Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 121, 1 April 1921 — Page 6

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PAGE SIX-

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 192L

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM . '. ' : -: - and son-teusgram , Published Every Evening Except Sunday by . . A Palladium Printing Co. rainadlum Bnfldlng. North NIath und Sailor Streets. .Catered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, aa

" -' ' ' ' Second-Claset Mall Matter. HCHBER OF TBE ASSOCIATED PRKSS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of U ws dUpatchea credited to It or not otherwise creditedaln this paper, and also the local newa published hereto.- AJ! rights ot republication of special dispatches herein are ajao -reserved. V. Viviani's Visit " No inkling of the real purport of former Premier Viviani's visit to Washington is discernible from news dispatches. Ostensibly here as the representative of the French government to express the cordial feeling of that republic for the United States," M. Viviani, it is believed, also seeks to learn America's attitude on international questions and to further a closer harmony between the two nations. Observers of diplomatic moves believe that M. Viviani will carry back to France a comprehensive report on the real attitude of the United States toward further participation in European .if fairs. The former premier, it is believed, will present no proposals to the American government, but is here in the capacity of a representative who-wants to acquire information. Once before M. Viviani came to the United States on a special mission for France. That was in the dark hours of the war when the allies were suffering.Under the heavy blows which the German war machine was inflicting upon their lines in France, and Belgium. Then he pleaded for quick and effective participation of the United States ; in the -war. As a result of that visit, America' ; speeded up her war preparations, sent two millioh men across the Atlantic, and poured munitions supplies in astounding profusion into the battlearea. Fro'mt'tneC.inilitary standpoint, conditions have changed since Germany has been defeated, and the allied governments are now enforcing the peace treaty which they drafted. The United States has held aloof from participation in the Versailles treaty. A new administration, elected by an overwhelming majority, because the American people objected to the league of nations and the entanglements in European affairs which it involved, now controls the destiny of the nation. This presents a diplomatic situation almost as important as was the military crisis that

prompted the first visit of M. Viviani. Affairs! in Europe, so far as they refer to domestic tranquility and the restoration of pre-war conditions in commerce and trade, are chaotic in the extreme. Germany's refusal to meet the repara

tion conditions has compelled the allied governments to use force to colfect them; creating

another obstacle to speedy return to normalcy. Lloyd George's step to restore trade relations with Soviet Russia and America's rejection of a similar overture, coupled with France's aid to Poland in defeating the soviet armies of invasion, all present problems of interest to the allied governments. It is natural, therefore, that France, long a warm friend of the United States, should wonder what the attitude of the new administration will be toward the rejected Versailles treaty, the league of nations, independent peace with Germany, a triple alliance of the United States, France and Great Britain, and other European Harding and his advisers may not be ready to formulate a definite policy at once, but in the main, it is safe to predict that the United States will not deviate from our historical policy of refusing to be drawn into any alliance that will involve us in the present or future settlement of European disputes.

And Then He Took Up Fishing

Now for the Next Step The two former American doughboys who had the nerve to try to capture G. C. Bergdoll, notorious draft evader, were released by the German authorities yesterday. They reached Coblenz today after serving only a few days of the period for which they had been incarcerated by the German court which found them guilty. America is well pleased with Germany's decision to release the two former soldiers. The handing over of Bergdoll to the American authorities is the next step that Germany should take. He is taking advantage of a situation which can be terminated quickly if Germany

cares to end it.

f USTew wcnrv- i A hcmrY- i fervors N hcnrv- ma do WANT To TetL VOO )( A A HOCK IKJ ONE. OUT I -jf&rH STRAIGHT -PAGSGS I THE STRAIGHT) ( T VeSTCRDAV- Is - I 1" A AP CSAIMG J FLUSH Heil LAST If lEH I hVBtbu ifi Jf I MOM DAY-- I'LL. Tect JZ. . ' " fpOVS.-- T WAivJT To - Henry- t Jost (Sot I tell rbo The. fonj hoov BEAT (JMBURDE.N MVSetP AvM& HAH V)P lO MMMC KH6HT ,T S I TBUU Vba ABOUT A 5AM(2 I v. la&T '5UMrAPfi- - ALL I Or Pool. I VUA-S fM UP JXf - 1 I ABOUT TrtS RQHT I J --v AT JACK 350VL-E:VS THS. "D THt.. y- HAD VLMTH A RivE ) - JsSSi

Daily Reader What is meant by the j Quai d'Orsay? Quai d'Orsay ig a! name of a portion of the left bank of,

Bergdoll is a visitor who has no business inl" Seine In Paris. From the fact that ; uciguuii " ' ! the chamber nf dpnntffis anil nthfr pnv-

Answers to Questions

TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can," "Take It,"

'Up"

TALK IT OUT

Germany. His place is in the United btates, where he is to be tried for evading the selective service act. Germany has nothing to gain by refusing to hand him over to the American authorities. In. fact, she has much to gain. American officials should exert such heavy pressure on Germany that she will immediately get rid of him.

Good

looa evening

By Roy K. Moulton

We like to see the newspapers go into a matter thoroughly and to picture a news' story to the limit but

In the, Stillmaa case, one paper presented nine or tea pictures of the Stillman hunting 'estate in the jGanadiah woods, the lodge, the caretakers, etc., and wound up by giving a picture of the Stillman family cow. It is a fairly good-looking cow, but then why show -partiality? Why leave. out the goldfish, the family cat, the carpet sweeper, the coffee percolator and the wire dish rag? A lady out our way was very much

incensed when she found her ten-year-eld eon smoking cigarets in the garage back of the house, and ehe took him in and gave him a good "hiding. The trouble was that he was using up her own monogrammed, gold-tipped ones. . RENEWAL Time keeps its old accustomed round; The year renews itself once more; In vearning sky and quickening ground f Life throbs and burgeons as before.

Correct English

Don't Say: He went ONTO the roof of the house. I do not know what is the matter OF him. !; ' He died WITH a cancer. The caterpillar changes TO a butterfly. Say: (Prepositions.) He went UPON the roof of the house. i I do not know what is the matter WITH him. He died OP a cancer. The caterpiller changes INTO a butterfly.

Who's Who in the Day's News

Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON

The bluebird swells. his throat with ' song. And small wing'd creatures without name Stir and mount upward, as along The pastures cowslips run like flame The challenge of proud chanticleer. The mellow lowing of the kino, M&ke jocund music far and near, While singing runlets glance and

shine. j y - j The ker. damp scent cf fresh-turned mold, I The buds with vernal showers v.et.j SI ill waken memories, as of old. j . All pcigrant with a wild regret. Doris Kenyon. 1 A mass meeting of thieves, to do-J

ina.no a Mian- .u ... i4 ..

RED NOSES. John Barleycorn is planted, the law has put him out; no tanglefoot is granted to any thirsty scout; no bar keep hands the bitters, the bourbon or the rye, to any human critters, as drouthy months go by. But oh, the crimson noses I see upon the street as red as any roses that make the snmnier sweet! Where do they get. their tinting, their bright autumnal hue. since vintners are not vinting, and brewers do not brew? The barkeeps are not flinging the glasfe-s as of. yore; the. doors lhat once were swinging inward now no more: John Barleycorn is busted. Ms graft is past and gone, the old brass rail is rusted, there is no demijohn. Rut oh, the crimson noses that through the ether plow! The looker-on supposes they should be bleached now. They should be fair and whiter than is the driven snow, since Barleycorn, the blighter, was slain lonsr months pgo. There should be no such noses, r.inre Barleycorn is dead, hut every hour discloses new shades of blooming red. Oh, can it be that water will tint, the human beak, as well as stuff that's hotter the booze men usl to seek? And can it be that

3-

was recent IV Iieid. u is reponeu. .it

Tiasoff-wn-ibe-lion. Speeches were made by'leadiug thieves, outlining the difficulties and beseeching the help of the community. This appears to us to be a particularly pathetic situation, and it is a distinctly sad commentary upon conditions in the Trotzky community. It proves more than ever the sad physical condition of the, country. When the burglars, yeggs, porch-climbers, stick-ups. second-story workers and djps can't make a living, what chance has anyone else?

blooming, blistered, nose?

Memories of Old Days j

In This Paper Ten Years

Ago Today

.To determine what was a fair price for a little finger on the left hand of a housewife was one of the questions put to the petit jury of the Wayne circuit court, during the April term of court. 3 Grove's is the Only Genuine Laxative BROMO QUININE tablets, ' The first and original Cold and Grip Tablet. (Be sure you get BKOMO.) ' !?0C. Advertisement.

No One Need Buy Cuticura Before He Tries Free Samples

Dinner Stories

"I suppose you marry a lot of eloping couples, squire. Quite a source of income, eh? "Yes: I get $5 for maj-ryin' each couple and they come in such darned haste I alius fine them $10 more for speeding.

"Helen. I really cannot permit you to read novels on the Sabbath." ' But, grandma, this one is all right; it tells about a girl who was engaged to three Episcopal clergymen all at once."

JUSTICE EDWARD DOUGLAS WHITE. Edward Douglas White, chief justice of the United States supreme court, may retire soon because of ill health, according to rumors from Washington. That he has been desirus of resigning for some time is generally known. His departure from the supreme bench

will be a loss, as he is one of the most commanding figures of the judicial

world. White is an old Confederate soldier and a lifelong Democrat from Louisiana. The late Senator Randall Gibson of that state, a devoted adherent of

Grover Cleveland,

rged the president

E. D. WHITE in 1894 to place Senator White, Gibson's colleague and kinsman, on the supreme court bench. White was then the most eminent lawyer in the country and the president, was glad to appoint him as an associate justice. Moreover, existing differences between President Cleveland and the senate made the appointment, especially desirable, as it csmoothed the way for confirmation a a time when there was reluctance to confirm any of his appointees. Justice White had been on th-

bench nearly 17 years when President Taft, in December, 110. nominated him for chief justice. The nomination came as a great surprise to the senate and to the country and more special ly to Justice Hughes, whom Taft had appointed as an associate justice in the previous November. Before appointing Justice White as the presiding judge of the court, the president bad assured Justice Hughes' friends, it was stated at the time, that the New Yorker would be advanced to that position. The senate then contained 25 Republican majority and Hughes could have been advanced without serious opposition, though the proposal to make him chief justice was criticized by . many Republican senators on the ground that 'both in age and service he was the youngest man on the bench, and that to advance him over a man like White would be a blow at the dignity and standing of the court. Over night, it was alleged, the president changed his mind and sent Justice White's .nomination for chief justice to the senate, as the successor to the late Chief Justice Fuller. The nomination was promptly confirmed.

the chamber of deputies and other gov

ernment buildings front on it, its name; has come to be used to denote the French foreign office of the government in general in the same way that Westminster is used to describe the British government or Washington to describe our government. Question Were the remains of John Paul Jones ever brought to this country? If so, when and what was done with them? John Paul Jones died in Paris on July 18, 1792, at the age of 45 years. He was accorded the honor of a public funeral by the French assembly and was buried in the Protestant cemetery of St. Louis at the corner of the Rue de la Grange aux Belles and the Rue des Ecluses Saint Martin, in Paris. In the spring of 1905, through the efforts of General Horace Porter, his grave was discovered and its remains disinterred pn April 14, 1905. They were afterward identified by threa distinguished French scientists of the highest standing and were brought to America in the armored cruiser Brooklyn, flagship of Rear Admiral Charles D. Sigsbee's accompanying squadron. The remains were interred in a crypt specially prepared for them in the beautiful memorial chapel at the naval academy at Annapolis, Md. Itradrrn nar obtnln annrrr to anra-

Uon hy wrltlnff Tbr i'nllndiuni Qurnflnn nod Ananrrn drpurtmrnt. All qtienlions should he writtrn plainly and briefly, Ajimwctb will be plven briefly.

'County Churches j

V , Middleboro M. E. Church L. F. IJ1mer, Pastor. Sunday school, 9:30 a. m. Preaching, 10:30 a. m. Chester M. E. Church L. F. Ulmer, Pastor. Sunday school, 9:45. Preaching, 7:30 p. m. Whitewater M. E. Church Sunday school, 9:30. Class meeting, 10:30; prayer meeting Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.

Everything has to have an outlet. The big engine has to "blow off steam" occasionally or else it just buckles up and dies of selfviolence. People who continually suppress every feeling that surges up In them, perform the same task as the teacher does when she whips her pupil instead of kindly teaching the avoidance of mistakes only in the case of the one who suppresses, the faithful nerves are whipped. We grow as we interchange ideas and experiences. We learn as we come to realize the uselessness of carrying all our thoughts around in our own handbag. If there is something that hurts in you somewhere, find somebody whose soul has responsive springs to it and try to play upon them for awhile. Both souls will benefit from the process. In other words, talk it out! It's a very imperfect world. There are bound to be those who will take advantage of your trust and confidence. But somehow the very air likes to feel the touch of sincere and honest confession! So, talk it out, somehow or other. To be afraid is to suffocate the life roots of your best instincts. The mountain spring doesn't suppress and it doesn't mind who comes to partake of its cool drippings. Find the throttle In your great human machine and pull it when the steam gets too heavy!

FRECKLES Now Is the Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots.

There's no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as Othine double strength is guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of Othine double strength from any druggist and apply a little of it night and morning and you should 6oon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom that more than an ounce is needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength Othine a3 this is sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles. Advertised.

Boston Methodist Church Wilbur Thorn, Pastor; Guy Girton, Sunday school superintendent. Sunday school time, 9:30; preaching, 10:30; Teachers' training class next Tuesday night; prayer meeting every Thursday night. "Go to Sunday school and stay for church." New Garden Friends Three-quarter mile south of Fountain City; Pastor, Miss Esther Cook; Sunday school superintendent, Mrs. Ella Bond. Sunday school at 9:30; preaching at 10:45 a. m. and 7:00 p. m. Whitewater Christian Church April 3. Sunday School at 9:?0: D. C. Hunt, Sup't.; Preaching at 10:30 and 7:30 p. m. Rev. William Wright, pastor. Economy Friends Church Pastor. Leslie T. Pennington; Sunday school, 10 a. m., Elza D. Stevenson, superintendent. Church service, 11 a, m. Subject of sermon, "The Tailor and

Subject of Sermon, His Sail."

'The Sailor and

"Gets-It" Tickles Corns to Death

First Stops All Pain Then Peels the Corn Off.

Don't try to fox trot on corn tor-

I tllrwl foot f I of r r.f vnnp rnrnc Tf

Bayer" on Genuine Aspirin say "Bayer"

Warning: Unless you see the name "Beyer" on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre-

ralgia. Rheumatism. Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. All druggists sell Bayer Tablets of Aspirin in

of 24 and 100. Asnirin is the trade

scribed by physicians for twenty-one handy tin boxes of 12. and in bottles years and proved safe by millions, mark of Bayer Manufacture of MonoTake Aspirin only as told in the Bay-'.aceticacidester of Saiicylicacid. Ader package for Colds, Headache, Neu-vertisement.

I M U 1 1 ft 1 M H V SfiH3L, J

BATTERY COST REDUCED ONE-HALF TO ALL FORD OWNERS

The upkeep and repair on your battery can be reduced 50 if you equip your Ford with the special Vesta Battery for Ford Cars.

Storage Battery

PIEHL AUTO ELECTRIC COMPANY

WHERE PIEHL "HEX" RADIATOR IS SOLD

Admiralty POCAHONTAS Goal Will not be cheaper any time this summer than right now, so you are taking no chance. Better get yours while it's available. Phone us your order. We have no solicitors. Richmond Coal Co. SOLE AGENTS Telephones 3165 and 3379

The Rudolph Wurlitzer Company

8

Cumulative Preferred Stock Tai Exempt in Ohio Write for Special Circular "B" Westheimer & coTaPT, S24-32C VTalnt Bt, CINCINNATI, O. Nar Vrk Staek (nlnn Dlraet Cincinnati Slock ErchanM Piinfa

,'mminiiuinnnHiWfiwnnuiitMtmmiwHmtMHijwiiiuiiiiwBiiMHini

Spring Winds Call for '

TORNADO INSURANCE 1 KELLY & KECK I I (Insurance Service) 1 Phone 2150 901'2 Main St I inmtwrmtnmnHMUfymimn llliiliMmiimuuiuimMiliiiiiI

Malta Your Faet Happy! Rcnwre TboM Cons, With'Goto-h."

you have never seen a corn tickled to

deatb, just apply a few drops of "Gets-

It" to yours. Then watch the corn

die peacefully as if it had gone to

sleep. Soon it is nothing but a loose I

piece of dead skin that you can lift right off with your fingers.

Get after them now. Your druggist I has "Gefs-It." Costs but a-triile or!

nothing at all if it fails Manufactured by K. Lawrence & Co.. Chicago. Sold

in Richmond by A. G. Luken & Co., I

Clem Thistlethwaite, Dafler Drug Co.., Yes & Now Drug Co. Advertisement.

REBUILT CARS At Low Prices on Easy Terms Chenoweth Auto Co. 1107 Main St. Phone 1925

i ! i i

1 1

i

5

mn

t

The Finest Line of Men's Hats in the City, $ 1.00 to $6.00 LICHTENFELS 1010 Main St

mifffTmtnnwmtmrr

Machine Work Gasoline Engines Air Compressors Electric Motors RICHMOND AIR COMPRESSOR CO. PHONE 3152 Cor. N. West First and R. R.

i FREE I

1 W E KEEP

O U R TIRI

UN REPAI

Our Prices are Low and Our Guar il antee is in writing I jf WM. F. LEE, No. 8 South 7th St. I 1 1 "Richmond's Reliable Tire Man I : iiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiTiiniiiiiTTnHTiMiinniMiiTiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiwiiiiiiiinniiinM. if

Splendid Used Player Piano at less than half cost Walter B. Fulghmn ; Phone 2275 1000 Main St

.. in n

FOR SALE One Paige touring in A-1 condition, new tires and bat teries. CARROLL & BROWN 1026 Main Phone 2512

LUMBER and COAL MATHER BROS. Co.

John H. Niewoehner Sanitary and Heating Englnetr

i DR. IL H. CARNES DENTIST Phone 2665 I Rooms 15-16 Comstock Building 1016 Main Street I Open Sundays and Evenings hj

, ,w iwijim. BanpMs

1024 Main St.

Phone 1891

J

tut, mini, Mxv 81P S. Q St Phons 1S2S appointment. A