annoying throat tickle, loosens the phlegm, and soon vour cough stops entirelv. SDlendid for bronchitis, croup. .
hoarseness and bronchial asthma. Pinex is a highly concentrated compound of Norwav pine extract, famous for its healing effect on the membranes. To avoid disappointment ask your druggist for "2l3 ounces of Pinex" with directions and don't accept anything else. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or money refunded. The Pinex j;Co., 1't. Wayne, Ind.
m
I s
ft
Will that Boy o "fours "Make Good?' That boy of yours has great possibilities. The chief factor in his success is good health. The chief factor in good health is cleanliness inside. Keep his mind keen and his physical force ever increasing through the proper elimination of waste matter and intestinal poisons from his system. By ah entirely new principle Nujol will keep the poisonous waste moving out of the body. Every other form ot treatment either irritates or forces the system. Nujol works on the waste matter instead of on the system. Nujol prevents constipation by keeping the food waste soft, thus helping Nature establish easy, thorough bowel evacuation at regular intervals the healthiest habit in the world. It is absolutely harmless and pleasant to taketry it. Nujolpssold by all druggists in sealed bottles only bearing NUJOL trade-mark. Write Nujol Laboratories, Standard Oil Co. (New Jersey), SO Broadway, N. Y. for Booklet, VTbirty Feet of Danger."
A Now Method of Treating
an Via jompiaint
Covered Buttons
Hemstitching Floss Stitching LACEY'S SEWING MACHINE STORE 9 S. 7th. Phone 1756
TRY CHURNGOLD Oleomargarine It's better The Churngold Grocery 23 So. 9th. H. C. Bowers, Mgr.
For Good Dry Cleaning Phone 1072 O. Moody Welling A Good Dry Cleaner
Our Customers know our coal is good, that's the reason of so many repeat orders. Qlve us an order. Hackman-KIefoth & Co. N 10th A F Sts. Phone 2015 or 201$
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25 DICTIONARIES IN ONE v. All Dictionaries published piwvieae to tkia on ar ot al date
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