Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 233, 10 August 1920 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, AUG. 10, 1920.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM : AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, aa Second-Class Mall Matter. MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Th Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the tise for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper.- and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.

The Russian Advance With Russian Reds hammering at the gates

of Warsaw and that strategically important city virtually in their hands, it is apparent that the

Poles are in a sorry plight. The Bolshevists

have announced their determination to set up a

soviet government in Poland. Their occupation of Poland finds the Allies at loss to know how to

proceed. The French have favored direct military action to support the Poles, but England so far has not supported this plan, preferring the expedient

of sending munitions to Poland and of lending of

ficers to direct operations. An economic block ade of Russia also is favored.

The military menace of the Red occupation of

Poland has not been taken seriously by military experts. Modern warfare, they say, depends primarily upon economic conditions behind the lines where the vast stores and munitions of warfare are prepared. Russia lacks these. Her whole industrial system is prostrate. Assailed by an army equipped with heavy artillery and the engines of modern offensive warfare, say these experts, and the Russian army would soon be destroyed. Supporters of this theory believe that an al

lied force, officered and directed by the military

genuises developed on the western front, backed be recalled.

by the industrial strength of their respective countries, would soon drive the Reds behind their own border. The danger of the Red occupation of Poland is to be found in the propaganda which will flow from that center. Bolshevism as a military menace is nil, because it has destroyed the industrial

efficiency upon which modern warfare depends for its victories. As a social menace its spread cannot be denied or underestimated. The allied governments have more to fear from the poisonous effects of social revolution which it preaches and disseminates than they have from the success Bolshevism may have won on the field of battle. Military ogeatiyons against the Russian Redgyjfthe Allies decide. to send armji nto the fray, will have fOTe ungrate purpose the defeat of hjj Reds to check an insidious propagandathat is deceiving .men and women and working for the undoing of the whole social state.

The Yearly Meeting

The conference of the Indiana yearly meeting

this week is its 100th annual gathering. The centennial anniversary will be celebrated next year.

Richmond has been the scene of almost every annual conference of this body in the last century, emphasizing the position which the city

has held as a center of Quaker endeavor. The establishment of central offices here in the last few years indicates that it has lost none of its importance in this respect in the lapse of years. Richmond passed its one hundredth milestone

a few years ago. Few of us realize that the in-

stitutions of our community are almost as old as the city itself, and, one by one, presently will celebrate centennial anniversaries, in which they will review their contributions to the development of Richmond and the betterment of its citizenship. The centennial of the yearly meeting un-

"""" Wi" uueami many an episoae Ol our i province of Rome, which in 1911 had

Answers to Questions

Subscriber- It seems to me that the summers are becoming cooler and winters more severe than formerly. Is there any scientific proof of this notion? No. It is a popular fallacy that our climate is changing; that the winters and summers are cooler than when old men were boys. The fallacy is advanced because of a natural ex

,aggeration of past 'events by persons

who' have not investigated the subject, and whose opinions aro wholly dependent upon imperfect recollections. The older we get the more vivid are the scenes and events of youthful years, and as one attains a ripe old age, it may be said that he is living entirely In the past, unmindful to a great extent of the magnitude and Importance of changes and incidents, because of changed habits and restricted activities. Records covering a long period of time disprove the common ideas- that the climate Is changing. It is generally accepted by

scientists that climate has not chang-;

ed appreciably within historic time. Mrs. R. F. At what expositions has the Liberty Bell been shown? It was taken to New Orleans Jn 18S5; to Chichago in 1893; to Atlanta in 1895, and to St. Louis in 1904. Readers may obtain anaTcera to qneatlona by writ in : the Palladium UurMlona and Answers department. Questions should be written plainly and briefly. Answers will be Riven briefly.

'MARY O THE MINT"

ITALY IS NO SAHARA; HAS 185,000 DRINKING PLACES (By Associated Press) ROME, Aug. 10. Italy cannot be called the "desert of Europe" because for her 40,000,000 inhabitants she provides 186,000 places where wine and alcohol beverages may be consumed, according to the Italian Statistical Annua lwhich has just been published. Lombardy with a population of about 5,000,000 leads the way with 32,642 drinking places, the figures, show.

i Piedmont follows her closely while the

community life which has been forgotten.

names of pioneers who shaped the spirit of our

institutions and gave tone to our community will

Many ' a Population of less than 1,500,000, has l no less than 8,127 drinking plaes.

Less intoxicants are consumed in the

South, in the Island of Sardinia and in Umbria, than in any other regions. Many other interesting features of

Indiana vpatTv mooting .wit tn'Knfo1 ;t Italian life are revealed by the Annual.

J 4M, D1UUC , deathrate of jlleg5timate children, oi men ana women to the cultural and moral de-1 for instance, is shown to be 40 per cent

greater than that of those born legiti'motolv Tiiharfiilriofst 1q B1r1 tn have

of the principles for which the body stood have shown " an increase, 50,000 of the

720,000 deaths in one year Deing at

tributed to that malady.

r s -s: 1

Miss Mary O'Reilly. Miss Mary O'Reilly is the first woman to hold the office of assistant director of the United States mint. In tsje absence of the director she has charge of the manufacture of gold and silver coins. Approximately 700,000,000 coins pass through her hands every year. She receives a salary of only $2,400 annually.

velopment of Richmond and of Indiana. Many

been translated into laws to improve the condition of mankind and make happier the social

state.

Today's Talk By George Matthew Adams

SOMEBODY HAS GOT TO HOLD TO YOU The child's heart trusts. "Better take the whole hand, kiddie," says Dad to the boy at his side, who is holding to one finger "No, I can hold on, Dad," he says. But presently he slips and knocks his little shins, and Dad says again, "Better take the whole hand boy." "No Dad, I can hold on," he says again. But Dad understands and keeps a watchful eye on the one who trusts because he loves him so. And that's the way It Is with us all whether small or great. Somebody has got to hold tightly to us to keep

us safe and free from danger and harm. None of us really knows the limit of our strength. Confidently ahead do we tread. And so we are bound to stub our toes often and sometimes we fall. But somehow or other, somebody is always watching us some eyeful brother or sister, or friend someone who loves us very dearly or some big Invisible God who understands. Somebody has got to hold to you! 1 We couldn't go very far along the load unless we could quickly grasp the long, reaching finger of somebody stronger and more confident than we. How very wonderful just to know that somebody WILL hold to you!

there is a house called the Line House. Half of this house is in Canada and the other half is in the United States. Canada is "wet" and the United States is "dry." It seems to mo that there are possibilities in a place like that. MARCEL STEINBRUGGE.

Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today

Harry C. Meek, superintendent of the county infirmary, and former Wayne township assessor, died at his home from abdominal disorders. He had been ill less than 12 hours. , Because of the increased cost of

I placing milk on the market, resulting

outtie anu fiiy requirements ror pure milk, the Commons Dairy company of this city filed notice of an increase in capital stock from $15,000 tc $25,000. The company had just announced its absorption of the J. L. Eatchelor dairy and an advance in the price of milk from GY cents per quart to 8 cents. It was said that it was probable that stock for a corporation to be known as the Richmond Lake and Park company would be put on sale by members of the Commercial club. The purpose of the company was to buy land in the Hawkins addition to Richmond, north of Glen Miller park, and to build a beautiful Chautauqua grounds.

an alternating current from the shore. Ships to take advantake of It must be equipped with audiphones or listening devices attached to the hull. Approaching the channel the sound waves emitted by the cable can be heard for some distance, and the increasing or decreasing strength of the sound enables the ship to be steered until it Is right over the source. It is then a simple matter to follow its course.

l r

Good E

By Roy K

ood ravening

Moulton

Dinner Stories

The arrival of "the daughter of a rich southern planter" in Great Bend 'tor a summer visit caused quite a ripple in rocial circles, according to the "Tribune," and the ripple still rippled

when it was learned she was the daughter of an enterprising undertaker in Atlanta. REALLY HATED TO LEAVE. ' I take this method to thank Sheriff Frazar and Jailor Woods for the kind treatment accorded mo while a prisoner in the parish jail. The food was good and wholesome, the beds neat and everything about the jail is kept in a clean and sanitary condition. N. A. Kingrey in De Ridder, La.. Enterprise. Fashion journal says : "The style In legs has changed. They are no longer thin and slender, but stout." But in ppite of fashion's decree, a good many ladies seem to be wearing their last year's legs. If Debs is elected, the president's traveling expense account will not be large. WE BREATHE AGAIN. For several months we have been threatened with the dire calamity of

j-nvine food prices reducea. it

been, in fact, an imminent peril, which has worried us more than a little. But row we observe the following headline In The Evemail: "FOOD PRICES WILL GO STILL HIGHER" So, the crisis is passed and all our worry was in vain, which is true of so many worries of this life. If perchance, our nightmare should have come true and prices should have' dropped even the fraction of a cent for the fraction of a moment, we don't believe we could have stood it. If gasoline does go to fifty cents a gallon, one result , will be that there will be a lot of people buying gasoline at fifty cents a gallon. Many men believe in spreading their pleasure out to cover a whole year by paying their income tax In four installments. BUT HOW ABOUT THE PROBABILITIES? Dear Roy: Way up here in the wilderness, we have discovered a really Temarkable place. There is a town named Jackman and near that town

A traveler passing through a small country town noticed a post on which was marked the height to which the river had risen during a recent flood. "Do you mean to say," he asked a native, "that the river rose as high as that?" "Oh, no," replied the native; "but the village children used to rub off the original mark, so the mayor ordered it to be put higher up, so as to be out of their reach." "Isn't it deplorable that a big, strong, healthy man like the one going there should be crippled ir such a manner," remarked a stranger the other Sunday, indicating a well known town man whom he saw walking with one leg stiff as a crutch. "Hub! That ain't crippled," replied a home guard. "His wife don't want him to play golf on Sunday and he's sneaking out to the course with a midIron down his pants leg."

JAPAN'S TRADE BALANCE IS REPORTED AS UNFAVORABLE (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Aug. 10.-Japan's foreign commerce for the first seven months of 1920, resulted in an unfavorpble trade balance of nearly $259,000,000, Commercial Attache James F. Abbott at Tokio, reported today to the Department of Commerce, Imports amounting to approximately $SS5,000,000, the report stated while exports were about $G3G,000,000. While the balance for seven months was a slight increase over that of $242,000,000 for the first six months, the report continued, the rate of increase was smaller than the increase in the unfavorable balance during June, when the figures jumped from $220,000,000, the unfavorable balance for the first five months. The unfavorable balance for the first four months was $163,000,000 and for the first quarter $10,-000,000.

SAY

DIAMOND DYES"

Don't streak or ruin your material in poor dye. Insist on "Diamond Dyes.1 Easy directions in package.

CABLE LEADS SHIP INTO NEW YORK HARBOR SAFELY NEW YORK, Aug. 10 The principle of "follow the green line," used successfully by the management of New York's subway system in handling crowds at congested transfer points, has been adapted in a measure

has i to insure safey to ships at sea around

crowded harbors. Instead of a visible "green line," however, a device has been perfected whereby vessels seeking their way into harbor in thick weather can follow with safety a submerged and energized wire. The device consist of a cable 16 miles long laid in the center of Ambrose channel. It is energized with

BEAR OIL1 For You r Hair

Tm WW M a bnld Indian They ooo't dm perfumed lotions. For as thar nsad bear oil, with other potent ingredient from the flelda. moon end f oreita of Nature. A reliable formal U ROTALKO. lodiana' elixir for

our ua eceip. Astoniining euc. J case In owcomina DANDRUFF, toppioc FALLING HAIR-, ud

inducing Aaif toituvrin In many caeee when all else failed, lneeetlgate. mny -refund guaranty, ror men, women, children. Keep this advertiie

mcnt. Show others. Poaitivelv

KATALKO at the dro (tore; or aend 10 centi

(atlTer or ttaanptj lor prool box and guarantee, to I to2m Hart Br lttin, Stau F. New York?

Boy

"CORNS"

Lift Right Off Without Pain

WANT GENERAL AMNESTY FOR POLITICAL PRISONERS (By Associated Pressl WASHINGTON, Aug. 10 Accompanied by six labor union officials and former Representative Meyer London, of New York, Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor is scheduled to call on Attorney General Palmer tomorrow to urge the procalamation of a general amnesty for political prisoners. Labor officials who it was announced today, will be in the delegation are Frank Morrison, secretary of the American Federation of Labor; Wm. H. Johnston, president of the International Association of Machinists; John Sullivan, treasurer of the Central Federation of New York; J. P. Coughlin, president of the Brooklyn Central Labor Union; Max Pine, secretary of the United Hebrew Trades, and Lucy Robins, secretary of the Central Labor bodies conference of New York.

HOME OF WALT WHITMAN IS PURCHASED FOR SHRINE (By Associated Press) CAMDEN, N. J., Aug. 10. The humble little house in which Walter Whitman, the "good gray poet" lived has been purchased by the city from the

poet's three nieces. It will be converted into a memorial museum. It will be moved to either Whitman Park

or Forest Hill Park and will house the relics, books and mementoes that have survived the beloved poet. It was here that many of the poems that have throbbed their way into the hearts of the world were written. The 101st anniversary of Whitman's birth was recently celebrated by a pilgrimage of devotees to his tomb in a cemetery

near here. The house is a square wooden structure of two stories with smoky, sombre clapboard front and a tall chimney bending a bit with years.

and Jailer Jones said he would not me surprised If Wilson died before another 24 hours. Wilson now abhors the sight of food and gets violent when it Is brought to his cell. No forcible efforts will be' made to feed him, it having been decided that a man may lawfully, starve himself to death if he wants to."

Lynn Says Umpire Was Partial to New Madison Charges that the umpire in the Lynn-New Madison baseball gama at New Madison 'Sunday afternoon was partial to the home team and that bad decisions caused Lynn to bo defeated 7 to 6, have been filed with President George Brehm by the Lynn Suburban baseball league management. Brehm In his capacity as manager of the Suburban league, will investigate the mat,ter and try to restore peaceful relation s.

DE VALERA SPENT HUGE SUM TO OBTAIN RECOGNITION ' LONDON, Aug. 10. The Evening Standard claims documentary evidence that a Sinn Fein congress In June authorized Eamonn de Valera, "President of the Irish Republic," to expend"?500,000 "in connection with the campaign for the presidency of the United States." One million dollars in expenditure by de Valera was authorized to obtain recognition of the Irish Republic, the newspaper declares.

SUNDAY ATTACKS LEAGUE LINCOLN, Neb., Aug. 10. The League of Nations was made a target by Billy Sunday, who came out of retirement hero long enough to make a short address before the Epworth Assembly. "I am not in favor of allowing a bunch of mutts, molhycoddles and curmudgeons to sit around a table and decide when we aro to declare our wars," he said.

1

FOR

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MEDICINAL VALUE ALWAYS

r aBeas a. a af fja. awe. ta. f.

UfcNUinE A)rl K1IM Tajua htMK aaauTiwo THE

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VwXWx.'g?

-fir t01j DRINK "

The Sparkling Mint Drink Mint Se-Kule Syrup Co., Inc. Indianapolis

For Sale at a Bargain 1920 Pilot Sport Model Driven less than 1,000 miles. The Richmond Electric Co.

SAVE ON TIRES SAVE ON TUBES Richmond Tire Service Cor. 11th and Main

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DUSTY'S SHOE REBUILDES5

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STORES

PRISONER STARVES 48 DAYS; MAY LIVE 24 HOURS LONGER POTTSVILLE, Pa., Aug. 10.--Charles Wilson, a prisoner at the county jail, Monday entered on the 48th day of his fast. Wilson has lost only 15 pounds jn weight, and is not emaciated, but officials say his heart is getting weak,

3BEZ

Henry T. Poblmoyer Ora E. Stegall WTm. A. Welfer Harry C. Downing Murray G. DeHaven POHLMEYER, DOWNING and COMPANY

15 N. 10th St.

FUNERAL DIRECTORS

LIMOUSINE AMBULANCE

Phone 1335

SEC

Duty of spinning thread, in the old ages, was assigned to unmarried women, or "spinsters."

SHE CAX TRl'THPl'LliY SAY Hay fever, asthma and bronchial couKhs yield to the soothing, healing properties of Foley's Honey and Tar Compound as quickly and surely as do ordinary coughs, colds and croup. Sirs. Geneva Robinson. S8 X. Swan St.. Albany X. Y.. writes: "I tried Foley s Honey and Tar and results encouraged me to use more. I can truthfully say it is the best cough medicine I ever used. Two bottles broke a most stubborn, lingering cough." For sale by A. C Luken & Co., 630 Mam St. Ad-

BATHING SUITS For Men, Women and Children VIGRAN 617 MAIN STREET

! o

Sand Q UDDEN Oe

Tire Shop RVICE

Lee Tires and Tubes, Standard Four Tires Distributor Indiana Trucks Vulcanizing, Relining, Retreading Phone 2906 17 S. 9th St.

Doesn't hurt a biu

a little

Freezone on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then you lift it right out. Yes, magic. A tiny bottle of Freezone costs but a few cents at any drug store, but is sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or irritation. Advertisement.

You Simply Must See

DR. LEE C. HOOVER Veterinarian Phono 1399 20 S. 12th St.

DR. R. H. CARNES DENTIST Phone 2665 Rooms 15-16 Comstocl; Building 1016 Main Street Oren Sundays and Eventngi by appointment.

SCIENCE FINDS NATURE'S LONG HIDDEN SECRET TMrIT HELPS BUILD THE STRENGTH

STAMINA AND ENDURANCE TO WIN

'THE WEAK SPOT IN THE CREW"

Are you a man of power and endurance or do you topple over when near the goal? Read in this article, how Science has found a new and amazing way to supply in Vitamon those vital substances the vitamines which Nature seems to have intended for building health, strength and energy.

Medical Authorities Discover That Without the Life-Giving Vitamines Which Are Now Lost frcm Many Everyday Foods, There Can be No Fullness of Health, Energy and Vitality Physician Explains Why People Become Weak, Nervous and Rundown, and Tells How to Get Vitamines in Vitamon.

GOOD FORD TIRES

S12.85

-Not Rebuilt

S9.50 to

(New Goods-

Wm. F. Lee- No. 8 S. 7th St. Richmond, Ind.

ouglas IS CTacLean

liJoris lVJiay : : :

In "LET'S BE FASHIONABLE" Thursday, Friday and Saturday WASHINGTON

We can save you dealer's profit on a Used Piano or can trade your Bllent Piano for a Viotrola. Our salesman, Mr. J. R. Jones, has had fifteen year's piano experience. Hia advice la free. Walter B. Fulghum 1000 Main St

' New York (Special) "Whether it be in the Kace of Boats or In the Hace of

Life It takes mighty strength and tireless energy to withstand the terrific strain and reach the goal of Victory. For years countless tonics and preparations have come and gone, but now Science has brought forth the amazing facts of how people become weakened, nervous, run-down, thin and prematurely old, often simply because of the lack of those life-giving substances the vitamines which authorities declare absolutely necessary to vigorous health, physical power, mental vieor and even to life itself. In explaining the startling success being obtained when practically everything else had failed, Dr. John J. Rudolph, a Former

Health Commissioner ,late of New York Hospital Staffs, and a Graduate of the University of Baltimore, says: "If I were asked Vhat are Vitamines?' I should say 'They are life they are energy they are power they give strength and beauty to your body and vigor to your mind. So rapid, so pronounced and so amazing are the results produced by the concentrated vitamines and other health-giving elements as combined in Vitamon that no matter what anyone says, I do not believe that there is anything whatso

ever to which this discovery can be compared." When you see a man contented to merely 'hold a job' a man who has no other interest than remaining "In his own rut, wlio Is perfectly satisfied with what comes in his pay envelope every week, and is willing to go through life without ever amounting to much, yon will find that his lark of interest and enthusiasm is caused by a lowered vitality and a weakened physical condition. He either has a poor appetite, or else he is not getting the proper nourishment out of what he eats to build health and strength. Nature puts in certain raw foods a vital life-giving substance which scientists have given the name vitamines, but even though you were to select the very foods which do contain vitamines you would probably not get enough to do you much

good, for present methods of preparations and cooking rob these foods of their vitamines before they reach our tables. Therefore, the man who is weakened, nervous and run down must got these vitamines in some other way such as by taking the concentrated form called Vitamon If ,he expects to make himself a keen. re"d-blooded fellow with the strength, energy, ambition and courage to succeed. By keeping himself fit with Vitamon he at once becomes more powerful mentally, better able to use the talents and ability he possesses and his buoyant health

makes him so active and alert that he Is always ready to reach out and grasp every opportunity which comes his way. Such a man can easily take the leadership and hold It he has the vim and the energy, the brain-power and the money, too. There are. In my opinion, thousands of men who by taking a short course of Vitamon might readily build themselves up Into a position of health, success and power Instead of being nervous, irritable weaklings haunted by fear through the day and totured by sleeplessness and depression at night. Not until you have taken Vitamon yourself and felt Its up-buildlng effects can you form any Idea of the vast difference it may quickly make In your health, strength, mental vigor and physical appearance."

SPECIAL GUARANTEE If after uxtng Vitamon yon are not rntlrrly natlnfled tilth the rrnulta nml are not convinced that tt haa been worth to floii far more than you paid for It, the trial will rout you absolutely nothing. .You are to be the aole Judge. Vitamon may now be obtained In this city from all leading druKarlata. such aa A. G. l.uken, Qulglry'a, UaMler & Spanasel, Thlatletbwalte.

FOR STRENGTH AND ENERGY OF MEN

11 amrn s ? jatyCalSfe

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