Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 94, 28 February 1921 — Page 6
PAGE SIX -
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, FEB. 28, 1921.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
AND SUN-TELEGRAM
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. UUUSUVU Uf CI j AJAVM WVWU WJ Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and r Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, as . . - Second-Class Mail Matter... MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Th. Awl.1 Prui 1 vMnalvlv entitled tn tk. lias
for republication of all tiew dispatches credited to It or not otherwlit credited In this paper, and also the local
clal dUpatohM herein are alaa reserved. . College Failures Record breaking enrollments in the universities and colleges of the country last autumn indicated the desire of thousands of young men and women to obtain the benefits of education. Hardly an institution of higher learning in the United States that could accommodate the influx of students. Dormitory facilities were lacking and not enough teachers to conduct classes could be obtained. A big boom in the , educational world was on. Reports from some universities and colleges show that the boom is beginning to subside. Many students had enrolled because they believed they could obtain a diploma without months of hard study, but when the examinations were held they found out hw badly mistaken they were. In some universities the influx of students was so great that the authorities had to employ part-time instructors who took little interest in the progress of their students, which became apparent at examination time. In other institutions it was found that some members of the faculty had become so old that they were unable to hold the young mind, a condition which also was disastrous - for the student. And in other, institutions, outside attractions, such as athletic contests, campaigns to raise funds, etc., so distracted the minds of the students that it set them far back in their studies. Five thousand failures at Ohio university this year, out of which 500 will mean the termination of their scholastic work at that institution, is regarded by authorities as the record for that
institution. All the foregoing named causes are assigned as reasons for the failure of the students. . . . ' Young men and women, who rushed to, the universities last fall because they believed they were entering places jvhere they could loaf, have discovered by this time that schools are, as methodical as business houses. Only , a worker will obtain a diploma from a university. A loafer and shirker is soon found out. '
For Federal Economy "Friends of a budget system and all supplementary measures of economy in the federal government are reported to be facing a battle in Washington," says the Chicago Tribune. "An attack upon the plan of a single committee on appropriations in the house and an effort to restore the old system of dividing appropriations among several committees is looked for in a Republican caucus which has been called. "Pork barrel congressmen are expected to make a desperate battle for the system which will divide responsibility with the division of appropriations and thereby improve the chances of slipping in pork measures. Against them will be Chairman Good of the appropriations committee and other supporters of the budget system. " 'Real economy in appropriations and government expenditures cannot be effected unless all appropriation bills originate in a single committee,' says Mr. Good. 'No one familiar with the workings of congress, seriously questions this
contention.'
"Mr. Good's contention is correct, but that will not prevent opposition to it if such opposition gives promise of a new postoff ice at Hick Center or a fat dredging and draining job at Simpson's Slough. A battle is assured every time the pork barrel system is menaced in any point. The taxpaying constituents of congressmen who will be involved in this clash will save money by making their moral support clear to those who defend the single committee as to those who support the budget system."
: The Days of Real Sport v ' I ' T" ' . , 1 .. r. ' ; - - r - . ij ' .. j - -" - ' ' 5rTlWAV NIGHT -"rtJR - Jr1 Bath NtfiHT- coMfi -i s X v JLL ' AND GET OP Tne TUB J 7 Sfeggr '
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TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can", "Take If, "Up".
Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON
THE CRUCIAL TIME. The country's reached an evil pass, and there is worse to follow; this readjustment stuff, alas, is pretty hard to swallow. So speak the jays, in doleful bands, who grunt and grumble daily; throughout their lives they wring their hands, and murmur. "Willow-waly!" But wise men say that bitter times are just what we are needing: we are learning nowto prize the dimes we used to blow unheeding. . We used to spend our coin in base, for all the junk they'd dish us ; we're learning how that wanton waste is foolish, -vain and vicious. We had to learn that much of truth, and heal the spendthrift canker, and take our earnings to the booth where dwells the village banker; we had to learn this sort of dope, and quit our .money burning, before there could be any hope of stable, times returning. We're getting down again to tacks, we cease our spendthrift ravings, and you may see us making tracks to salt away our savings. When we are seedy, sick and sore, it takes strong dope to cure us; and now Good Health is at the door, the wise old lads assure us. The medicine we have- to take may seem a trifle bitter, but what'B the diff if it will make each gent a healthy critter?
Who's Who in the
D
XT
ay s iNews
quently one of the eventful heiresses of the wealthy Count Balny d'Avricourt, who is the envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiory of the sovereign Prince of Monaco in Paris.
Good Evening By Roy K. Moulton
A burglar was caught trying to rob a New York police station. The wonder is not, that he was trying to rob .a police station, but rather that he was caught. There is a banana uprising in Honduras. Most of the banana troubles we have sheii have been sittings down. MR: HUGHES Equipped for the job. His training complete. And then, igain, He parts 'em so neat. A Californian went up ina blimp to be married. Seems as though it is risky enough being married on the ground these days. There isat least one compensation for bringing up a large family. A man with ten children is entitled to a reduction of ?2,0C0 on his income tax schedule. , V The authorities have derided that it is perfectly legal for a person to inherit liquor. That seems only fair, especially when a person has inherited the thirst. WE DON'T REMEMBER Do you believe the "American" when it says: "Marion Sackett also played in the original cast of 'Julius Caesar' "? She didn't look 300, to say the least. Dixie. ' A lot of snow, but it will never be deep enough to bedraggle the women's skirts. Germany seems to be about as dead as John Barleycorn. TJhey are talking about a cheap inr MfTiiwi ton Vtnf i t t- ill Ka nrot t xr a v.
pensive to the present office holders. When Mr. Hays inherits the post office department he will have a cinch in one way. Every change he makes will necessarily be for the better. The best of igkt fiction we know of is the bill for electricity we receive occasionally.
COUNT CHARLES DE SAINTAUCAIRE. France's new ambassador in London, Count Charles de Saint-Aulaire, can boast of royal blood in his veins, despite his serving as plenipotentiary of a republic. For he is descended, ' on the distaff side, from a matrimonial A, - alliance of the Anr Ci glo-Breton territor-
de Herpadene-Belle-ville, privy councillor and chambevlain to King Charles VI, with that monarch's illegitimate daughter, Marguerite de Valois. She was legitimized by her halt brother, "King Charles VII, in 1427, and granted by him the right to bear
the royal arms of France, "brised" with a golden bar. From this union descended Marie Harpedene de Belleville, who in 17S0, as the last of her line, married Marc Antoine de Beaupoil; Comte de SaintAulaire. The de Harpedenes-de-Bellevilles, though of remote Breton origin, were for several centuries subjects of the
English crown. Thus Jehan de Harpa-vj
dene de Belleville was an English knight, was English governor of Fontenay in 1369, and commanded the
English army in Guienne under Ed- j.
ward the Black Prince. The father of this Jehan de Harpene de Belleville
' was a native of England and only took
up his residence In Fiance in 131 X. The Countess de Saint-Aulaire that is to say, the new French ambassadress in London, possesses a large fortune, being the daughter and conse-
Conect English
Don't Say: WHO shall we nominate as our candidate for chairman? Let you and I be partners in this game. Let HE that is industrious and persevering be rewarded. Bid the pupils TO remain after school. ' I dare TO sa3r he will not come. Say: WHOM shall we nominate as our candidate for chairman? Let you and ME be partners in this game. Let HIM that is industrious and persevering be rewarded. Bid the pupils remain after school. I dare say he will not come.
Dinner Stories
Simple Way To End Dandruff
There is one sure way that has never failed to remove dandruff at once, and that is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, just get about four ounces of plain, common liquid ajvon from any drug store (this is aU you will need), apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with'the finger tips.
By morning, most if not all, of your
dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy ever s ingle sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find all itching and digging of the scalp will stop instantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. Advertisement.
The cub reporter was grinding out a marriage notice. Finally he brought it up and laid it on the city editor's desk: "Mr. and Mrs. Blank announce to- : A M COMPLEXION
Ruddy Cheeks SparklingEyes Most Women Can Have
Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Knowa Ohio Physician Dr.F.M.Edwards for 17 years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. You will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a normal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in one's system. - If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women and men take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets the successful substitute for calomel now and then just to keep them fit 15c Advertisement
Satisfaction Always Guaranteed
Nothing in life quite touches in value all that is embodied in what we call Memory. No artist ever conceived a masterpiece so perfect In reality or beauty as Memory daily paints. Like a great gallery is our Memory. And I believe that many of us have separate rooms in this Memoryplace of ours where special pictures are hung pictures that we like to walk up to and .look at for hours. Perhaps the picture of Mother or of someone else we especially loved, from whose loveliness of character we daily drink anew, and grow strong and rich from the act. The years may pile like the " strata we see in huge embankments, but Memory is only softened and mellowed by the process. When disappointment comes, there is always some Memory-picture to streak the darkness with rays of gold. We remember wherein we have failed and then we see ourselves doing better thereafter. . Wisdom is what we get from our Memory and experience. If we were not able to retain the images which are all the time being flashed to our senses, we would grope like the blind man across a world of barren deadness. Interest would be gone, and the incentive to get ahead and to become somebody would fade away and be lost. Like a great store house is Memory. Apparently, however, its size is limited only by the ambition and enthusiasm of its owner. For our Memories grow great as we enlarge in feeling and desire. With our Memories we may touch the intimacies of the past and march ancient events before our eyes afresh. - 1 - ' Let us then not allow our Memory to become clogged with the unimportances of life. Let us remember only that which leads us and which helps us to lead others as well.
day the marriage of their daughter to take place next Monday " "Huh," graunted the editor, "you can't ay they announced a marriage yet to take place." Again the cub jabbed away at his typewriter. And when he brought it back this time it read: "Mr. and Mrs. Blank predicted today the marriage of their daughter."
"There!" exclaimed six-year-old Bernice, throwing down a book, "I just ain't going to school another day." ' "Why," asked her mother, "what's the matter?" "It's no use wasting time," replied the little miss. "I can't never learn to spell. The teacher just keeps changing the words every day."
Don't ruin your material in a poor dye that spots, streaks and fades. Buy "Diamond Dyes" no other kind then perfect results are guaranteed. Each
package contains directions so simple , that it is fun for any woman to dia-
T
Answers to Questions
Mrs, P. S. What was the amount of merchant tonnage lost by England during the recent war? The British merchant vessels lost through nemy action during the war totalled 7,759,090 gross tons. This Is the official announcement made on OcL 16. 1919. Submarine action was responsible for the .loss of 6,635,057 tons of that total. There was a loss of 14,287 lives In these sinkings. Reader When did Ellis Island become the immigrant station for the Port of New York? In December, 1891. - Pupil Who Were the three youngest presidents? The three youngesjt presidents of the United States were Theodore Roosevelt, U. S. Grant and Grover Cleveland. Roosevelt was 42; Grant 46 and Cleveland 47 when inaugurated. Reader What is a good book on the Brook Farm episode? The best account of the Brook Farm experiment 1841-1847 at West Roxbury,
EXPOSURE ACHESRHEUMATIC PAINS Sloan's Liniment, kept handy, Takes the fight out of them. Sloshing around in 'the wet and then the dreaded rheumatic twinge! But not for long when Sloan's Liniment is put on the job! Pains, strains, sprains how soon this old family friend penetrates without rubbing and helps drive 'em away! And how cleanly, too no muss, no bother, no stained skin or clogged pores. Muscles limber up, lumbago, sciatica, neuralgia, backache are promptly relieved. Keep a bottle handy. Get one today if you've run out of Sloan's Liniment, it's so warming. All druggists 35c, 70c, $1.40. The largest bottle holds six times as much as the smallest
Mass, is "Brook Farm, Its Members. Scholars and Visitors," by Lindry Swift, published oy the MacMUlan company. lteadcra mmy ktate aaawr vet!oBa by wrltlac he Palladium feaeatloaa aad Aaawcra iepartaacat. All qaeatloaa ahaald fee vrrlttea alalaly aad briefly. JUnren will ba Klvca briefly.
ToCureaCold in One Day
Take Grovo'o
Laxative
IBrom
tablcto
9
O
30c
Be sure you get
The genuine bears this signature
mond-dye old, faded skirts, waists.
dresses, coats, sweaters, stocking, draperies, coverings, everything. Tell druggist whether your material is wool or silk, or if it is cotton, linen, or a mixture. 16 rich, fadeless colors. Advertisement.
Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years ; Ago Today
The examination of the high school building by Dr. W. F. King, assistant state health commissioner, marked the beginning of a thorough inspecion of . the sanitary conditions of the Richmond public schools.
iiumirainlitiiinmitnittminHmiulit
SPRING COATS I
I All the wanted shades and styles I I' ; 812.75 to S45.00 .
15-17 I N. 9th St. I
ntHiinnnMiiHnutiMattimmnnMmH
HIRSCH'S
Battery Charging Prices Reduced C-volt for 75J 12-volt for Sl.OO $17.50 and your old battery will get you a 6-volt battery, guaranteed one year. J 22.50 and your old battery will get you a 12-volt battery guaranteed one year. THESE ARE NOT CHEAP BATTERIES THEY ARE GOOD BATTERIES CHEAP RICHMOND BATTERY & RADIATOR CO.
12th and Main Sts. Free Delivery Service
Phone 1365 Free Testing Service
SUPERIOR RADIATOR WORK When you bring your radiator here for repairing, you get the best work skilled radiator men can give. We deliver to you a repair Job that Is neat not a patched-up Job. Repairing of all makes of radiators. Prompt Service Guaranteed Work
PIEHL AUTO ELECTRIC CO. 1024 Main St., Where the Piehl "Hex" Radiator is Made. Phone 1891
Newspaper Advertising Starts the Wheels
In November, business had a bluish cast. The financial waters were troubled. Corn and wheat and cotton were tumblingbusiness was halting and hesitating. Everywhere you heard the croakers say, "People are not buying."
Then the retailers took the cold plunge. They began to readjust prices and offer inducements. And they advertised the fact advertised it in the newspapers of their home cities. They kept at it and kept at it. After a bit, buying began to wake up slowly at first, then in greater volume. Progressive merchants who know newspaper advertising i pulls progressively went at it harder. ' Business grew better and better, and by the last part of December many merchants were reporting record-breaking sales, and, taking the country as a whole, business was good.
- Newspaper advertising saved the day and made it possible for the merchants to clear their shelves and reorder from the manufacturer thus loosening - the clogged stream of commerce and setting the factory wheels in motion. Newspaper advertising is the greatest' single business force on this continent today.
The Richmond Palladium
Liniment
PRICE COAL CO. 517-51S N. 6th St. PHONE 1050 Dealers in High Grade Coal
See the New
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Uneim
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All the Latest Periodicals Appear First at
'Phil" Zuttcrmeister's
1103 Main
John H. Niewoehner
Sanitary and Heating Engineer
819 S. Q St. Phone 182B
i Full Line of Automobile Insurance Hates Reasonable ! KELLY & KECK
MMMwrwM j i 901 JJ Main St
Phone 2150 I
t
0LDSM0BILE FOUR
I Carrol & Brown I I 1026 Main St. Phone 2512 1 tnimMmiHiiMwuiniuiiniuninimuimiiiintiiitiNiinimnmmufimntuMuJ
Dr. J. A. Thomson Dentist Murray Theater Building Hours: 9-12, 1-5, 7-8; Sunday 9-12 Phone 2930
WATCH REPAIRING If you want your watch to run and
depend on good time, bring them to us. A specialty on high-grade watch repairing. C. & O. watch inspector. HOMRIGHOUS
1021 Main St. Phone 1867
MONEY TO LOAN "PRUDENTIAL" Phone 1727 Room 202 K. of P. Temple
LUMBER and COAL MATHER BROS. Co.
On Both CORD and FABRIC TIRES For a Limitel Time Only
WM. F. LEE, No. 8 South 7th St.
Machine Work Gasoline Engines Air Compressors Electric Motors RICHMOND AIR COMPRESSOR CO. PHONE 3152 . Cer. N. West First and R. R.
We cafi save vau Healer's orofit on
a Used Plan or can trade your Silent Piano for -a Victrola. WALTER B. FULGHUM 1000 Main St. Phone 2275
DR. R. H. CARNES I
If DENTIST Phone 2665 i i Rooms 15-16 Comstock Building! !i 101 fi Main Ktroat I
Open Sundays and Evenings b? I j ' appointment, I
