Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 199, 2 July 1921 — Page 6

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM

AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Published Every .Evening Except Sunday by : Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Street. Entered, aC the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as , . Second-Class Mall Matter. MEMBER OP TJIB ASSOCIATED PRESS Ths Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatch herein are also reserved. The Fourth of July Celebration Although the Fourth of July celebration recalls to mind the founding of the republic by the colonists, the anniversary this year directs our thoughts to the disabled veterans of the World war. Not tha the real significance of the Declaration of Independence and of the Revolutionary war is . unworthy of attention, but because the suffering and neglect of the crippled veterans of the last war call for our consideration. The patriots of the Revolutionary war suffered privations and hardships that have not been forgotten by the republic. Every school boy knows what Valley Forge stands for. But ever since that day the nation has vowed that

never again should its soldiers be compelled to starve for food and suffer for lack of clothing and fuel. And yet that's precisely the condition of many of them today. Washington, under the fire of an outraged public opinion, has speeded up relief measures, cut red tape, and simplified the method of obtaining compensation and medi

Cashel The huge stone Cashel bridge in County Tyrone, Ireland, was recently blown up by Sinn FeinGood Evening By ROY K. MOULTON THE ANGEL OF PATIENCE. To weary hearts, to mourning homes, Go(fs meekest angel gently comes; No power has he to banish pain, Or give us back our lost again; And yet in tenderest love our dear And Heavenly Father sends him here. There's quiet in the angel's glance. There's rest in his still countenance: He mocks no grief with idle cheer, Nor wounds with words the mourner's ear; But ills end woes he may not cure He kindly trains us to endure. Angel of Providence! sent to calm Our feverish brows and cooling palm; To lay the storms of hope and fear And reconcile life's smile and tear; The throbs of wounded pride to still. And make our own our Father's will. O thou who mournest on thy way, With longings for the close of day; He walks with thee, that Angel kind. And gently whispers, "Be resigned; Bear up, bear on, the end shall tell The dear Lord ordereth all things welK" "I spilled the beans." said Sims recently in Washington. At last he has made one speech with which everybody will agree. A GOOD THING TO KNOW. Now that it is hot There is one tiling You should remember and Allow it to be firmly impressed Upon your mind and it is something That everybody will tell you. The great secret is that It Is the humidity and not the heat That makes you suffer. Having firmly established that In your brain pan, You have solved the problem And you will be nice and Comfortable and cool. EXTREME. Her dress aroused his levity, He almost had a fit. Why so, you ask? Well, brevity You know's the soul of wit Dinner Stories ThA wife of the nrofiteer was hav ing great difficulty over the furnishing of the large house. She did not know the names of ordinary articles of furniture, and the more ornamental things completely puzzled her. One day a woman said to her: "Have you read 'Lamb's Tales'?" She thought for a while and then answered, nervously, "No, but I've got a gray sheepskin rug." The teacher had spent twenty minutes impressing on her pupils the correct pronunciation of the word "case." The following morning she wanted to find out if the children remembered, so she turned to one little boy suddenly and demanded: "What do you see on the mantel piece at home. Jackie?" "Father's feet, miss," came the prompt reply. Chicory, grown In Bavsria. is use.i ail ver Europe as a substitute for xSe.

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cal relief. The country is glad to see this im-j provement, but it is not sleeping on the job. It is watching how the changes will work and what improvement will take place. One Richmond veteran, who was gasssed overseas and incapable of following his vocation, filed his claim for compensation more than a year ago. He said that he had been informed by Jep. Elliott that his claim had been allowed, and that he would receive $40 monthly hereafter and compensation from the time of his disability. We hope that under the new system disabled men need not wait a year for an adjustment. This young man literally was "ticked to death," as he puts it, to receive the money, for it removed a burden of worry and has enabled him to address himself to the task of recuperating without fretting as to how he would have enough money to pay his expenses. Citizens of the republic will do well on the Fourth to think of the disabled and crippled vet

erans of the World war, for if the heroes of the Revolutionary war founded the republic, the sacrifices of the heroes of the World war perpetuated it. If they had not endured the onslaughts of the enemy and offered themselves as champions of freedom, the free institutions of this republic might today be only a memory and a chapter of history. We owe them a debt of gratitude which we never can repay fully, but we can at least show our appreciation by demanding that the crippled and helpless soldiers receive adequate compensation and the best medical care the nation can afford.

BRIDGE BLOWN UP IN IRISH REVOLUTION

Bridge, County Tyrone, Ireland, as it appears now.

ers to harass British troop3. The body of one man was found in the ruins. The bridge now is

Two Minutes of Optimism Ey HERMAN J. STICH

SILENCING THE DEVIL I once knew a small town real estate man who had a passion for buying up ground to the point where he deprived himself of comforts and even stinted himself of necessities. He used to insist: "I'm not greedy about land all I want is what joins mine!" One day he saw the light and rid himself of his mania by the rather drastic means of selling all the land he had begged, borrowed, bought and stolen and giving almost all the proceeds to charity. If you find yourself getting very close, and want to be cured, begin to scatter, like a certain wealthy farmer in New York State. He was a died-in-the-wool miser, but one day he made up his mind no longer to be. Soon after, a poor man who had been burnt out and had no provisions came to him for help. This was the farmer's opportunity to be liberal, and he determined to make the most of it. He went to his smoke house to give the man a ham; but on his way to get it the tempter whispered to him: "Give him the smallest ham you've got." Old prejudice dies hard, and the farmer had a struggle whether he should give away a large ham or a small one; but finally he took down the largest ham he could find. "You are a fool," the devil whispered. "If you don't keep still," the farmer replied, " I will give him every ham I have In the smoke house!" This silenced the devil. There is a moral somewhere in these incidents for every one of us, and this moral is that one way to eliminate a bad habit is to over-indulge its corresponding virtue. Are you a "confirmed" grouch? Try being an inveterate cheer-spreader. Do you fly off the handle easily? Try "keeping your shirt on" even under justifiable povocation. Are you "naturally" lazy and inert? Get an extra-sized hustle on every day for a month say. Do you do only what you like and refuse to handle anything just because you are disinclined? Then at least once a day, do something worthwhile that you don't like at all even if it means reading a good book, studying, buying a thrift stamp or two, distributing sunshine, and holding up (not down) your job better t"han anybody else can possibly do it. Copyright, 1921, by Public Ledger Co.

Who's Who in the Day's News ELMER SCHLESSINGER. The appointment of Elmer Schlessinger as general counsel of the United States shipping board has been announced by A. D. Lasker, the new chairman of the board. Schlessinger will have charge of settling 500 law cases pending in the district and state courts of the country against the fleet corporation and the shipping board. These claims involve approximately $ t0,000,000. Schlessinger Is a k 8&ri native or cnicago fV ii fi&ik. and Is forty years old. He has followed in, his father's footsteps as a law yer. H e obtained his law degree in 1903 at Harvard liw school after studying at the preparatory school and university. He was admitted to the bar the same year. He entered the offices of Mayer, Meyer, Austrian & Piatt and nine years ago was admitted to that firm. He is married and has two children. In forty-two countries of the world there are more than 8,000.00 men under arms and twice as many in the reserves.

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RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

a menace, as the break in the span- cannot be seen from one approach. Correct English Don't Say: He knows SOMEWHAT of French. He looks SOMETHING like hii father. I am SOME tired. He has SOME new suit; hasn't he' (Slang.) A politician, SOMETHING successful, but dishonest. Say: He knows SOMETHING of French. He looks SOMEWHAT like his father. I am SOMEWHAT tired. He has SOMETHING of a new suit; hasn't he? A politician, SOMEWHAT successful, but dishonest. Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON TEARS, IDLE TEARS. It doesn't help, when trouble's here, to shed the brackish, briny tear. I well recall the fateful day when mj old hen refused to lay; I needed eggs to poach and boil, and brace me up for honest toil; but when I sought the biddy's coop, she'd laid no eggs and cared no whoop. And I had fed her costly hay and kindred grub, that she might lay. I might have wept and torn my hair and rent my beard in my despair; instead of that I seized the fowl, beheaded her, despite her howl, and had her for an evening meal, and then remarked, "How good I feel!" An so I make the best of things when grief in my direction

"V O m nd 8 on Time IS' I In naVinS Certificate Yoa I VU V A"&3 can start savings I account any time. Interest paid Jan. 1st and July 1st. I

The People's Home and Savings Ass'n. 29 N. 8th. Cap. Stock $2,500,000 Safety Boxes for rent

SUN - TELEGRAM, RICHMOND,

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TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can", "Take It", "Up" IN SINCERITY The pungent fragrance of the flower is its evidence of sincerity. One knows at once that it is real. Men and women carry about them an invisible atmosphere which either attracts or repels, builds or destroys, sweetens or sours. Instinctively one feels realness sincerity. A baby feels it. A horse does. A dog gets it at once. There is no way in the world whereby falseness may be concealed. Sincerity looms like day and radiates as do the rays of the sun. In sincerity are all the precious treasures of life warmly and securely wrapped. And through sincerity are hearts made like pure gold a thousand fine! We know sincerity because we see it so often. In eyes that look right into ours, in the strength and fineness of the handshake, and by the very mode and method of the words that reach our sight and hearing from the heart-rooms of these we trust. With sincerity ruling the one we love, we can go a million miles or more in the forgiving line. For sincerity, somehow, seems to pivot all else. It is impossible to be insincere and people not know it. No one has ever been able to conceal character. Words, deeds, fame, money, social standing character walks at the head and preceeds them all. But without sincerity, character is like unto a crumbled ruin desolute and full of tragedy. Strive in sincerity.

swings. I once possessed a balky steed, and when it balked 'twas vain ; to plead or weep or let hot language roll, or soak it with a cedar pole. When on a journey I would start, I j took some volumes in the cart; when balkiness obsessed the steed, I'd open some good book and read, and spend an hour in comfort there, instead of pawing of the air. And when the horse desired to go, I'd speak a loud, ! commanding "Whoa!" And so he quit the balking "Whoa!" And so a trotter earned much fame, became the best of bald-faced roans, and brought me in two hundred bones. I always make the best of things, and am as happ as nine kings. Answers to Questions CLUB MEMBERS To enlighten a discussion among friends will you kindly inform them wnere the Indians originated. No one knows where the Indian came from, or how long he has inhabited the continent. By some scientists he is believed to be descended from the tribes of Central and Northeastern Asia, for the two resemble each other in nearly every physical character. Stories, once widely believed, that the Indians were descendants of the lost Hebrew tribes, or of shipwrecked Europeans have been proved impossible, for the Indian languages are absolutely different from other tongues and must have been spoken for thousands of years. The generally accepted theory is that the natives of America crossed Asia at Bering Strait, or father south by a passage which has cow disappeared. N. B. A friend has told me .that the majority of circus animals are trained in Germany. Is this true? Are there no animals taken in the jungle and trained for the circu3? There are ! men who make a business of trapping wild animals for the circus and museums. It is also true that many of the animals on exhibition are born in captivity. Readers may obtnln iinrrr to questions by TrrltlnK The Pollnilium Question and Answers department. AJt questions should be written plainly and briefly. Anwcr will be srlven briefly. THEY ARE MII.1J BIT EFFECTIVE A person with inactive or slowed up digestive organs suffers doubly from j hot weather. Billiousness. headaches. ! blurred vision, bad breath, coated tongue are almost certain to be present with a mass of heat-producing undigested food in the stomach. Foley Cathartic Tablets keep the digestive organs active and the system fit and fine, purged of poisons. W. X). Kennedy, Albany, N. Y.. says: "Foley Cathartic Tablets are mild but effective." A. G. Luken & Co... 626-628 Main. Advertisement.. jiiminrnmimiuuniainiiinimiiinfiiiRiiiiiHiiiniiiniiiiiiiittimiiuiwiniiiiniiH Bring Us Your 1 VU LCAN izi ng I I Work Guaranteed 1 1 f Richmod Tire Service i! Corner 11th and Main ; tiiiiniiHHiiiitHHHiiiiiiiiminntiiuiiiimiiiiHiiiiiMimiuniitmmmmiitiiiinni. j

IND., SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1921.

When a Feller Needs a Friend

.J THE FORUM Editor of The Palladium: j In your editorial of June 27 you; i quote President Lowell of Harvard asj follows: "What we need now is not' more organization or more machinery,) HOW WOMEN QF MIDDLE AGE May Escape the Dreaded Sufferings of that Period by Taking Mrs. Block's Advice Hopkins, Minn. "During Change of Life 1 bad hot flashes and suffered for two years, l saw Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound advertised in the paper and got good results from taking it. I recom I to mend your medicine my mends and you may publish this fact as a testisH monial. " Mrs.RoBERTCLOCK.tSOX MZ, Hopkins, Minn. It has been said that not one woman in a thousand passes this perfectly natural change without experiencing a train of very annoying and sometimes painful symptoms. Those dreadful hot flashes, sinking spells, spots before the eyes, dizzy spells, nervousness, are only a few of the symptoms. Every woman at this age should profit by Mrs. Block's experience and try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable ComKund will help you, write to Lydia E. nkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., about your health. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. Advertisement. muuutiuiiiuutuiuiiiiuimimttiuimiituitimraimHftimimitiftittiiituiiiiiniiN I OFFICE DESKS and f CHAIRS ! BARTEL & ROHE ! 921 Main umnnrmnmtmnmtmttmminimHumiuuiiiiimfinninuirniuniutmiiirHun Why take any chances with a burglar? Rent a Safety Deposit Box First National Bank Southwest Corner Ninth and Main

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but more thought, personal thought; clear, far-reaching and profound." Which is very true. Why did President Lowell say this? Because he knows, as every one who is thinking seriously knows, that the most critical time of our republic is here and it means that something heroic must be done to save it from complete destruction. But "more thought" is of no use without free speech and a loyal American press to give circulation to it Not free speech which would run into license, but that which would coordinate against the extravagant democracy which has run our ship of state upon the rocks of despotism and which has made "the supreme law of the land" not worth the parchment

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TRACY'S COFFEE Always Satisfies we seii Skinners the highest grade Macaroni, Spaghetti, Egg Noodles and other Macaroni Products. Watch for KNOLLEN BERG'S JULY SALE July 6 to 16 GEO. W. MANSFIELD Architect Room 336 Colonial Bldg. nnmnninmt niiniiiiiiiiiiiimiiin:iiiuuiiiMiiiiiiimiiiuiiiiiiiimHiiHniiiiniji j BUY JELLICO COAL NOW j I Independent Ice & Fuel Company ffttmituiitHmuinminmMitiwniumwwMUim GOODRICH Quality TIRES Rodefeld Garage Vest End Main St. Bridge Phone 3077 MARVELSEAL Liquid Roof Cement It contains no coal tar Hackman, Klehfoth & Co.

S I II i.f3ngMsssssy j ALWAYS UNDERSELL i

O R rEAN-UPPmCES ON aIFS J-A Vy JLV IRONERS !'!' SUMMER GOODS j Stanley Plumbing & Electric Co. ssssggpTjjjragO 0 m 910 Main St. Phone 1286 j ; XFCC07tn0T '

upon which It Is written. The err J for the Americanization of the masses, which Is sadly needed to save our republic. The supreme question is this: How can the masses be taught pure Americanism unless the true standard is set up? The people have been wrongly taught that democracy Is Americanism, a "government of the people, for the people, by the people," when it really is a constitutional republic, having a supreme law in the interest of all people and which Is above them all and to which the president, the supreme court of the United States and the representatives of the people are subject and oath-bound. What we need now is a loyal American press which will unflinchingly let the people know what true Americanism is. Democracy has put our republic in jeopardy by letting down the constitutional barrier which was wisely erected by our fathers "to keep the republic upon a safe and sure basis.-' JOHN MADDOCK. Minneapolis, Minn., June 30.

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AMI Itched Something Fierce. Lost Rest. Cuticura Heals. "The trouble I bad started with small pimples on my face and body. The Dimples festered and when I would squeeze them ( ; they would dry and scale. 7 They itched something j fierce, and I lost a lot of rein scraicmng mem. "I tried all 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 Breitenbacb, Sherman Ave., Ft. Atkinson. Wis. Give Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum the daily care of your skin. lusU tut J m by Mail. Addms: "OaUraa LVwatorlM, Dt. H.BUlaa , Man." SoMenrrwhrt SopSc Omtipot2tnd60e. Talcum ttc. jEm? Tntiriira Soap shave without mus. Holthouse Rug Specials Best grade seamless 9x12 Wilton Velvet Rugs, beauti- QPTA Af ful patterns, at POUUU Tapestry Rugs, size Q- A Ef 9x12, special tp-L'eJv Best grade Tremont Wool and Fibre Rugs, size 9x12, Q1 O ft special 0-l-UU HOLTHOUSE Furniture Store 530 Main Street Big Reduction on Willys Knight and Overland Motor Cars OVERLAND RICHMOND CO. 11 S. 7th St Phone 1058 SAFETY FOR SAVINGS PLUS 4V2 Interest DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY "The Home For Savings" m m m ""-'"---ii-i--ri Tr n n.n-rLfirvjif Coal, Flour, Feed J. H. MENKE 162-168 Fort Wayne Ave. Phone 2662 4miuiiiiiiiuiHiiiuiiiHnniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiimiiiiiiitiifiiiiiuuHiiuiiiitiiMin 1 Suits Cleaned and Pressed! I $1.50 I if PEERLESS CLEANING CO. ! 318 Main Street' tiiniiiiaiiuiiuiunintMiiiiiiiitiiiMuijiiiuniiiiuiiiiiiiiuuuiimiiuuiwiimaniji fuiiiiiiiuiiuuiuiuiiniiiiiiiiuuiiiiuiiiiuiniiiiuiiuiimuiiiiiiiiiiimiiuiuiuuiMi I A. O. MARTIN DENTIST ! Colonial Bldg. Phone 1837 I wiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiMitiiiniiiniiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiimTl SNmiifuamiimittiuiiHiiiniJnMnmiinmnnHnnninmiiiiimiiitnmiwmMniS DR. R. H. CARNES 1 DENTIST Phono 2665 Rooms 15-16 Comstock Building I 1016 Mala Street I Open Sundays and Evenings br i appointment. " LUMBER and COAL MATHER BROS. Co. -j-i-fj We Have Many Fine Bargains in Used Cars Chenoweth Auto Co. 1107 Main St. Phone 1925 Deposits made in our Savings Department on or before th3 15th day of the month draw 4y2 interest from the first iay of the month. American Trust & Savings Bank Ninth and Main

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