Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 129, 11 April 1921 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND.. MONDAY, APRIL 11, 1921.

HOUSE OF COMMONS NOT AFFECTED BY THE ELOQUENCE, SAYS LAW (B.v Associated ;,PreM. ,

GL.ASGOW, April li. Contrary to a jpopular id ea nowhere, does "fluency of j speech' count;- tor JeVs than in the j

House of Common?;'; according to An-

drew BonarfTAw. .''ho for. 20 years, been a membeT jof Parliament and. until his receM 'resignation, aa ?he government leader in-othc House. Mr. Conar Uw was speaking of the qualities that make for -success in public life. .. .r. '-ri:.' " ' "In Parliament it'; is not the set speech but thedebaing speech which ip effective," he swJd in the course of his inaugural address as Lord Rector of Glasgow 'tlniversity. "As in war

the guns whifih-jnay secure victory are I

rot necessarily lae tirgs. dui ir.ose which are plcuce&.in the best position. fo in Parliament the heavier- the calibre of the guns-the t4ter. but at all co?ts they must be quick firing. Soeeches are Varied.

' There is a great difference between j

mon in the facility with wliiclt tuey speak. Some men speak far above their general ability and some men far below it but a natural gift of speech is not necessary to secure success in

publ;c life. . ';, I ' There have alway? been, and there j f.re now in Parliament, men whose

sp?aking when they began seemed hopelessly bed but who, nevertheless, have taken their place in the front rank of statesmen. They did so be

cause, intellect is not a tool, hut a j hand, and they used their innate intel- j l' ct ,md forcetd master the tool which ; va' n pessary .for their work.

n Pari iament -also there h? always been. -and there are now. men who from every point of view of.. form.

or of style, make speeches whir-h ranno" be considered good, but. there ii in them a vital force and their, utter- j arces. however expressed, like ax clec-. trie current convey tiuit force to those i who listen to.them." 1 . I Murt Be Sincere.

FOUR JUSTICES OF U. S. SUPREME COURT ARE NOW ELIGIBLE FOR RETIREMENT

jC

3E

Suburban

GREEN'S PORK, Ind Mr. and Mrs. Don Overman are the parents of a baby girl, born Sunday morning Charles Rets and Mr. and Mrs. John Riggleman entertained the following Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kable and Mr. and Mrs. Phlllln Retz. of Win-

Chester Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Cloud entertained Mrs. Martha Wisehart, Mrs. Sarah Jarboe, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cloud and son John J, and Rev. Roe Amburn, Sunday Mrs, Joseph Morgan, south of town, will 'entertain the C. W. B. M. Thursday afternoon. April 7 The preaching service at the Friends church was largely attended. Rev. Webb and Rev. Crawford talked on missionaries Special numbers were given by Nadiene Wise and Mrs. Harve Crook, Sunday morning at the Methodist church Mr. and Mrs. Everett Tipton. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Myers and daughter Mary and Mrs. Tommy Gray spent Monday afternoon in Richmond.... Mr. and Mrs. Palmer and sons and Mr. and Mrs. Steers and daughter dined Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Milton Metlert Mr. and Mrs. F. O. Underhill and family spent Sunday afternoon with Charles Bundy at Straughn Mrs. Flo Willis of Bloomings port came Sunday to visit Maria Underhill, who A3 ill The Clay Township Sunday

scnooi convention will be held at Sugar Grove Sunday, April 24. IT AGE R S TO W N , rhd Mr. F.nd Mr.-. J. A. Locke went 10 Martinsville last week.; . . .Mrs. Robert Hugh;?, of Cambridge City, was here Mondav Rev.

rnd Mrs. B. A. Hartley went to Liber-

ty Center, Sunday night after service to attend the funeral of Rev. Hari.iev's

grand-mother Mr. :ind Mrs. Albert Suckow were entertained ut dinner Sunday by Mr. and Mrs. Morris H;;rrisrn Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hot-scn-piller and son Herbert, and Mr. and

Mrs. Robert iAlhrop, of Richmond, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Crull Mrs Elizabeth Pitta, is visiting her daughters, Mrs Venable and Mrs. Jones at Marion.. .. .Mrs. C. N. Mohler and son, James, of Richmond, spent Sunday here and were guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Sells Mr. and Mrs. Charles Heath ipent Sunday at Boston The Woman's History club met Monday afternoon at Litecraft. the home of Mrs, C. N. Teetor Ten members were present. "Pennsylvania" was the subject of the responses given at roll call. Mrs. Laura Hines read an article entitled, "The Seven Baker Brothers." The guests were favored with a song and piano accompaniment by Winifred Teetor.

Ed. Newbold i3 ill Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. T. H. Hutchens Miss Marjorle G. F. Powers, of Fairview. were vis-J Hiatt is the guest of her aunt, Mrs. itors in Bentonville Thursday -SfrsJ Tom Blrtcn at Fort Wayne. . . .Mrs. G. F. Powers and Miss Call Knapp , .. called on Mrs. Ida Hutchinson, Thurs-1 Crl llliams. after spending a fewday afternoon Mrs. .Flo Rigger isj weeks here the guest of relatives and ill The missionary society ill i friends, has returned to her home in

meet witn Mrs. Homer uonieKer, n-

wo-i

CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind Dr. and Mrs. J. E. Wright were visitors in Indianapolis Monday. . .Mrs. Will Butler is ill. . . .Miss Alice Starr of Richmond visited her aunt, Mrs. Charles Marson Monday Mrs. Frank Marson and Mrs. Lillie Huddlest.on were Richmond visitors Wednesday .. .A number from here attended the Eastern Star meeting at Milton Wednesday night. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Degranrut of Milton, became members of the Milton Order of Eastern Star.... The Presbyterian Guild met with Mrs. Blumke Wednesday afternoon. . .The United Woman'fe Missionary society met at the home of Mrs. Leroy Lambers on Monday evening. Mrs. Louise Krepps was leader. Topic, "Translation of the Bible in Latin America." "Teaching the Bible in Porto Rico." Mrs. A. H. Hodson; "Echoes from Everywhere." Mrs. Ralph Tague. The May meeting will be held with Mrs." A. H. Hodson Mrs. Ray Hinsky of Richmond visited her sister. Mrs. Nettie Ingerman and parents, Mr. and Mrs. Beale. this week ....The Baptist Woman's Union held no meeting last week or this week on account of the Baptist revival.

BENTONVILLE, Ind. Mr3. Charles Knipe called on her mother, Mrs. V. D. Chance Monday evening. ... Mrs.

day afternoon. There will be a

man speaker from Connersville Mrs. William Stevens called on Miss ; Hazel Lock wood, Thursday afternoon, j Mrs. Ed. Miller and Cecil McKee j were business callers in Connersville Thursday afternoon Mrs. Adamj Miller called on Mrs. Glenn Walters, i Thursday. William Geren, of

Straughn, -was a visitor in Bentonville Wednesday.

WINCHESTER, Ind. The Royal So

ciety club met Thusday afternoon with j Mrs. George Smith. Dainty refresh-j ments were served Mr. and Mrs G. B. Robinson have returned from j Delphi, where they were the guests.1 of their daughter, Mrs. A. L. Hodgson. I The Magazine club met Thursday j aftfirnAnn with I jiiteo Cf 11H v 1

Mrs. Henry Grahs after spending the winter with her mother, Mrs. Adam Hirsh, and sister Mrs. Louise Study, has returned to her home in Logansport The Woman's club met Wednesday afternon with Mrs. J. A. Browne. "Mexico" was the topic for the afternoon .Mrs. Mary Cranor, who spent the winter in St. Petersburg, Fla., has gone to her home in Richmond, after spending a few days with her daughter, Mrs J. M. Browne. ....Miss Franc McNees has returned from Indianapolis The Past Grand association met with Mrs. George Ashley, Wednesday afternoon. ... Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Miller and daughter, Alice,

have returned from Los Angeles, Cal.,

where they spent the winter. .. .The i Rotary club entertained the Kiwanis club Tuesday evening at an elegant! banquet at tie First Christian church. ....Miss Florence Hutchens has re-'

turned to Kokomo, after spending a few days with her parents, Mr. and

Akron, Ohio.

STRIKE CIGARETTE

Insist Upon The Liberty Mills "Faultless" and "C.ix d: t: ?i iTi '

F'oauence. like geriiup. h ?aid. wa j a thins: apart and the eloquent man. i "like ;,the . rtoer, . was ' born nd no i made."' The former RoH?a.gue-of L'oyd ! Qeorge said he had heard very few !e-ioquent speeches. He had, however.! ; listened to many very fine rhetorical j efforts but the differences between . fO-ofiverce and rlif''or!C was a? wide a j the poles. Eloquence was "fire" and j : rhetoric, even at its best, was 'fire-! ;vbr!s." Eloquence a!?o was always i

.rtmple. There was nothine strained ! mechanical about it and it was not Iby,' piling up imarea , but by . some ,virifred expression that the effect was ' Produced .

'Xo man could secure, still less could!

he rf 'tain the confidence of th? House

of Commcr.s or of th country unless; he had evuned a r'-'putation for "di?- j

interest edneps and sincerit.v." Mr. Bona.r Law declared, and there va? c-rVly one way in w hich such a. rputa-

.tion could be perniauntly retained ',

and that wa.s by the actual possession of those qualities. The strongest human motive, he said, should be "a jwriise of duty." In looking out unon life, it wa. right fhpt men phould be anbit.ious. it Wa Kirht that th?y should strive to excel,

lut if it; Was merely a selfifh ambition there would be in that no "vision)

Splendid."

Above. Chief Justice Edward D. White, left, and Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. Below, Justice Joseph llcKenna, left, and Justice William R. Day. Four members of the U. S. supreme court are in a position tc take advantage of the ruling that a supreme court justice may retire aftc .0 years of service, providing he has reached the age wf seventy. Chief Justice Edward D. White is seventy-seven and ha3 been a member of the court since 1894. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes is eighty-one and was appointed in 1902. Justice Joseph McKenna is seventyight and has served since 1897. Justice William R. Day is seventy-two and was appointed in 1903.

I si

i 4

ROYAL PALM WRECK DEATH LIST NOW TOTALS FIVE SOMERSET. Ky.. April 11. Ephraim Richmond of Esprett. Mich., died here as a result of internal injuries re

ceived in the wreck of the Royal Palm on the Southern railway at New River, Tenn., Wednesday, making the fifth fatality resulting from the wreck.

.'.Excavation in Mexican ruin.s hr. revealed roads paved with huge block? ef ptonp.

A CLEAR C0IY1PLEX10N

3tuddy Cheeks SparklingEyes I Most Women Can Have i " a Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Knowa . Ohio Physician v Dr.F.M.Edwards for 17 years treated -Scores of women for liver and bowel ail- ; .Tnents. During these years he gave to i 'his patients a prescription made of a ; "few well-known vegetable ingredients "mixed with olive oil, naming them j Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. You will ! .uM v.,

- jhiiuw ujciu tjy uicix uuic wiuit ;. These tablets are wonder-workers on : the liver and bowels, which cause a normal action, carrying off the wasta 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, y " Thousands of women and men take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets the sucl cessful substitute for calomel now and - then just to keep them fiL 15 and COc -r-Aivertsement '

SUSTAINS BREAD IT'S the one food that al- ; ways satisfies because it's first in nourishment first in deliciousness first in economy Good Bread fmore than ''fills the bill" Jor bread satisfaction. , '''; At Your Grocer's NeU Bread

For the American Boy SMART shoes that meet every requirement of style, comfort and economy. Bring the boy here and let us prove how completely we can meet his ideas and yours. We are showing some particularly attractive Boys' Oxfords stylish, serviceable and sensibly priced.

t i

Wessel Shoe Co.

&M

718 Main St.

Sherwin-Williams FLAT-TONE

Flat-Tone walls and ceiling are decorative in the highest sense. Beyond that, they are the most sanitary of all wall treatments; can be cleaned when soiled, are restful to the eyes, and wonderfully durable Before you decorate look into Flat-Tone. Compare the cost with any other

form of wall treatment. Then consider Flat-Tone and its other advantages. This is the day of painted walls and ceilings, and Flat-Tone is a big factor in forwarding its popularity. Let us demonstrate to you its rich, warm tones, its depth and beautiful multi-color ' effects. Ask about our free decorative service.

i - .

Are you giving the wife and children. square deal? Do you know what pleasure the little ones will derive from a house of your own? Their own yard to play in a whole house to themselves! Don't delay any longer go out and get a house this spring and make the wife and chilcVen happy. Don't worry about furnishing it we will be glad to help you out. You can furnish your whole home by our liberal credit policy, pay a few dollars down and the rest in small payments spread over many months. Come in and talk this over with us if you have any consideration for your family.

LOUIS XVI BEAUTIFUL SUITE $312

After all, there is no period to compare with the Louis XVI for grace and luxurj This suite is a true example of Louis XVI design and possesses all the famous characteristics of that royal period. Consists of three pieces, a tall vanity dresses with three mirrors, roomy buffet and doublesized bow end bed. Finished in an ivory enamel. Be sure to see it.

Genuine Brass Bed

$36

Consider what a remarkable value this Bed is at the price we quote. Made of genuine brass, with large posts and big colonial caps. Comes as shown in a beautiful ribbon finish. Don't miss this value.

A

THREE-PIECE SUITE Astonishingly Low Price

$79.00

TTVf

Wing Back Rocker

When it comes to Chairs designed for beauty and comfort, you can not equal the wing-back oesign. This Rocker is finished in mahogany, with back and seat of cane.

Just for Comfort Overstuffed Q- Q Davenport. . . . P J-Oi This Davenport was designed just for comfort and how well it fulfills its mission ! Big and roomy, with deep scat and upholstered in a fine grade tapestry. We know you will adore this Davenport.

If you are looking for a real value in a Reed Suite, here is your opportunity. This three-piece Suite is woven of the finest reed and is finished in an ivory enamel.

Mahogany Chiffonier.

$67

Here is a convenient li'tle piece a mahogany chifforobe that will afford you ample room to store your clothes and to keep them in good condition. Big and roomy, finit-hed in a rich mahogany.

:

Visit This Big Store

920 to 926 Main Street

A. G. Luken Drug Co. . 626-628 Man Street $Frank Jacobs iuW,srL 623 N. .12 Strest