Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 62, 21 January 1921 — Page 6

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., FRIDAY, JAN. 21, 1921.

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Buliding North' Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Fost Offlfe? at Richmond, Indiana, aa . Second-Class Mall Matter. MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PnGM - The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the us 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.

Mills Are Resuming Operation It was in the manufacture of textiles that the first slumpof. the present industrial depression was noted;' and, so it- is of general interest to learn thatttK'"roajor; industry df "New England, employing more than 300,000 operatives, is beginning to resume operations. ..vr; ? : V 0 More orders were received last week than at any equivalent time since thet depression began last August. . Mill pwnrs hope to be able to resume normal work in two or three weeks, an event that is devoutly hoped for Jby the populace of the New England states. " The best way to accomplish the task of placing orders in the textile mills is for the public to begin buying. As soon as the retailer empties his shelves of wares, he will place, orders with the jobbers, and they will pass on the demand for more goods to the mills. - The beneficent effects of a restoration of a season of buying will be seen in the whole business world. Not only will the textile industries avert wholesale misery among their employes, but thousands of other workers in other industries, who are idle now because the public will not buy, will be taken back in their old places. News dispatches from many industrial centers in the last week show that mills and factories are beginning to operate again on a curtailed output basis, but even this resumption of industrial activity has had a stimulating effect on conditions generally. A survey of conditions in Richmond showed that all lines of business enterprise are beginning to show activity. Retail merchants expressed themselves satisfied with the optimistic outlook that prevailed, saying that the public had money .for the purchase of goods. Substantial reductions in many commodities have stimulated this buying process. Just as soon as a spirit of confidence in' the return to normalcy in the industrialvand business spheres is established, a general quickening in

demand for goods will be noted, an event that will speedily give employment to the thousands who are temporarily without work.

Conserving Our Trees Charles C. Deam, state fprester for -4he" department of conservation, is urging the passage of a bill by the general assembly to empower the state to purchase several thousand acres of waste land and unproductive hill lands and plant them to forests. His theory is that the wood-working industries of Indiana will suffer for lack of material; if the state does npt make provision for reforestation and for the encouragement of the planting of trees. 'Irrespective of the merits or demerits of the proposed measure, the importance of providing timber for the wood-working industries of Indi

ana is not to be sneered at by those who cannot' see the value of a tree. The nation cannot con- ! tinue to draw on its supply of timber indefinitely j

without reaching the. point where timber will be scarce and the price high. With the scarcity of the raw material and its high price comes nattir-

I ally an increase in t the price of the commodities

that are fashioned out of wood ; so that the diminution of our timber supply is of vital interest to everyone. There still are vast regions that are covered

TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams. Author ef "You Can?, "Take It", "Up-. THE BELIEVER It is better to believe in something than to believe in" nothing. Even though that something be little understood. . "When I. take to my Pullman bed, I believe that the engineer is going to keep his eyes alert and safely bring me to my destined end even though I have never seen him. "We sleep to wake! Because we believe there is to be a morrow. Though in the interim we are lost in a darkness. I still believe in Santa Claus because he makes so many little tots dance with joy. I believe that the world is getting better all the time for if J didn't I would get very discouraged, indeed. And I never feel good when I am that way. Do you? I believe that we are all of us being followed all tjje time by some kind and gentle spirit that sees we do not stray too Tar. Th believer is always the achiever! v He sees a long way ahead of the crowd. He goes to his night-bed tired and sometimes almost ready to give up. But he believes that he will awake refreshed and with newer and stronger faith in his idea. The believer bears his pain. The keeper at the door of his heart bands you a smile and bids you to enter. And you go away, ashamed of your complainings and imagined ills. Be big enough to believe.

Dinner Stories

A New Yorker, one of the nativeborn type, who rarely leaves the confines of the greater city, tooK a vacation last summer and went, with one of the New York ball clubs on Its

S trip west. He saw many strange

sights. On the return trip the club stopped off at Buffalo, and never, having seen

Answers to Questions

Morgenthau came to the United States

before he was 10 years old. He received his education in the New York public schools, in the college of the City of New York, and in the Columbia Law school. For 20 years he practiced law, attaining sufficient prominence to be associated with Elihu Root in the famous Hilton', Hughes and company, assignment Till this time, however, he was engaging in the business at which he established the reputation of being something of a wizard real estate. From 1913 to 1916 he was ambassador to Turkey. Touched by the suffering of the Armenias, he resigned

j this post and returned to the United

Club Members: Will you please print a short sketch of Henry Morgenthau? Henry Morgenthau, recently selected by President Wilson to act

! flR hid DArPMTial rohrAQontah'iro 3n

with Virgin forests, but many of these are far iating between the Armenians and the from the industrial centers and the trees are not j nhlfm aimllny S7ii&i$M MMr'

or a variety mar. iena tnemseives io me manufacture of articles for commercial purposes. The suggestion of Mr. Deam that the waste land and the barren hillsides of Indiana be planted to trees is a good one. There are many acres of land in Wayne county that are fallow and never will be adaptable to agricultural purposes. Some of them are used for grazing purposes, and in that manner contribute toward the wealth of the community. But a good proportion of this land is not even valuable for that purpose and should ho rnvprprl with vountr trees.

A farmer possessing waste land will enhance!

me value 01 me iiuint: pmce tu ins i.miuicii nu grandchildren by setting out trees of the varieties that are used for industrial purposes. The land would then be in the process of becoming a revenue producing portion of the farm. The trees also would prevent erosion of the soil. The soil of many a hillside In Wayne county is being

washed away by melting snow in the spring and

rains in the summer, soil.

100, only those are leap years which are divisible by 400. Thus 1900 was not a leap year.

Renders mT obtain aumrr ti qneKtlonn by irrltlns; the Palladium Questions and. Answers department. All questions sbonld be written nlainly

ana torlellj brief)'.

Niagara Falls, as is the case wttn most New Yorkers, the players persuader their, fellow traveler not to miss the opportunity. . He looked the falls over very carefully and returned to his hotel. "Well, what do you think of it for a wonderful sight?" asked one of the ball players. " "I'll say," said the. New Yorker, without undue enthusiasm, "that she certainly throws a mean leap."

"Only One that Ever Gave l Me the Benefits I Needed"

Mrs. Wright Says She Had Tried All Kinds of Remedies, But Trutona Alone Brought Desired Relief. "I've tried all kinds of medicines, but there is only one that's given me relief I've wanted, and that's Trutona" says Mrs. L. M. Wright, a well-known and highly respected Terre Haute woman, residing at 1124 north Ninth street. "Stomach derangement and nervousness had been my twin troubles for two years." she continued, "and I'll have to admit that Trutona is surely one good medicine, because it has eriv-

Aaswera will be sWea ! en me relief after others failed. I have

a good appetite now, and can eat anything I care for without bloating or

Rippling Rhymes

By WALT MASON J

BEGINNING RIGHT. Let's all begin the new vear risrlir

and make a record snowy white. Let's j drive our cars twelve miles an hour, i and not show off their pep and power by stepping fiercely 'on the gas and slaying people as we pass. What is the hurry, anyway? Why speed her up? ! We have all day to get to Punktown-i on-the-Height, where we expect to' spend the night. If we'd cut out the

foolish haste the nresent wild pnd wanton waste of numan life would promptly shrink it's worth a new

year vow, I think. A more important

ow this is than swearing off on drug-

belching afterward. The pains in my stomach, side and back have all been relieved, too, and my nerves are in so much better condition that I rest well every night now and of course, I never feel weak and tired out in the mornings as I used to." ' As Mrs. Wright's statement prove? stomach troubles not only affect? the nerves but also tends to weaken the entire system. Trutona is famous for its effective action on the stomach and bowels. Countless residents of Ipdiana scores of them right here in Richmond have testified that Trutona relived their stomach troubles even after many other remedies had failed. Trutona is sold in Richmond at Clem Thistlewaite's drug stores and in surrounding cities and towns by all good, druggists Advertisement ! - t

store fizz, or punk cigars that smell

suffereis. While a native of Germany. like shoes when vou have deftlv lit i

Mr. Morgenthau was active in expos- the fuse. Of course the gents who I ing German intrigue in Constantin-j have no cars may waste 1 heir vows on j

ople. Early in 1920 he was appointed

hay cigars, but we who push our clank

ing vans should make some new and ! drastic plans. We're slaying thou-1

ambassador to Mexico.

Mr. Morgenthau is now at Atlantic

City with his wife, pending arrange- tands every year as down th turnpike ments for his mission to Armenia. j we career; the dead are lying where Information: How is leap yeariwe raced, and all because of maudlin chosen? Leap years are chosen to j haste. What is the hurry, anvhow? be those in which the number of the It's all uncalled for, you'll allow; we VPfl r ic fl i V 1 hi n v fmii wiM-innf tq Jl-.t-rt nll'n.. . .-..1, n 1- 1 1

... ' " iwivut. ic.inrc mi uoj Ml "linn lu IfaUIl U1S Irees Will conserve tne mainder; but, of the years divisible by I famous Biigetown-by-the-Beach.

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Official Announcement Wa are pleased to state that Mr. C. W. Mason, formerly our local theatre manager, Orpheum Theatre, Fort .Wayne, was promoted and will, in the future, be assistant to our general theatre manager, A. F. Brentlinger, who is our vicepresident. Mr. Mason is a son-in-law of our vice-president and has been local manager of thet Orpheum Theatre for the past six years. He has proven to be a splendid local theatre manager and a good disciplinarian, and he will be of valuable assistance to our vice-president in helping him to further systematize all departments in theatres, to make larger profits, to screen and O. K. all pictures, and to criticize and to O. K. all vaudeville acts before they are presented in our chain of theatres for your approval and entertainment. Consolidated Realty and Theatres Corporation

r. Mim m

Good Evening By Roy K. Moulton

THE UBIQUITOUS VERA. "Vera Gordon, the beloved mother of 'Humoresque,' returned to vaudeville last week, after an absence from, the American-speaking stage of three years. She registered a sensational hit appearing SIMULTANEOUSLY IN TWO THEATERS." Cincinnati Post. INDEED NO! Fire was discovered about 11 o'clock today, where 300 girls were employed, but there was no panic. New. York World. ' I" ' -V "r .' Arrangements are being made to Send an airplane with 300 passengers across the Atlantic ocean. Well, as one vaudeville actor always says: "Let 'er go." PICK OUT YOUR BURIAL TOGS' NOW WHY WAIT? Ad. in women wear: MOURNING GOODS Exhibition of; advanced styles." tn burial attire. Nobody knows what, the customers drink. Nohodv has the least suspicion.

Roy Wilson, of Oklathe, Kan., settles

the distinction this way:

Who's Who in the Day's News

SEN. JAMES W. WADSWORTH The activity of Senator James WWadsworth of New York as a member of the military affairs committee of the senate has caused his name to be spoken of in connection with the selection of a secretary of war in the , Harding cabinet.

He has been prominent in advancing legislation to strengthen the military arm of the governnfent. Wads worth was re-elected to his second

home in time to shave before the even

ing meal, it's dinner. If he doesn't, it's s-upper. One thing we don't understand rs how the women her so much with thoiv ears all covered up. A Philadelphia bandit was about to get away with the contents of a grocer's cash register, when a clerk who is evidently an ex-doughboy knocked him out with a can of baked beans. Did he throw the can of bean?; at the bandit or make him eat them? "Lost Ba'loonists Ate Carrier Pigeons." Headline. It rau?t have ben one of those things that we had New Year's day, but the butcher called it a turkey. Dr. Koo will represent China in the league of nations. Koo, understand, jiot Koo-koo.

being born in Genesee, that state, Aug 12. 1877. He is a graduate of Yale,

, C'- Possessing a is. A. eAPswoeTH degree. He first gained attention politically as a member of the New York

i assembly. 1905-10... The last four vears

If he gets j 0f that timo he served as speaker. He

CATHOLICS DROP PROJECT

FOR INDIANA PREP SCHOOLl

LAPORTE, Ind.. Jan. 21 The pro--ject of opening a preparatory school at Interlaken for fitting boys for Notre Dame and other Catholic universities has been dropped by officials of St. Xavier's, in order to give full support to a $2,000,000 school at Baltimore. It was learned today, however, that Capt. C. L. Deals of the Chicago board of education had taken an option on Interlaken school property until Feb. 1 and expects to open a military school.

Masonic Calendar

SI!

amefe! Neglect" of Our

Disabled Doegh-Boys

9

Friday, Jan- 21 King Solomon's

chapter No. 4. It. A. M.. called convo-

term in the senate cation; work in Mark Master degree.

last fall. He is a Saturday. Jan. 22 Loyal Chapter

native or New YorK, No. 49, q. E. S.. will give a social and 1

basket supper for the members andp their families. j i

NOT niggardliness but mismanagement is behind the fact that thousands of -our disabled soldier of the Great War "are still waiting, exploited, neglected, forgotten,' for the draft of honor to be redeemed." The Public Health Service, according to Harold A. Littledale, of the New York Evening Post, is months behind in dealing with urgent appeals from disabled soldiers needing

treatment, as is also the Bureau of war-Risk Insurance in payments. The Pittsburgh Chron-

was a delegate to the Republican national convention in 1908-12-10. Outside of his political duties he is in the livestock and general farming business at Mt. Morris, N. Y. He is also a director in two banks at Genesee, N. Y.

Correct English

Don't Say: If I had been HER I should not have gone. It was ME who spoke. ' It was not HER whom you thought it was. , . i No expense or labor WERE spared in erecting the building. . To have wealth, or to be influential in politics, LEAD to temptation. Say: ' If I had been SHE I should not have gone. , It was I who spoke. It was not SHE WHO you thought it was. No expense nor labor WAS spared in erecting the biulding. To have wealth, or to be influential in poliUcs, LEADS to temptation.

I Memories of Old Days I. In This Paper Ten Years. I: Ago Today

1- . ' s Made desperate by his fear of the Penitentiary, William Warren, colored, madea successful, brek, for liberty about 5 pm., scaping; deputy sheriff Oscar Mashmeyer amid a .veritable rhower of leaden pellets from, the officer's 32-caliber revolver, i The annual roll call meeting of the Whitewater lodge, No. 41. I. O. O. F., was held in the lodge rooms. There were 182 members answered the call r.'f their names either by person or 'Hn.' The attendance was unusually

CARRIE CHAPMAN CATT PAYS HEIRS TO PREVENT CONTEST NEW YORK, Jan. 21.—Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, who inherited the bulk of Mrs. Frank Leslie's $2,000,000 estate, made settlements with two heirs to avoid a contest of the will, it was disclosed here yesterday. Mrs. Leslie's niece, who was bequeathed the income from a $50,000 trust fund, was given $160,000 and another prospective contestant was paid $100,000. Mrs. Catt claimed that two fees, aggregating $150,000, for legal services were excessive. SALTS FINE FOR

ACHING KIDNEYS We eat too much meat which clogs Kidneys, then the Back hurts.

ARISES MORNINGS REFRESHED AFTER GOOD NIGHT'S REST

Could Not Sleep Well Nights, Appetite Was Poor Before He Took Hypo-Cod. "

Most folks forget that the kidneys, like the bowels, get sluggish and clogged and need a flushing occasionally, else we have backache and dull misery in the kidney region, severe headaches, rheumatic twinges, torpid 'liver, acid stomach, sleeplessness and all sorts of bladder disorders: You simply must keep your kidneys, active and clean, and the moment you feel an ache or pain in the kidney region, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good drug store here, take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is mace from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and is harmless to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity. It also neutralises the acids in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts is harmless'; inexpensive; makes a delightful effervescent lithiawaler drink which everybody should take now and then to keep their kidneys clean, thus avoiding serious complications. A well-known local druggist says he sells lots of Jad Salts to folks who be-, lieve in overcoming kidney trouble while it is only trouble. Advertise-menL

Feels Much Stronger "I, did not tleep good very often, only three or four hours in a whole

night and would get up in the morn-

ing feeling as bad as when I went to bed. I was living on' eggs and milk part of the time and also suffered from a severe cold that I had had several mouths. I always had a severe burning sensation in my throat, but 1 am feeling so much stronger and better now. "Since taking Earle's Hypo-Cod hich I bought because I saw it advertised, I get up in the morning feeling fine, lay down at night and sleep straight through and enjoy it, and my appetite is excellent can just eat anything at all. My cold and throat trouble is practically gone. "I had tried several different remedies, but could not. get anything that would give results until I started to take this one," declared Mr. Ernest Morse, 150 Hamilton Ave., Columbus, Ohio. There is bcrdly anything more disagreeable than to be unable to sleep well at night and get up in the morning as tirpd us. when you went to bed. It makes life seem hardly worth living and as a rule ones health is on a steady decline. Druggists, chemists and experts aspert Earle's Hypo-Cod is a most powerful reconstructive tonic. Drop in at the drug store tonight, and take home a bottle with you. Earle's Hypo-Cod is sold here by all good druggists, and the leading druggists in all nearby towns. Advertisement

We can save you dealer's profit on a Used Piano or can trade your Silent Piano for a Victrola.

WALTER 1000 Main St.

B. FULGHUM Phone 2275

$1.00 Men's Silk Hose 50c LICHTENFELS - 1010 Main St.

IS A CHILD'S LIFE WORTH $10 TO YOU? When Mr. Herbert Hoover wrote to The Literary Digest in October, telling of the desperate condition of three and a half million children in Europe, and of the threatened interruption of the work of his organization because its resources would be exhausted in January, he said that he had asked other American organizations to lift the further responsibility of this work from his shoulders, but that up to that time none of them had felt able to assume the gigantic task. The Literary Digest was profoundly Btifred by the call of this great emergency and decided to consecrate its entire energy to the task of arousing the American people to uphold Mr. Hoover's hands in this live-saving work. We immediately published in our issue of October 30, an editorial appeal entitled "The Slaughter of the Innocents," and called lor prompt subscriptions by our own readers and Americans everywhere to the ChildFeeding Fund urgently needed, starting the Fund ourselves with a "large cash contribution. On the very first appearance of 'this appeal President-elect Harding gave a wonderful impetus to the Fund by his Eplendid telegram of endorsement, and his contribution of $2,500 to care for 250 starving children. We published the appeal in more than three hundred leading newspapers throughout the United States and telgraphed to more than two thousand newspapers urging their editorial support, which was royally given. Immediately following this nation-wide appeal, which The Digest has continued intensively and without interruption every week for three months, the heart, and mind, and proper pride of America responded to the call the members as well as the officers of other great benevolent organizations felt that this was also their opportunity, the difficulties which Mr. Hoover had previously experienced disappeared, and he found it possible to complete a consolidation of eight of the greatest relief organizations in the country for a combined campaign to collect the $33,000,000 needed to feed the starving children of Europe and to provide medical supplies and worx. State and city organizations were quickly formed in every part of the Union, and the money began pouring in from the American people who are now thoroughly aroused. Nearly half of the total $33,000,000 is now raised; but the other half is urgently needed within the next 30 days to be effective. Remember, $10 saves the life of one child. Every American whose eye rests on these words should not let a single day pass without sending a contribution for this life-saving work. We are asking all our 4 readers to co-operate in every possible way with the local organizations and to send thair contributions to their State Treasurers instead of direct to The Literary Digest, because it is impossible to continue printing the long lists of contributors in the overcrowded columns of Jhe Literary Digest. Give generously and give promptly , to this emergency relief to save the lives of Europe's starving children. The name and address of your State Treasurer is SOL. S. KISER, 136 E. Washington St., Indianapolis, Ind.

icle-Telegraph quotes Col. Frederick W. Galbraith, Jr., National Commander of the American Legion, as saying that "10,000 disabled veterans are quartered in cellars, poor-houses, and insane asylums. The leading article in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week, January 22, 1921, presents facts that will astonish the American public and which have been incorporated by the American Legion in a dispassionate memorial to the President, the Presidentelect, the. Congress, and the people of the United States. The causes of the present regrettable condition and a remedy for it are carefully shown. Other important news-articles in "THE DIGEST this week are: " l The New Italy (with a full-page map in colors) To Sell Europe Our Surplus "On Tick" No More Railroad Strikes "If" Germany's Air Aims Tidal Power at Last A League to Improve Posture The Coming Age of Fibre Our Grandfathers' Favorite Opera Here Again Why Prohibition Is Not Enforced The Vatican and the Y. M. C. A. Should the Clergy Pay Full Fare? European Iron and Steel in 1920 Flying in a Hurricane Over the Caribbean The Young Idea Welcomes "Movies in the Schools ' Puss, the Sphinx of the Fireside A Lean Year for Pay Envelopes A Gentle Hint to Cuban Fewer Lynchings Is All Quiet Along the Adriatic? Best of the Current Poetry Topics of the Day Many Interesting Illustrations, Including JCartoons f

JANUARY 22D NUMBER ON SALE TODAY NEWS DEALERS 10 CENTS $4.09 A YEAR

The

(3p jKraJLMest

FUNK & WAGNALLS'COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous New Standard Dictionary), New York

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