Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 124, 5 April 1921 — Page 6
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND TUESDAY, APRIL 5, 1921.
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j PufclidrrEroy VETOing Except Sunday by t - "is? PalladiuflJi Printing Co. I PaHAtfltnn SxJIdfitNftrth- .Nlnth'': Mid Sailor Strata. Enteid At. the Poat Offic at Richmond. Indiana. ; as
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Second-Class Mail Matter.
I f ' nSHB- THB ASSOCIA-TED PRtSS I TW Assoeteiod Prsa la exclusively entitled to the nae I for twnblteattoir.ofi&U news' dispatches credited to it or t not 4Umrwis . creel red in thls paper... and also the local i news 4)iiVlMtfeln., A!' rlgijts of repubUcaUon of spef tlal Wsatoarhereh Are aUo reecrvsd, f." - T r . f STATEMENT OF THE OWNER8HIP, MANAGEMENT, 4 ' CIRCULATION, .ET&, -REQUIRED BYV THE ACT OF CONGRESS OF AUGUST 24. 1912 ; Of The Richmond Palladium, published Daily Except Sunj ; ' day, at Richmond, Indiana, for April 1, 1921
f State of Indiana. County of Wayne, ss: i Before ma. a Notary Public ,ln and for the State and county aforesaid, personally appeared Edward H. Harris, i who, havinff been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that ho la the manager of the Richmond Palladium and that the following: is, to the best of his knowli edge and belief, a true statement of the ownership, manasemest, circulation, etc. of the aforesaid publication for X, .the date'ahown in the above caption, required by the Act iof August 24, 1912. embodied in section 443, Postal Laws I and Regulations, to wit: . That the .names and addresses of the publisher, editor, man-Fag-Ins editor,-and business managers are: . t Name of .'. Pos toff Ice Address J. Publisher Palladium Printing: Co. Richmond, Indiana fc1nditoi j"! li. O. Leeds Richmond, Indiana t Manager I Edward H. Harris ..-.Richmond, Indiana Luther M. Feegrer, Asst. '.Richmond, Indiana
5 That the owners are:
men are: i len M. Gaar.i. nette G. Leeds I G, Leeds.... f H. Harris J
All of Richmond, Indiana.
for additional funds and allow the institution to continue its normal growth. "Our institutions of higher learning must not solve the problems by limiting the number of their students.' They must care for all the young men and women who are anxious, and at the same time qualified, to enter them. And to do this they must have more money. ' Of course, increased tuition fees will bring increased
revenues. Most institutions have increased their
fees, and before long will have to increase them again. But this is not as serious a matter to the student as it seems at first glance- The tuition fee is only a fraction of a student's annual budget. And in no university has it increased in anything like the proportion with other expenses. So, while the increased tuition fee means very little extra expense to the student in the aggregate, it means a great deal to the university." President Thwing says the new financial problems of the colleges and universities cannot be solved by increasing tuition fees because the increase has been too great to be met from that source. With taxes preventing the wealthy man from making substantial gifts, President Thwing believes educational institutions must turn to the communities in which they are located for future aid. The plight of the colleges illustrates another phase of the tax burden under which every one is suffering. Every individual and every institution and organization feels the load. Nothing will stimulate the country more than a thorough
revision of the tax laws by congress.
Mr a Helen M. Gaar.i
",. Mrs. Jeanette
Rudolph Edward
i.That the Known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or vmore of , total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities are: J:N'one. .That the two paragraphs next above, giving the names ol ithe owners, stockholders, and security holders, if any, contain not only the list of stockholders and security hold-f-ers as they, appear upon the books of the company but .also, in cades where the stockholder or security holder apfpears upon-- the. books of the company as trustee or in any other fiduciary .', relation, the name of the person or corporation for whom such trustee is acting, is given: also Mhat the said two paragraphs contain statements embracing affiant's full .knowledge and belief as to the circum
stances and conditions under which stockholders and se-1 jartpnH Ampriraniratinn rnpotinosi is nmrrtA cunty holders who do not appear upon the books of the'10 tiena Americanization meetings, is ampie
company as trustees, hold stock and securities in a capacity other than that of a bona fide owner: and this affiant has no reason to believe that any other person, as
sociation, or corporation had any interest direct or indl-
Americanization Meetings The enthusiastic outpouring of loyal citizens
rect In the said stock, bonds, or other securities than as
so stated by him. That the average number of copies of each issue of 'this publication sold or distributed through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the six months proceeding the date shown above is J 937
1 Jf u . EDWARD ? H. HARRIS. Manager.
t '" Sworn to and suhscribedbefore me this 6th day of "April. 1911. ' IRA C. MURRAY. Notary Public. (SEAL) ( My commission expires August 20, 1923. Higher Education Faces Crisis, Says Thwing "Higher education in America is in a critical condition. The wealthy men who have endowed our colleges and 'uni vers ities are no longer able to contribute large sums of money to their support, for their incomes have been reduced by nore than two-thirds as a result of our high taxes. Our wealthy men have given and given until it is no longer just or reasonable for educators to expect them to give more." , i Dr. Charles F. Thwing, president of Western Reserve University, recently made these statements.' He expressed the hope that the problems would be solved by the new community spirit that has been developed in America. I "There are two ways of meeting the situation, which is confronting practically every institution of higher learning in America," continued Dr. Thwing. "One way is to limit the number of students and thus keep the expenses of the college or university within the limits of its present income. Princeton has already done this. The alternative is to appeal to the community
proof that efforts to spread insidious propaganda are being shattered against the loyalty of our citizenship. New York- and Indianapolis recently gave abundant proof of-that fact. They may be accepted as representative of the whole country. The average American may not shout and yell
to demonstrate his patriotism, but he is sure to show it when an occasion demands it. This repression of our feeling is a national trait, which sometimes leads foreign nations to underestimate the full swing of our loyalty. Germany, which considered herself well informed on our national morale and loyalty, lost a war because she did not correctly estimate the loyalty of our people and the fighting ability of our young men. She listed us as an easy-going, good-natured, optimistic, peace-loving nation, fearing the clash of arms and the suffering and agony of the battlefield. It took her by surprise when we sent two million soldiers across the Atlantic; and the surprise changed into consternation when the American doughboys whipped one crack division after another of the German army. The effort of Van Mach and Viereck to spread German propaganda is surprising in the light of American loyalty and solidarity manifested during the war. Most of us believed that foreign propagandists had learned enough of American character by this time to know that further efforts to alienate a section of our populace would be doomed to failure. The decisive answer of the country to the first effort of this kind is heartening.
Ain't it a Grand and Glorious Feeling!
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Who's Who in the Day's News
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Good Evening By Key K. Moulton
WE REFUSE TO ANSWER, AS IT ''MIGHT INCRIMINATE OR DEi GRADE US. I The world often thinks that the wise Man is a ' foof and the fool is often taken for a wise man. How about 1hosp chaps who write the columns In the newspapers? Are "they wise men. or are they fools? By your answer we will know if y6u have brains. Marcel Ftelnbrugge. ' Wilbur Glenn Voliva has announced that there will be no more short skirts allowed in' Zion City. The question is, what is a short skirt? Years ago they were short when they were up to the fhoe tops. Now they are long if they reach below the knees. Well, anyhow, ft, is a question that we do not care to discuss. DIDN'T CARE FOR THE NEAR-NEW A Kansas City man who is manager of the used car department in one of the big motor car salesrooms downtown has evidently been talking shop at home, says the Kansas City "Star." The other day his wif fried up some patties from some mashed potatoes that had been left over from a party ttie night before. The little four-year-old son was offered a helping. "Naw," h6 remarked in firm refusal. "I don't want any of those used potatoes." , Speaking of horrible deaths, how would you like to be a United States senate bill and talked to death, asks Oe Jewell "Republican." , One newspaper announces in a tone of faint regret that there is "only one gorilla in this country." Onewill be enough if. he ever gets loose. National workers have just denied the implication that they intend to force a Puritanical Sunday. Then we are not going blue-y, after all. l:!An appropriate spring song in some local circl would be: "Here Comes the Bribe." What has become of the Costa RicePanama war? r: Have you been Stillmanned enough?
Two Minutes of Optimism By HERMAN J. STICH
111
is
Memories of Old Days In Th's Pacer Ten Years
r Aao Todav
? f f Th Dean Electric company, of Byria, , O., installed a test apparatus ; Sj Ojf'its flashlight system of police patrol ; jisat the city ball, where it was if i smo. ;tet Hy :,ithe . board of worka.
i ''.I''JthUollco, department gave it a test
i'kM found the. apparatus satisfactory.
GOD HELPS HIM WHO HELPS HIMSELF Some years ago a young chap walked up to the dean of Leland Stanford Junior University, and asked: "What are the chances here for earning enough money to work your way through?" It was an old question, had been asked hundreds, thousands of times before. It was fairly easy to answer. The dean consulted a file. "The only job that seems to be lying about loose," he said, finally, "is that of serving in the dining rooms. Student waiters are always in demand." The young fellow's face screwed up into a good-natured grimace. He looked as if he had bitten into an unripe persimmon. "I suppose," he drawled whimsically, "that 'they also serve who only stand and wait'; but somehow I can't quite see myself in the part." Then, after a few moments' reflection: "Anyway, I don't know that I need depend on a job that's 'lying around loose'. I shouldn't wonder if I'd have to look around a bit for an opening that hasn't been offered to every passerby and become shopworn." Most people have eyes to see only that which is exceptional the exclamation points of life the unusual, the striking, the things that force themselves on their attention; they seldom see the everyday things that make men pd fortunes. The young fellow had "looked around a bit" only a few days when he discovered a need and an opportunity. There was no college laundry. "I think." he said to himself, "that the person who undertakes to organize the clean linen business In this academic settlement will 'also serve' and won't have to 'wait' for his reward!" - A little investigation, quite a number of inquiries, an interview or two, some "educational" propaganda, and One morning the college community awoke to the realization that, above everything else, it needed efficient laundry service. Before long it was clear that not only was the college being systematically and satisfactorily served fn this respect, but what was even more important, there had appeared upon the campus a man who could see and satisfyneeds which were obvious but to which everybody else was oblivious. It soon became natural to "ask Hoover" and to "let Hoover manage"
the various student undertakings; and to this day "the way Hoover saw and ' did things" is one of the most firmly established traditions at Leland Stan-1 ford. Many years have passed since the establishment of the students' laundry at Leland Stanford, and the man who started that and many other enter-1 prises has kept up the pace he set, his latest feats being feeding famished !
nations. Herbert Hoover made good for two reasons. First: Because the man who can do things when it ought to be done is veryJTiuch in demand. Second: Because, God helps him who helps himself.
LORD LEE OF FAREHAM Lord Lee of Fareham, who has just succeeded Walter Hume Long as first
lord of the admiralty in the British ;
cabinet, has many friends in the United States and Canada. But they know
him best as Lieut.Col. Sir Arthur Hamilton Lee. He has an American wife, who was Miss Ruth, daughter of the late John Godfrey Moore of New York. Lord Lee of Fareham is one of the fore most military men in England, of great and varied experience. He has been professor of strategy and tactics in the royal military college, Kinston,
Can.; military attache at Washington, civil lord of the admiralty, personal military secretary to the minister of munitions, director general of food production and minister of agriculture and fisheries. He served in the Spanish-American war with the United States army headquarters staff, and received the Anrerican war medal, and he saw a year's service in the World war. Lord Lee of Fareham gave to the nation his country seat, Chequers, in Buckinghamshire, as a rural residence for Prime Minister Lloyd George and future British premiers. A delightful house party was assembled there about a month ago for the housewarming, among the guests being the American ambassador and Mrs. Davis.
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Correct English
Don't Say: He is SO large as his brother. France is not AS large as England. Such THAT I have I give to thee. ,1 read many novels, such LIKE Ivanho and Romona. I should like for you to pay me the money you owe me AS it is now overdue. x Say: He is AS large an his brother. France is not SO large as England. (Negative statement.) -Such AS I have I give to thee. I read many novels, such AS Ivanho and Romola. 1 should like for you to pay me the money you owe me; it is now overdue.
Dinner Stories
A prominent society woman suffering from neural pi a decided to consult a noted specialist In nervous disorders. The physician listened attentively to her symptoms. 'Madam." he said, impressively, when she had concluded, "1 can guarjnte to cure you only on one
PIMPLY? WELL D0N7 BE People Notice It. Drive Them Off with Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets
Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON
THE MILLENIUM. Some day the stand-off scheme will smash, a wise old seer has said it, and all we'll buy will be for cash, and none will ask for credit. Collectors then won't block our way and bluff and plead and beckon; and that will be a happy day for aJl of us, I reckon. We have to pay more for our eats, and find the poor house closer, because we pay the bills of beats who sting the corner grocer. The grocer sighs, "This Jasper Jones has jumper our lovely city, and he was owing forty bones, which seems a ghastly pity. He'll never pay me for my rice, he never more will greet me;
and so 111 have to raise the price from those who do net beat me." And when I go to purchase prunes to feed my children twenty, he's raised the price some picayunes, and soaks me good and plenty. The tailor trusts a hundred men., and ten of them don't pay him, and I must dig an extra yen to comfort him and stay. And so it goes
along the line, in every kind of deal-1
ing; the deadbeat adds to bills of mine until my head is reeling. 'Twill be a blessed day, gadzooks, when "stand-off system" ceases, when merchant princes burn their books and kick the slate to pieces.
The present Drury Lane theatre in London is i. the fourth to bear . that name, the three previous structures having all been destroyed by fire.
A pimtrty face will not embarrass you much longer if you get a package of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. The skin should begin to dear after you have taken the tablets a few nights. Cleanse the blood, bowels and liver Trith Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the successful substitute for olomel; there's no sickness or pain after taking them. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do that , "which calomel does, and just as effectively, but their action is gentle and safe instead of severe and irritating. No one who takes Olive Tablets is ever cursed with a "dark brown taste." a bad breath, a dulL listless, "no good" feeling, constipation, torpid liver, bad disposition or pimply face. Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil ; you will know them by their olive color. Dr. Edwards spent years among patients afflicted 'with liver and bowel complaints, and Olive Tablets are the immensely effective result. Take die or two nizhtly for a week. See how much
better you feel and look 15c and 30c,
Advertisement
TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of -You Can," Take It," "Up STILLNESS We are influenced by far more than we ever dream. The very noises of the earth and air early learn to swim and ride among the corpuscles of our blood and through the delicate strings of fibres which the doctors tell us are our nerves. So that when we are, through some manner of change, thrust Into utter stillness, we long for the very things which we had expected to be glad to escape. Stillness soothes and smoothes but it also gives a new meaning to loneliness. Scientists say that one will go mad in a short space of time In pure stillness. And it is not difficult to imagine such a result. But stillness, broken by the voice of one who is interested in us and who loves us, is given the touch of divine charm and we are fascinated by it. Stillness pierced by the strains of some distant music, or the call of some shepherd, or the song of some bird whose heart has just been made free, is made to emphasize itself as one of 'the gifts of Nature. For hours I have sat on some bank, all alone, just listening to the ripple of some stream in its soft running through the woods and I have felt that God has a way of talking to people and that It must be that He especially favors streams. And then I have sat, as I sit tonight, in my big library. All is quite still. Every sound seems muffled. But about me everywhere are scores of books, and on my walls are the pictures which I love. There cannot be absolute stillness with the voices of the great just a few feet from you even though they may be long silenced by the years. Though dead, still do they live and speak! Stillness has its own peculiar compensations. It inspires you to think. It stimulates you to bring up memories and to review your life experiences. There is something in everything. And there is everything in some things love, for instance. It's so still that you can't see it. You have to FEEL it!
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condition the removal of every tooth In your mouth." "Will you stake your professional reputation on that?" she asked, anxiously. "I certainly will," said the doctor. "Very well," replied the society leader. She placed her hand to her mouth and removed two complete sets of false teeth! "Let me kiss those tears away," he begged tenderly. She fell into his arms and he was
busy for the next few minutes. And
yet the tears flowed on. "Can nothing stop them?" he asked breathlessly. "No," she murmured, "it is hay
fever, you know. But go on with the treatment.' Out of a grand total of $13,883,819,826 :?6 held in the vaults of the United States Treasury, $97,410,283.02 is in cash.
MUNCIE BUILDING UNIONS OUT. MUNCIE, Ind., April 5. Following an announcement by contractors of a 15 per cent, reduction in wages, members of the various building trades unions here refused to go to work.
Answers to Questions jj
. M THREE READERS. For the Information of three of your readers, -wilt you kindly tell them what raiiroadi was the first out of Chicago? Th first railroad to get charter out of Chicago was the Galena and Chicago Union. It was chartered on Jan. 16, 1836, and work on it was at once begun. The object of this road was to increase the value of real estate at both points. Galena being then a leading village of the West,- obtained precedence in the naming of the road. Just two days after the incorporation of the Galena and Chicago Union Railroad the Illinois Central railroad was incorporated. The 58 incorporators failed to do anything, and the project collapsed. It was revived by its immense land grant In September, 1830. The Galena and Chicago Union railroad was revived in 1846, and by Nov. 21, 1848, the engine was running on the ten miles of completed road weft of Chicago, conveying materials and laborers to carry on the work. On Nov. 20, 1848, Chicago received its first wheat transported by rail. In December, 1850, the Galena and Chicago Union was completed to Elgin, 111., 42 miles, and was the first railroad out of Chicago. By Sept. 4. 1853, thi3 road was 121 miles long. A READER. Some time ago I read, an article in some magazine which V stated that it would take 104 years to count $1,000,000,000. working eight hours a day. This I understood to be in counting pennies. Is this correct figuring? Why not figure it out yourself? If you count 100 a minute vcu will count 6.000 in 60 minutes and
48,000 in one day of eight hours. Continue this process to the end. Readers may obtala answer es- " y wrttlas- The Palladium Qajeatloaa aad Anawera department. All Ideations ahttnld be written plainly aad briefly. Anawers will be riven briefly.
During the last year 681 newspapers and periodicals printed In England have raised their subscription prices owing to the high cost of publication.
Compare
These Flakes with any brand on yourgrocerfe shelves and yoiill find that
"Say It With Flowers" LEMON'S FLOWER SHOP 1015 Main Street Phone 1093
SAFETY FOR SAVINGS PLUS Al2 Interest DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY "The Home For Savings'
Post Toasties Are Superior Corn Flakes In making Post Toasties only the choice part of carefully selected white corn is used, perfectly cooked, rolled and toasted to a crisp appetizing brown. Motions eat Post Toasties Jbecause they like 9em! Sold by Grocers Everywhere! s Haaby Pkistum Cereal Co,IncBaitk Creek, Michigan.
Davis, Cole and Oakland Motor Cars MANLOVE & WILSON
Phone 1840 21-23 S. 7th St
1 1 Suits Cleaned and Pressed!
9150 PEERLESS CLEANING CO. I 318 Main Street i
THOR Stanley Plumbing & 910 Main St.
WASHING
MACHINES IRONERS Electric Co. Phone 1236
Goodrich Quality Tires at Reasonable Prices RODEFELD GARAGE West End Main St. Bridge Phone 3077
and 5 en Time Certificate. You can start savings
account any time. Interest paid Jan. 1st and July 1st.
On Savings
The FAULTLESS CLEANING Co. Merchant Tailors Cleaning and Pressing Garments Called for and Delivered , NEWSOM & STAFFORD 203 Union Nat'l. Bank Bldg. , 8th and Main Phons 271 g
The People's Home and Savings Ass'n. 29 N. 8th. Cap. Stock $2,500,000 Safety Boxes for rent
2 i imam
FURNITURE OF QUALITY FERD GROTHAUS 614-816 Main St. -v.
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