Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 122, 2 April 1921 — Page 6
fAGK SIX
THS RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TKLEGKAM, RICHMOND, IND SATURDAY, APRIL 2, 1921.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every. Evening . Except Sunday by r-- Palladium Printing Co: Palladium Bulldlngr. North Ninth and Sailor Street, Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as ! ' " Second-Class Mall Matter, MttMBEIl OF THE ASSOCIATED PRK'SS Tha Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the ne Tor republication -ff alt news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local news puMishad herein. AJ! rights or republication ot special dispatches herein are also reserved. " The Attempt of Emperor Charles to Regain 's : a Throne . The failure of former Emperor Charles to set up -a monarchy in Hungary serves only to illustrate the badly demoralized political condition of central 1 Europe and the Balkan region, and to emphasize how utterly inadequate is the treaty of Versailles as a medium to restore peace and tranquility. America may consider herself fortunate, indeed, that she did not accept the instrument and cannot be held accountable for the chaos that is to be found in those regions, and for the apprehension that is being felt among European diplomats. - - Bitterness is noted everywhere, says a correspondent of a Chicago newspaper. Greece is
at war with Turkey, and is accusing the Italians
of secretly assisting the latter- France feels re sentment toward England over the Syrian ques
tion and also has changed her attitude toward Greece since Constantine regained the throne.
Roumania wants representation on the Dardanelles commission and the Bulgarians are cherishing a grudge against Greece. The racial animosities and national feuds of these people have not been quieted by the league of nations or by the treaty that ended the World war. We find them as bellicose and prone to rush into costly wars as they were before 1914. Even the depleted condition of their treasuries, the industrial and economic plight of their countries, the suffering and want of their people, the
bloodshed and destruction of the World war, do not. deter them from preparing for war or for giving occasion for further , strife. No wonder that many observers believe that the civilization of Europe is tottering. It is very easy to see why the foreign offices of the great powers are anxious to know how far the United States will concern itself about European affairs. Knowing as they do our national reluctance to participate in the entanglements and disputes of European countries and our oft-repeated declaration that we believe that we must work out our destiny on the American continent, their diplomats still wonder if we will now forsake our old standpoint and take sides in their troubles. We hope that President Harding will make clear to M. Viviani, the former French premier, that the United States still stands on the principles which President Washington set forth when the republic was still young. We want to see industrial and commercial peace restored in Europe so that millions who are on the border line of starvation may return to work, but we have no desire to enter into a political relation that will make us party to continental disputes over territory. If the people ofEurope want to fight with each other and destroy their civilization, that is their own right and privilege. We have no de
sire to interfere. For our part, we seek to become powerful and wealthy not by wars of aggrandizement, but by ways of peace, based on
honorable dealings and lofty ideals. We pray that the European nations will adopt the same view. Our perseverance in the ways of peace has exalted us to the lofty plane of national greatness. WTe do not seek war, neither do we care to become party to diplomatic entanglements that may involve us in hostilities, which, in the end, will serve only the interests of some European power. We may be accused of a "proud
isolation," but so far it has been the bulwark of
our strength, politically and financially.
Rippling Rhymes " By WALT MASON
UNSUNG HEROES The owner of the PJue Front store has ample reason to be sore, to heave
a throbbiftg sigh; for -when the price!
slump hit the land he had all kinds of goods on hand, he bought at prices high. He had to sell them under cost,
and every night there was a frost,)
when he sized up the till; each day of business stripped his roll, and put him further in the hole it was a bitter pill. And yet he wore a smiling face, and went around with princely grace, refusing to be glum, and urged his neighbors to be glad and boost their good old native grad, and help to make things hum. The merchant princes of the land have seen a season's profits
canned, they had a plexus blow; "We'll just forget the loss," they cry, "forj better luck will soon come by we i haven't time for woe." The wuilinga come from doleful gents who lost some i twelve or fourteen cents, from pikers !
here and there; the bieger men .lust stand the gaff and face the harsh world with a laugh, and sidestep grira despair.
'rozen
North
!
Good Evening By Roy K. Moulton
Uncle Sam's latest contribution to International peace i3 the battleship Colorado," launched recently, the most powerful ship in the navy. She probably will be the most powerful ship for several days, when somebody will launch one a trifle more powerful. THE NONCHALANT BRIDEGROOM Felipe Garcia may make Prisca, Gutierres a good husband, but he dlsrayed a marked attitude of indifference during his marriage ceremony, according to Judge J. D. M. Hamilton. While the wedding was being performed in the probate court yesterday afternoon Garcia went to sleep standing up and his bride was forced to wake him up before Judge Hamilton could finish the ceremony. Topeka Capital. LenineV policies have been adopted in Russia, or perhaps it is better to say that they will be adopted as soon as the people find out what they are. roNPESSIONS OF A CYNIC
I don't understand the Einstein the-j
ory and hope I never will. I am not very fond of so-called smart people. 1 I believe temperament is largely bosh. ' ... I don't believe that all wives are . more Intelligent than their husbands, nor that all husbands know more than their wives. I am giad I am unhappy much or the time, for when I am happy 1 appreciate it. I don't believe President Obregon of Mexico is an Irishman. 1 am very fond of chicken pie when it has chicken in it. It is seldom that I find one of these. They are going to try to abolish the London fog. which is an institution of many years' standing. Those who have enjoyed this strictly London enterprise In the past will miss it. One of the delights of going about in a London fog is the fact that you can walk right by a dozen creditors and they cannot see you. We have often thought what a boon such a fog would to many people if we could have it over here.
"The frozen north i3 largely a myth," declares Vilhjalmur Stefannson, noted explorer. He points out that he has found fertil valleys with all sorts of life far above the arctic circle. The arctic regions form a coming empire which will supply the world with most of its meat within fifty years, he says. "The American school geography," he continues, "is the most widely read bit of fiction in the United States. It informs you that there is practically no life north of the arctic circle, that there is nothing but a barren waste of snow and ice. "The arctic explorer himself also i3 largely responsible for fostering this myth. It is so often not only pleasant but extremely profitable to pose as a hero. If, when I come back from the north, you think I have been coping with wondrous hardships you will worship me as a hero. And if I appear a little reticent you will love me for my modesty. All I have to do is not to give the game away. And then there is the mis
sionary. The missionaries in the north are doing a very excellent work at least, they say it is but it costs money. If when they come back they find the popular impression has got abroad that they have been enduring untold hardships from cold and hunger they find it helpful in loosening the purse strings. x " 'Yes,' they say, lt was pretty cold at times and it did get pretty lonesome.' And they are applauded for their modesty. "The coldest temperature at the north pole is 60 degrees below zero. The coldest ever reported in the United States
J'"js"fi was bs degrees oeiow zero at Havre, Moni. ine unueu r ijy?W' Rtatps wpathpr hiirp.au maintains a station on the north
coast of Alaska. It frequently reports a summer temperature of 100 in the shade. And the coldest temperature there, 200 miles north of the arctic circle, is 54 degrees below zero. "When I was a boy in North Dakota I frequently walked
five miles to school in weather 50 degrees below zero. I didn't especially consider myself a hero then." The history of the world, Mr. Stefannson said, had been the history of the conquest of the "frozen north." "I suppose if Memphis, Egypt, had an advertising club like yours 3,000 years ago, the returned traveler, lecturing before it, would say that all north of the Mediterranean was a frozen, sterile waste where nothing would grow," he said. "In the days of the Roman empire the 'frozen north' was all north of the Alps. Today we have the same old myth, copsidering the 'frozen north' all above the arctic circle." Stefannson says 250 specimens of vegetation had been found on Banks island, 400 miles north of the arctic circle, and 750 specimens had been counted on the north coast of Alaska.
H8 1
Two Minutes of Optimism By HERMAN J. ST1CH
And Then He Made a Hole in One
. - (You NisvgR .Tack ! rfu sbt roR 6oor ( was a Vouwc; ) t V J: S To Mei tfeT S ewcy jay .WHAT 1 amd hppy girl l ' t Tlet 5t-r-riM5 HERC jCjiA AlCS YOU !T IS YOUR , 1 WHeu HoU MARRlEP . T coNve.se uth You OR s .Your oouF To live for- -
. s.r N
Answers to Questions
It P. Will you please print some
thing about Soap lake? The "soap lake," as the inhabitants call it, is in the north-westem part of Oregon. If the water be violently stirred or beaten with a stick, it forms thick suds, and when rubbed between the hands it has a soapy feel. Animals refuse to drink the water. Dispute Which is "the taller, the Washington monument or the Eiffel Tower? The Eiffel tower is S84 feet high, the Washington monument is 556 feet high. Subscribe!- When was William R. Day appointed to be a member of the Supreme Court? In 1903. American How many Japanese in California? The 1920 census bureau report-shows 70.196, en increase of 69.7 per cent since 1910. The total population of the state is 3,426,S61. Itemler mny obtnln nimvrer to qo ration by writing The Palladium Q.ort Ion and Anntma fl r part merit. All qiirntlona nhonld be written plainly nnd briefly. Amnrn will be given briefly.
Correct English
TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can," Take It," "Up ONE MAN One man may be very great if he decides that way. He is full of that which we sometimes call influence. And Influence is one of the greatest forces in the world. We wouldn't go far without it. We are led unconsciously by its touches. We are influenced by the color of the sky, by the warmth of the sun, by the fragrance of the flowers, by the feel of the air. But when a man steps out to somewhere and so wields and welaa his personality into people and times that he brings order out of chaos and happiness where desolation was, then one is compelled to admit how great one man may be. A friend, writing to me from the heart of an ancient empire, had this to say: "What a WORLD she is!" One man may prove exceedingly able. He has to decide that for himself, however. Sitting upon some Sinai of vision, he may crystalize in his mind the secret hope of a thousand centuries. He may put his finger upon the pulse of a thousand wrongs as well. He may say: "1 am going to help. I am going to be of use in the world." And then it doesn't matter in detail as to what he puts his talents and energies, after such a decision. You are one man. Or, maybe, you are one woman. Sex is neutral when affairs loom. Men and women are one when ideas begin to mix. It wasn't so long ago when the peace of the world rested upon the decision of one man.
WINDOW GLASS PRICE CUT
PITTSBURGH, Pa, April 2. A St per cent cut in the price of window glass, effective Saturday, was announce ed here by officials of the American Window Glass company. The concent is one of the largest producers of 'window glass In the world.
a .4.-.-. . r. --0 Af having t Vl r
new administration is a beautiful,)
' early spring. The weather furnished by Mr,, WJlson was never so good.
- We nave seen ma.uy urn .- y tures of the Hardings' pet Airedale, " 'Laddie Boy Caswell,; but so far as we t can see he looks about the same as Tny other Airedale, which means that V he is a very homely dog and that's all. ? 'The race is not always to the swift, .oat it' is about 99 times out of a hunMdred. fa. " Ss -
IMPS OF SATAN "Courage lost, everything lost," Goethe used to say. "CfOd holds with the strong," said Mazzini, the Italian Emerson. To be able to bear is to conquer. Cats have nine lives because no matter how often or how far they are thrown they always land on their feet. Are you inferior to the cat? These especially are days when to have courage is to be sensible as well as brave. Doubt and fear never avail, always harm. Courage is bound to help. Here is a pretty parable on courage, a parable every man and every w-oman will immediately comprehend because it deals with two things every one of us knows at least a little bit about man and the devil. It happened in the Street of J.ife, where, walking in darkness and shadow, old King Satan was out hunting with his dogs, the little imps ot human weakness. Suddenly a man came strolling along. Satan's eyes lighted up, and turning to the stunted imp Gloom, he commanded : "Go get that man for me!" The imp hopped across the street, slipped silently into the man's heart, and whispered: "You are discouraged." "You are mistaken," the man replied. "I am not discouraged." "You ARE you are discouraged," the imp persisted. "I do not THINK I am." replied the man For the third time, loudly, decisively, imperiously, the imp repeated: "I tell you you are discouraged!" "Well, I suppose I am," the man answered. His head drooped and the darkness enfolded him. Back hopped imp Gloom to Satan and reported proudly:
l got mm. He is discouraged. He is yours. King Satan grinned and continued on his walk. Suddenly he spied another man. Again he ordered imp Gloom to "Get him for me!" And the swift demon of discouragement chortled gleefully to himself in anticipation of another victim. As slyly as ever, he sneaked into the man's heart. "You are discouraged," he whispered. "NO!" replied the man emphatically, "I am NOT discouraged." "You ARE you are discouraged," persisted the imp. "I tell you 1 am NOT never was discouraged," responded the man, who was getting determined. "I think you ARE discouraged," repeated the imp in a tremulous whisper. "I am NOT discouraged," shot odt the man; "YOU LIE!" And, turning on his heel, he walked down the street, his chin in. his upper lip stiff, the crown of his head held high, striding with unerring step through the darkness to the light. Courage is adversity's lamp. Very much ashamed and crestfallen, imp Gloom returned to his master Satan. "I couldn't get him," he muttered. "You never had a chance. I kept telling him he was discouraged and the last time I told him he called me a liar and that discouraged me. He got 'away. His kind always do." Satan and his pack of imps are as much on the job as ever. They are tireless. Indefatigable hunters. They rarely get discouraged and they must be fought with their own fire. And when you hear that faint voice whispering, "You are discouraged." or "They will ever fnind it out," "You can do it tomorrow," "Nobody appreciates you" just remember old King Satad Is out gunning and the'Only thing that will discourage him and his imps is to tell them they're lying and to act as though you mean it! ' Remember also: "Courage lost, everything lost." "God holds with the strong. "To be able to bear is to conquer."
Don't Say:
He lives AT Bond street, IN num-i
ber 725, AT Denver. There were five workmen, two ON the top of the building, three AT the ground. We shall have a holiday UPON Lincoln's birthday. When I was TO Boston, I stayed IN the Adams House. When I shall have arrived TO my journey's end, I shall sell my auto. Say: He lives ON Bond street, AT number 725, IN Denver. There were five workmen, two UPON the top of the building, three ON the ground. We shall have a holiday ON Lincoln's birthday. When I was IN Boston, I stayed AT the Adams House. When I shall have arrived AT my journey's end, I shall sell my auto.
Dinner Stories
N
The profiteer's wife called on a specialist to attend her husband, who complained of huskiness in his throat. "I think I might, paint the throat with nitrate of silver," said the doctor. "Oh, doctor," said the devoted wife, "expense is no object. Please use gold!" 4
"What became of that glass eater you had with you last year?" asked the visitor to the side 6how. "We had to let him go," replied thj manager. "He got so high-toned that he wouldn't eat anything but imported cut glass."
Six-year-old Margaret often played with Nellie, a neighbor's little girl. One rainy day the two were just stat
ing across the clean kitchen floor at
Margaret's home when the latter's mother, seeing their muddy shoes, headed them off and sent them out to play on the porch. After a moment Nellie remarked: "My mother don't care how much I run over the kitchen floor."
There was quite a long interval of silence. Then Margaret said: "I wish I had a nice, dirty mother like you've got, Nellie." GIBBONS'S CRYPT TO BECOME SHRINE OF PILGRIMAGES BALTIMORE, April 2. The crypt in which Cardinal Gibbons was entombed yesterday with simple ceremonies, after the imposing services in the cathedral, will be kept as a shrine of pilgrimage, it was announced at the arcbiepiscopal residence. Six of the late cardinal's predecessors in the Baltimore archbishopric are buried there.
HARDING TO DELIVER ORATION WASHINGTON, April 2. Following a custom of many years standing, President Harding has accepted an invitation to make the Memorial day address at Arlington cemetery.
LUMBERMEN TO USE FUND TO "EDUCATE" PUBLIC CHICAGO. April 2 The National Lumbermen's association, at its convention here, appropriated $200,000 to be used in a national advertising campaign which, it was announced, would "acquaint the public with the truth about lumber prices."
MONON SHOPS REOPEN LAFAYETTE, Ind., April 2. The Monon shops reopened Friday, taking back between 500 and 600 men, laid off recently. The same force of work
men, representing all crafts, will be
employed as before the close of the shops, officials announced.
PIMPLES ON FACE AND BODY Itched Something Fierce. Lost Rest. Cuticura Heals.
The trouble I had started with small pimples on toy face and body.
The pimples festered and when I would aqaeexethem they wonld dry and scale. They itched eotnetbiag fierce, and I lost lot of rest scratching them. "I tried ail kinds of remedies but nothing helped.
I heard about Cuticura Soap and Ointment and bought them, and when I had used them about two months I was completely healed." (Signed) Bernard Breitenbach, Sherman Ave., Ft. Atkinaon, Wis. Give Cuticara Soap, Ointment and Talcum the daily care of your skin.
mfU Ztl Tt y Ma. AAr : artait,Drta,BUMra 4. HM
whr. axpe. un ibi 9VCrticara Smp ska
DR. R. H. CARNES
ACHINO ANO 1 1 f I eAIN ANO J WtjjSS ! J ROOT CWW-JIp"-0" S I Jjr ODO.OUS . FLAT CO"N'" ' 'Tjf ""ji weT,,a I sorr comf' tJ aowTeoMioH
ENDS FOOT MISERY
Cal-o-cide positively gives quick relief and lasting results. It penetrates the pores and removes the cause. (Plasters in each package for Stubborn Corns)
i DENTIST Phone 2665 i I Rooms 15-16 Comstock Bulldlnr -I 1016 Main Street I Open Sundays and Evenings by 1 I appointment. i
LUMBER and COAL
IS
ri.in.il '
MATHER BROS. Co.
CUT THIS OUT IT'S WOllTH MOSEY Cut out thla silo, enclose with 6c and
mail it to Foley & Co., 2836 Sheffield
Ave., Chicago. 111., writing your name and address clearly. You will receive In return a trial package containing Foley's Honey and Tar Compound for couajhs, colds and croup: Foley Kidney Pills for pains in sides and back; rheumatism backache, kidney and bladder ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroug-hly cleansing; cathartic for constipation, biliousness, headaches, and sluggish bowels. A. O. Luken & Co., 626-62S Main. Advertisement.
LINOLEUM
I Extra fine grade, rTQ 1 per yard I 5C
Holthouse Furniture Store
530 Main St.
J.C.Mirtz.n. R.P. oaueoisr
CAN BE CURED Free Proof To You All I want is your name and address to 1 can send yon a free trial treatment. I want you just to try tbis treatment that a all Just
try It. That's my only arrument. . ... ..-. I've been in the Retail Drur Business for to years. I am Secretary of the Indiana State Board of Pharmacy and President of the Retail Drucsicts Associ-tion. Nearly everyone in rort Wayne knows me and knows about my successful treatment. Orer fourt.. th.ua.od f iv. Imndr.d Men. Women and Children outside of Fort Wayne have, according to their own statements, been cured by this treatment since I Brit made this offer public. If you have Eczema, Itch. Salt Rheum, T.tt.r nerer mind bow bad my treatment has cufed the worst cases I ever saw rhr. in a chance it. prov. my claln. Send me your name and address on the coupon below and get the trial treatment I want to send you FREE. The wonders accomplished in your own case will be proof. a i CUT AND MAIL TODAY I. C. HUTZELL Druggist, 3657 West Main St Fort Wayne, Ind. riease send without cost or obligation t. me your Free Proof Treatment.
Davis, Cole and Oakland : i Motor Cars MANLOVE & WILSON Phone 184021-23 S. 7th St. SAFETY FOR SAVINGS . PLUS 4l2 Interest DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY !
I "The Home For Savings" C
Simplex Electric Ironers Save Time and Money Weiss Furniture Store 505-13 Main St.
DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY "The Home For Savings"
BICYCLES $65 Crown Motor-Bike CjQ QQ E L M E R S. SMITH The Wheel Man 426 Main St. Phone 1806
Name.
Ace.
Toct Office State.
Street and No.
SAVINGS AND INVESTMENTS We pay 6 on Savings Bonds and have desirable and safe 8 NonTaxable securities for conservative investors. We will give you free reports on any investment. It la safer to Invest with responsible home people. Come in and see us. You are always welcome. WELFARE LOAN SOCIETY "Investors' Headquarters" Capital $130,000 Richmond, Ind. Phone, 2509 9 N. 10th St.
REBUILT CARS At Low Prices on Easy Terms Chenoweth Auto Co.
1107 Main St.
Phone 1925
The Finest Line of Men's Hats
in the City, $4.00 to $6.00 LICHTENFELS 1010 Main St.
i Trfmmntamni
FREE
Gri Savings
WE KEEP OUR TIRES I I N REPAIR
I Our Prices are Low and Our Guar-1 I antee ia in writing I WM. F. LEE, No. 8 South 7th St. 1 ! I "Richmond" Reliahl Tin f
tllllMI.IIMI.IIIIIIUIIIIMIIMI.'.IIIIH I IIMIMIIII l..M 8
and 5 en Time Certificate. You can start savings
account any time. Interest paid Jan. 1st and July 1st.
The People's Home and Savings Ass'n. 29 N. Sth, Cap. Stock $2,500,000 Safety Boxe for rsnt
I Suits Cleaned and Pressed! J - $1.50 I,
I PEERLESS CLEANING CO. I
' .....- M , , n ILI
318 Main Street
H
Splendid Used Player Piano at less than half cost Walter B. Fulghum Phone 2275 1000 Main t.
" -- -ri.-ri.n?
