Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 104, 12 March 1920 — Page 6
K3.73-: i: V l f ":PAGE:SIX - -
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 1920.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
AND SUN-TELEGRAM
net ,.-'"
Published;- Every Evening Except Sunday, by :; -i k i-'jpaUadiara "Printing Co. 1 J Pafiadlum tPuildlng, North Ninth and 8allor Street!. ,i Entered at, the Post Office, at Richmond, Indiana, as Seo ' ond Class Mail Matter.
''.if.VlBMDEB OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS T "- . Th Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for-republication of all news dispatches credited to It or tiOt- otlvcrwlse credited In this paper and also the local Tiews published herein. All rights of republication of. speJal dispatches, herein are also reserved.
Answers to Questions j
il: league Baseball in Richmond j; hsTproposal to place league baseball in Richjjjmond commends itself to the support of every ijwide awake citizen. The plant, usually the greatest handicap in s"; obtaining a franchise, is here, and contains fea- ; Jtures that seldom are found in a baseball park in a minor league city. -
' uvertures irom a number ot strong minor
:;leagues. have been received. Richmond patron sizes' league baseball, as the season of 1917 indi
.cated. and minor leagues, therefore, want Rich-
X. mond in their circuit.
-'opens td'sign'a good manager and obtain players pof ability. Men who like to watch a game of ball are : anxious to see league ball here. :'. What is retarding the acquisition of a fran;chise? Why may the park be dismantled, and Richmond's best chance to get on the baseball j:': map defeated? :: Jt is a question of finances. The board of 'directors since 1917 have kept the property intact i;: for the stockholders and for the enjoyment of I jfans. They were handicapped in 1917 by a capitalization that was so low that they were unable to pay all the bills for the building of the plant,
and this debt still hangs like a millstone around their necks. If Richmond does not rally to their support, the directors will not personally finance the project as they have done since 1917, and the park will be torn down.
It would be a calamity if the community would permit this. Never again would Richmond have the opportunity of getting a clean, whole
some .sport, the national pastime, represented by
a strong minor league team. It is a case of now or never. f
xxxc vd-iuc ui KxCoC46 4xC o -Comstock Berve afl representative of
communuy enierunse biiwuiu auueai w cveiunc. me sixin mstnci m tjongress.' a
Men like to reside in a city where they may watch league ball. It is a drawing card for a city to Ijave a ball team that represents it in a league. It keeps workers here. It will attract others. Baseball keeps dollars at home. It is estimated that from 80 to 120 persons go to Cin
cinnati every Sunday the Reds play there. If
Richmond had baseball here, they would stay at home, and the money that was paid for railroad tickets and entertainment would remain at home. Both the merchant and -the manufacturer benefit directly by the presence of a ball team. A league team promotes pride in the home town. It induces men to robt for their own community,
to boost its enterprise and aggressiveness. It makes loyal citizens out of them. Community spirit may be developed in many ways. Healthy sports is one of them. A man who is loyal to his home team is loyal to his home town. The wish is widespread that the baseball park be saved for Richmond. It can be done, if the
citizens see in it an opportunity to boost their city. The time left for the redemption of the park is limited. Action will be needed. Richmond
cannot afford to let the chance of getting league j
ball slip by, but the directors of the Richmond Exhibition company cannot be blamed if they lose patience and close out the property.
S. M. Which porf-next to New York handles the most shipping In the United States? Philadelphia. C. P. I saw "eau de Tie" printed on a bottle. What does it mean? Water of life. Brandy also Is called by that name. Pupil What Is photomicrography? The art of enlarging microscopic objects, by means of the micoscope, and
projection of the enlarged image on a senslsized plate. R. A. D. Who was city attorney In 1910? A. M. Gardner.
Old Soldier How long did Judge
little more than two months.
New Paris Reader1 How much difference is there between the rising of the sun on March 1 and on April 1? The sun rise of March 1 was ,6:38 a. m. and on April 1 will be 5:43 a. m., a difference of 53 minutes. Wife On what grounds can a person obtain a divorce in Indiana? Habitual drunkenness, cruel and Inhuman treatment, adultery, failure to
provide and desertion. Failure to pro
vide and desertion must have covered
a period of two years before a decree will be granted on these grounds.
H. R. Is sugar produced in Egypt? In the year 1918-1919 it produced
100,000 tons, which seems to be about
the annual production for a number of
years.
the v largo chairs, which straightway blotted out her delicate figure with its heavy upholstered lines. Occasionally the magazines ring the bell. A recent magazine article is entitled "Women as Mothers." It coincides with our own ideas. We have always held that women make the best mothers the world has ever of a man being a successful mother. We read in the divorce news that
Mary Pickford, whose name was Mrs.
Owen Moore, was allowed to take her
maiden name of Smith, after which
the court probably took a recess to
find recreation in reading the city di
rectory.
Good Evening By Roy K. Moulton
Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten-Years Ago Today
v No remonstrances were filed against the improvement of the National road, wept of Richmond, to the Center township line and the opinion that the improvements would bo made, was expressed. Earlham college won an intercollegiate debate with Cincinnati, taking the negative stand on "Resolved: That the working classes of the United States can best advance their interests by the organization of a separate political party." The condition of wheat In the coun-
i ty was very poor" and a small yield -' was anticipated, according to a report made by the county horticultural fe
You often hear of somebody who has "gone wrong," but do you hear anything about those who "go right?"
"DIAMOND DYE" FADED OLD DRESS MATERIAL Fun to see shabby, discarded skirts, coats, blouses, sweaters, gloves, dresses, everything turn new; whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods. Directions In package. Can't make mistake. Druggist has "Diamond Dye" Color Card. Advertisement.
n
Today's Talk By Georgs Matthew Adams
! THAT YOU OF YOURS AND THIS ME OF MINE! ;:t All of us are selfish. Your you and (.'-my me stack high! Were it not so. .'the one great cohesive power of the world w.ould be broken and all of us would be aimless wanderers in a world of wonders! We all get hungry for food, love,
adventure, frlendo, and a thousand other things, too. But we are not all gluttons in this line. If I want a friend, I must hunt for the you in him. And If he. would be
my friend, he must search for the me in me. For we all travel in an equipage made for us as individuals. That you of yours is mighty. Though I may know you and touch eparks with the fire of your personality, yet shall I never fully get all that you represent. And I am a great deal like you! So you must come to me as I come to you. And though ,tho crowd may move without plan or direction, still that does not alter in the slightest degree the one element that is common to every you and every me in the world.
That you of yours is divine. It is indistructible as the air which you breathe. And only as you harness it to every other you and make it pull its weight, are you able to travel far and get along contentedly and well. We measure too much from the pubstance of other yous. Our own little nie's tower too. high at times. In a multitude of works and worries. lt i:s not forget that there is a world that needs attending to; that every -little you is important and every me nuite great but not too great or important. That you of yours watch it with care. That me of mine I'll try end not feed it too much!
newcomers In the town and were taking their first sight-seeing tour. Nellie glanced up at the sign in front of the museum: "Man-eating Shark. Fifteen cents admission." So the two passed on. Two or three hours later mother and daughter came back by the same route and again passed the museum. The sign of course, .was still there.
Nellie could not be silenced, man still eating the shark?'
ed. "I should think he would get tired." Three-year-old Albert was tormenting the cat when it scratched him.
and he called it a bad name. His i
ALL BURLESON'S FAULT.
Dear Roy: Isn't the mail service terrible. I sent you a poem last
November and, after watching your column carefully everv dav, I find it LESTER LAMB. The champion optimist of the world lives in Flushing. Ho has just bought a saloon. The Amalgamated Potato Peelers' International Federation demands $6
for an eight-hour day and there aro not enough potatoes peeled ahead to last this country more than one meal.
A New York vwoman advertised for a husband and got one, and is now sued for aleniaton of affections. It is always safer to advertise for a single man.
Volstead is
on tne map.
the guy that put Cuba
One thing we have not learned, that
mother, overhearing what he had said, washed his mouth out with soap and water. The next day the lad was teasing pussy again, and once more the cat scratched him. But Arthur
"Is that! scad: "You are the same kind of a she ask-1 cat you were yesterday."
Is the price of admiscion into Sir iver's lodge.
Ol-
FURNITURE ART. (From the Smart Set.) She turned away with a quivering chin and sat down listlessly in one of
You 11 Relish Hood s Hominy
Dinner Stories
Possibly the apex or E?.rcrsm or
Fomething was reached the other day when Jones took his flivver to a re-1
J --."ft. ...... i.t'.tv. i ..v, tul u IllCiC what was the best thing to do with it. The repair man lookfd the car over in silence for a few minutes, after whichd he grasped the horn and tooted it. "You've a good horn here," he remarked quietly,- suppose you jack it up and run a new car under it?"
The setting for the tale is La Jolla, j a siaall town near Kan Diego. It is a place that boasts of great swimming j and many" other attractions, besides j a museum. A little maiden whom wo ! : will call Nellie, was passing the mu-', ! seura with her mother. Both wera i
MR '.
Fesler's Right
J.'W. Fe Jer It a lawyer of training and high ideals' with a spotless record. An associate of President Benjamin Harrison. Indiana needs him. Vote for
FESLER AN ABLE REPUBLICAN for Governor
Primary May 4, 1920 "The Folks are For Festa"
This is the time of year when hominy as prepared for the Hood Label, is a keenly relished dish by the children and grown-ups.
35,000 Owners Praise The New Triplex Springs
Indiana corn bipr, plump, white grains is prepared for this dish, first by removing the outer skin and the softening: of the starch cells by the old-fashioned lye process. The corn is then washed through many waters and then sealed
and steam cooked for many hours. It is sweet, tender and appetizing and when creamed or fried with bacon strips it makes a mighty good dish for breakfast or luncheon.
4
Ask your grocer for Hood Label Hominy and see how good it is.
TTs Hood Label Brand of Fruits and Vegetables. '" Packed on the spot from the world's best gardens and erchards.
The H. Hood Co. Wholesale Grocers Portland, Ind. Richmond, Ind.
MORE than 35,000 owners of the new Overland 4 are enthusiastically telling their friends of the wonderful riding qualities of this car. Triplex Springs smooth out the rough road bumps I "Rides as no light car ever rode before."
"It would be an insult to put shock absorbers on this car." ''The most advanced piece of work yet produced in the motor car line." These are some of the sincere compliments paid Overland 4 by proud owners.
The Sedan weighs only 200 pounds more than the Touring Car
Phone 2411
DAVIS-OVERLAND SALES CO. Complete Line Reo, Overland
1211 Main
.Tfc
1 Mil I ! II I IIIIM'l 111 iMi"iHlinillllTiHlm7VllllMll M1M MMf lMMMMjjfll f' ; i i q J t
The Dream of Home
We all dream dreams In the days of our youth; Overflowing with hope For there is no dream like the hopes that gleam Through the heart and mind of a boy.
But the very best dream ot the. dreams w dream As.Life's tortuous trail we roam, is the Joy we have In our adult years When our dream comes true of a home.
Saving for a home after all is much easier than one might think. After the first payment, money which otherwise must go for rent, helps wonderfully in carrying the burden.. Where there's a will there is always a way. Thousands are doing it successfully gradually but surely paving the road to independence WHY NOT YOU? Once having demonstrated your own sincerity you'll find willing hands to help you Sound advice and money always stand ready to further laudable endeavor. The time is ripe to make the start. In the vocabulary of all who do not boast of a home of their own there are but three words worth while "BUILD ONE NOW."
RICHMOND Lumber Co. RICHMOND. INDIANA
lASSOCIATCl TV
to
2Z
