Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 177, 6 June 1921 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., - MONDAY, JUNE 6, ,1921.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM

AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Published Every Evening Except Sunday by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium; Building, North Ninth and Sailor Street. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Second-Class Mail Matter. ' MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS . -Th Associated Press is exclusively entitled to tha use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not ' otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local news published heretn. All rights of-republic.tlon of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Chancellor Wirth's Program

' Clamorous opposition to the imposition

of

heavy taxes by the opponents of the Wirth government has not deterred the German chancellor from proceeding to execute a plan which will entail hard work and economy for every citizen of Germany. Having accepted the allied reparations terms, the chancellor proposes to pay the debt by organizing the industries of Germany and revising the revenue law so as to enable the Germans to raise the money. A 20 per cent levy on capital is one of the Wirth proposals. Certain industries will be taken over by the "government to eliminate private profit. The 26 per cent tax on exports is to be raised by internal taxation and turned over to the allies. . Chancellor Wirth points out to the German people the necessity of giving up luxuries, practicing self-denial, increasing production and utilizing all the national resources to meet the reparations claims. It will not be easy for Chancellor Wirth to carry out this program, but he has had the courage to tell the German people that it is the only manner in which the goodwill and respect of the allied governments may be regained. The chancellor knows that the allied and associated governments will not listen to excuses and evasions, but will insist that the Germans pay for the damage which they inflicted. The German people will learn that the chancellor is right

in his estimation of the determination of the allies to insist on the reparations, and the quicker they arrange their internal affairs to meet the payments the better off will they be.

Vote for the City Manager System With the special election only a week off, voters should not overlook the necessity of going to the polls on June 14 to help decide if the city is to abandon the federal system for the city manager plan of government. This issue, as has been pointed out repeatedly, will be decided at the polls and nowhere else. Advocates of the city manager plan must go to the polls next Tuesday if they wish to win the victory. Many a salutary measure has been lost because voters neglected to cast their ballots, or believed their votes were not necessary to make the victory complete. Good citizenship shows itself in the utilization of the means furnished for the purpose of asserting that quality. A good citizen knows that the ballot box is one of the means supplied by the founders of the republic for the settlement of political questions. Changes in the form of gov-, ernment in the United States are brought about by voting and not by street corner arguments and altercations. The right to vote is a privilege which some of us disregard or underestimate. Consequently, many a reform in the municipal, state and national governments is defeated at the polls, not because it lacked merit, but because its advocates lacked sufficient interest to vote. If the city manager plan is defeated next Tuesday because its proponents were too lazy to vote, they cannot shift the responsibility. Voters are urged to go to the polls in order that the issue may be fairly tested and the preponderance of public opinion established. The majority rules under our form of government. If you believe in the city manager plan, vote your sentiments next Tuesday, June 14, and do not depend upon the other man's vote to express your sentiment.

Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON

KEEP YOUR WORD. ; You'll be rated as a bird, in the busy haunts of trade, if you always keep your word, never let a promise fade. If you promise you will pay for your wagonload of lime on the twenty-ninth of May, do your paying right on time. Then the smiling merchant prince will remark, with beaming eye, "It is many ages since I have seen so prompt, a guy." And the merchant prince will say to the other princes near, "There is no more honest joy from Dansheba olar to Deer." If you promise you will meet James Adolphus lArthur Mix on the corner of th street at ten minutes after six, do not make Adolphus wait for the fraction of an hour, or he'll think you are a skate, and his spirit will be sour. And upon a future darr'when you need him in your biz, and approach him. he will say, "Moly Hoses and Gee Whiz! Once I had a date with you. and you kept It in a horn; so I naturally view you and all your works with scorn." One has great renown for wit. one can wrestle like a

Gotch, and another makes a hit when J

be warbles "Larboard Watch"; one can write a classy ode, one can rear up and orate, one can .scorch along the road at a Barney Oldfleld gait. There are many kinds of fame, and -some samples are absurd: but we all .admire the gam? of the man who keeps his word. He is loaded to the guards with fhe laurel wreaths he's won, when the statesmen and the bards retail at ten cents a ton.

Good Evening

The commission appointed a couple of years ago to investigate profiteeering has already found out that there has been some profiteering. Why Pick On Us? Dear Roy There's a goof in our office you ought to introduce to the weather man. He always knows when

to carry his raincoat and umbrella and j whn to leave 'em home. If it looks cloudy in the morning and I take my.

rain protectors witn me, it sure !encugh clears up by the time I get to the office. Then said goof gives me the merry ha, ha. The next day it looks pretty bright and I don my straw lid and glad rags, only to be drenched when I go to lunch. Said goof, however, has brought his rain togs- with him. Can't you do something about it? J. JAY. Marcel's Statistics Ninety per cent of the landlords nil! raie the rent if they can get it. The lenses used in the eyeglasses in New York alone would make enough seidels for the entire population to drink 9.S65.654 gallons of real beer. Forty per cent of the people have no idea what Silesia means. Many of them think that it is some kind of salts.

Eight per cent of the women under

stand Daseoan ana are worm taKing to a game. The rest use tueir intuition and get away with it. If the writers don't coddle Georges to death before the fight, he may have a. chance.

TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can," "Take IV -Up' KEEP LEARNING A very great man went out of the world when Chief Justice White of the United States Supreme Court died His tastes were simple. He was democratic, gentle, extremely sympathetic, keenly humorous, yet with a mind which towered in strength. One who knew him very well says that he was a great reader, a great student that he rose very early and sat up very late, closeting himself in his library where he constantly sought to improve his mind. "To learn something," was the way he put it. If you have ever read Green's History of England, this story will interest you. On hi3 tombstone ha had this inscription placed: "Here lies John Richard Green, Historian of the English people. He died learning." You who accumulate knowledge are far wiser than the one who heaps up his money. For your learning can never be taken from you. And it's "tax free!" In a home the other day I saw a boy buried in a book. I stood and looked at him and said to myself that there was a boy who would be heard from some day. Appreciation is one of the great gifts. And the more you learn the more you are able to appreciate. To walk into the chambers of a rich mind is like being led into some beautiful nook of Nature. There are the new thrills whereia all the cells of one's mind are aroused to attention. I brought to my library the other evening six new books by a writer with whom I have been but slightly acquainted. He is without doubt one of America's great writers of prose George Edward Woodberry. The reading of his essays is like the breathing of cool mountain air. I wish that I had found him long ago. We are prone too much to flounder in our daily tasks. How much happier and stronger we would be if we kept learning more. How great a thing it is to keep thinking, observing and reading! For each means something new learned. You have badly lost a day on which you cannot look back and recall something useful that you have learned.

.J

be applied to all Kansans. Others attribute the word to Col. Charles R. Jennison, one of the free State leaders, claiming that he "coined" it. "Jayhawking" was the term used to describe the aepredations of the Kansans and they were called "Jayhawkers," as the term "Border Ruffians" was applied to the' Missouri proslavery men. Subscriber When was the American Museum of Natural History organized? The American Museum of Natural History, organized in was housed at first in the old Arsenal building in Central park, New York. The cornerstone of the first section erected in Manhattan square was laid by President Grant, June 2. 187 4, and the building was formally opened to the public by President Hayes Decer.?r 22, 1S77. Since then seven scions have been added.

When a Feller Needs a Friend

J,ge J 1 SEEsllll - JmPfjm -

r

Correct English

CprM N. Y. Tr&aa U.

Don't Say: He unjustly IMPUGNS my honesty. He CHAMPIONED the party. He CALCULATES to go to college next fall. Senator Smith, in his speech. OPPOSED the bill. But the people, at election time, showed by their votes that thev were ANTAGONIZED to his vews. Say: He unjustly IMPUTES my honesty. He SUPPORTED the partv. He INTENDS to go to college next fall. Senator Smith, in his speech, ANTAGONIZED the bill. But the people, at election time, showed by their votes that they were OPPOSED to his views.

Summer Gotdo Cause Heaciacheo

Grove'a 07 Laxative Broma

Quinine tablets Relieve the Headache by Curing the Cold. joe. The genuine bears this signature

Who's Who in the Day's News

Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today

Plans for an insane ward in the county Jail, in case the county council was to appropriate $6,000 for the purpose were inspected by the county commissioners. The plans called for a building providing for five rooms for patients , a bath room, a large corridor and a vestibule.

HUGH M. DORSEY Gov. Hugh M. Dorsey, of Georgia, is about to retire from office. Dorsey r? 1 t i n .111 . k Y. ; 1 ; , I. a

-.iii vi uiuiacu n uiic ill i li . i

governors otrice dv nis courageous handling of farm labor conditions. Dorsey waged war against "peonage"

and sought to ini

prove conditions generally in the rural sections. - Dorsey was born at Faye tte v i 1 1 e, Ga., July 10,1371. He received his B. A. at the University of Georgia and oras a. student in the law department of the University of V i rginia. In 1894 he became associated with a new law

firm of which his father was a member. He was connected with them until 1916. In addition to his legal duties Dorsey was also solicitor general of the Atlanta judicial circuit. He has been governor of Georgia since 1917. The governor-elect who will succeed Dorsey June 28, id Thomas W. Hardwick.

prove it," contradicted Monahan. "By mistake I was reported -killed entirely in the war, and one day me sister went to a medium who told her I w as wishin" I was back on earth. And at that very time I was on a transport in a high fea, d'ye mind?" Sir Herbert Tree, the English actor.

i was once buttonholed in the corridor : of the theater by a bore whom he par

ticularly wanted to avoid. The actor was in the make-up of Caliban at the time. "Surely you know me. Sir Herbert?" said the bore. "I don't think so," replied the actor. "I'm Mr. So-and-So," persisted the

other. "I was introduced to you a few days ago." "I'm so sorry," replied Tree. "I did not recognize you in my make-up."

Eleven muscles work together to pucker up the moulh and twenty-one pairs of muscles help to make a smile.

ABOUT TO GIVE UP HIS JOB WHEN HE HEARD OF DRECO

Muncie man had a tired, no account feeling every morning and had bad taste in his mouth. Often had dizzy spe!ls. A friend recommended Dreco and now he is on the job, feeling as well as ever.

Dinner Siories

"Divvle a bit do I believe the messages these mediums are after gettin' from the dead." declared Dugan. "Ye can't be tellin' whether they're true or not." "More fool ye. Ye can and I can

PALE CHILDREN NEED IRON. Lack of iron in the blood saps the strength of mind and body. Give the Kiddies GROVE'S IRON TONIC SYRUP and watch its Strengthening Effect. Very pleasant to take. 75c. Advertisement.

AH! EPSOM SALTS ri LIKE LEMONADE ' - You can now buy epsom salts without the awful taste and nausea, by Asking your druggist for a handy package of "Epsonade Salts" which looks Andiacts exactly like epsom salts, because it is real epsom salts, combined with fruit derivative salts, giving it the taste of sparkling lemonade. , . Take a tablespoonful in a glass of cold water whenever you feel bilious, headachy or constipated. "Epsonade " Salts" is the much talked of discovery : of the American Epsom Association. Advertisement. .

I Answers to Questions

VREADER There are some odd names given to the inhabitants of our States, such as "Gun Flints" to Rhode Islanders; "Leatherheads" to the dwellers in Pennsylvania: "Tar Heels" to North Carolina people, but "Jayhawkers," the name given to Kansans, interests me enough to ask where it came from. Can you tell me? Wilder's Annals of Kansas gives this history of the word: "One autumn morning in the year 1S5G, Pat Devlin, a free State Irishman, rode into Osawatomie on a horse heavily laden with many kinds of goods. "Have you been foraging, Pat?" "Yes, I've been jayhawking.' In Ireland we have a bird we call the 'jayhawk'; it

and jayhawking is a good name for

the business I've been in." Col. Jennison, early in the war (between the pro-slavery and free State forces) called himself and his soldiers "jayhawkers." and the name soon came to

DYE ONLY WITH "DIAMOND DYES"

ASPIRIN

Name "Bayer" on Genuine

Rradra mar oblnln attawer 1o qnesHon by TrlHnr The Palladium Question aad Aiawrra drpartmv- All qneatiana ahnuld be written pl.fcnly and brivflr. Annrra wll? riven briefly.

Careless Shampooing Spoils the Hair

"I'm mighty glad a friend of mine told me about Drcco. for I was about to stop work and go heme for I felt so bad. said Mr. George Stowe, who lives on South Ohio Ave., Muncie. Ind. "Every morning I'd get up feeling tired, stretchy, no account and with a nasty taste in my mouth. Often at work I'd get so dizzy that I'd have to sit down till it passed cff. One day a friend of mine advised me to try Drecc, for lots of pecple around here were praising it so highly. He had taken it himself and it had done him a lot of good, so I got a bottle. "This Dreco went right straight to my liver and worked it off, which put a stop to those dizzy spells, headaches and foul taste in my mouth. Every morning now I roll out feeling great, full of energy and fit for work. I feel better than I have in months, so it is easy to gee why I am recommending Drcco to others." All druggists now sell Dreco and it is being especially introduced in Richmond by Thistlethwaite's seven drug stores. Advertisement.

fl'ClOR immediate relief -L from that eczema 1 pre- ' scribe Resinol Ointment" That is what thousands of - doctors bare been doing for years. They know it is cooling, sooth in?, eaay to aae, and rarnly faile to ottcona eczema and Btaiilar ill. At ail druggirta, Resinol Lt u hM roa a Miopia. 1m. 10-T. Rortnoi. B.itiaw. Md.

The Miller-Kemper Co. 'Everything To Build Anything" LUMBER MILLWORK BUILDERS' SUPPLIES Phones 3247 and 3347

WATCH REPAIRING If you want your watch to run and

aepena on good time, bring them to, us. A specialty on high-grade watch repairing C. & O. watch inspector. HOMRIGHOUS

'021 Main St. Phone 1867

New York Dental Parlors Gold Crown $4.00 Plates $8.00 Gas for Extraction $2.50 DR. J. W. GANS. Open Evenings 8th and Main Phone 1378

John H. Niewoehner

6anltary and Heating Engineer

81P S. G St. Phone 1828

Uliuuuf iiuuuiuiufliaiutwmuumii lutinini niiLniinutitmiuuiumiMnnnit.

! GARDEN HOSE j 25-ft. and 50-ft. and cut sizes I IRVIN REED & SON j

".,iUiiUMitiu:HiinmiiiifiuiiiiiMrin!iiiiiiMriiiifimuiuiiiH!rfTmtinifmimjiinu

Men's Light Weight Suits

$8.50 and up -WHEN STORE

712 Main

Soap should be used very carefully, if you watt to keep your hair looking

worries its prey before devouring lt-rrits best. Most soaps and prepared

shampoos contain too much alkili. This

dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and ruins it. ' The best thing for steady use la Mulsified cocoanut oil shampoo (which is pure and greaseless), and is better than anything else you can use. One or two teaspoonsful of Mulsi fied will cleanse the hair and scalp thoroughly. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in. It makes an abundance of rich creamy lather, which rinses out easily, removing every particle of dust, dirt, dandru'.t and excessive oil. The hair driee qaickly and evenly, and It leaves the scalp

Unless you ask for "Diamond Dyes" I soft and the hair fine and silky,

you may get a poor dye that streaks, bright lustrous, fluffy and easy to

spots, fades and ruins your goods,

Every package of Diamond Dyes contains simple directions for home dyeing or tinting any new, rich, fadeless color into .garments or draperies of any material. No mistakes! No failures! Advertisement.

manage. Yon can get Malsified cocoanut oil shampoo at any pharmacy, it's very cheap, and a few ounces will supply every member of the family for months. Be sure your druggist gives you Mulsified-. Advertisement.

Beware! Unless, vnu s.cm th na m

"Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre-1 scribed by physicians for twenty-one! years and proved safe by millions, j Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer package for Colds. Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago, and for Pain. Handy tin 1 boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of AsDirin cost few cents DniM'istii olezn!

sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. Advertisement.

WORK SHIRTS Big, full cut, 79 Rapp's Cut Price Co. 525-529 Main St.

The Store of Unmatchable Bargains

Always Good

BREAD

Pure and "Wholesome Made by ZWISSLER'S

imitimtiimtmHHiniiHi-tmimtmaumumw ! Klehfoth-Niewoehner Co. ! COAL Builders' Supplies I (iiliiia,iifiufmuiiiitii;iHi!itiummiuitti(itiiiMiiiutfuiiuiinituniiiHfiini:iii7

MONEY TO LOAN

PRUDENTIAL

Phone 1727 Room 202 K. of P. Temple

PRICE COAL CO. B17-519 N, 6th St. PHONE 1050 Dealers in High Grade Coal

I DUI LUAL NOW t

T 9 -

I v e nave tne right coal at the right i price. Jellico & Tocahontas Lump, j 1 Superior Ice & Coal Co. 1 N. W. 3rd &. Chestnut Phone 3121 f liitiliiwimfrinmirtinTwiiinfiirimniiiimitinniiiiinMiiiiiiM-TTriii mm

Full Coverage Insurance on all kinds of Automobiles. Insure before it is too late. KELLY & KECK (Insurance Service) 901 ' Main St. Phone 2150

LUMBER and COAL MATHER BROS. Co.

See Us for Bungalow

i Draperies 5 i iHoIthouse Furniture Store) I 530 Main St. LwamiaVUiimunautMiMunB

DR. R H. CARNES DENTIST -Phono 2665

Rooms 15-16 Comstock Building

lots Main street

Open Sundays and Evenings by

appointment

wuiiuiui;BiwwBiimmmn!uira!i!mu!iimi!inimuut:mmjimiui!a A. O. MARTIN 1 DENTIST

Colonial Bldg.

H'icinJiiraiiiniiMmTmiuiununiiHfUifliriiimimuiTinramrtjJnmmmmitfTrr5

Phone 1637

B 11 'r-

PURE

Ice Creaw

BOSTON STORE Only One Price

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

STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE Made From Liberty Mills "Self Rising Biscuit Hour" is most delicious. Ask your grocer.

GOOD CLEAN COAL Prompt Delivery RICHMOND COAL COMPANY Telephones 3165-3379

m

3

Special Prices on Manhattan and Apex Tires Oldsmobilc Salesroom 1026 Main St.

We Undersell on Porch Furniture, Rujjs, Swings, Refrigerators, etc. Weiss Furniture Store 505-13 Main