Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 216, 22 July 1921 — Page 6

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM , , AND SUN-TELEGRAM . .

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND.$ FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1921.

Published Every . Evening Except Sunday by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, as 1 ' Second-Class Mail Matter. MEXBBR OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Ass.vlated Press is exclusively entitled to the us 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 dispatches herein are also reserved. - Training Our Children - After looking at the number of agencies devised for the training of the children, one sometimes wonders what part the parents play in the rearing of their children nowadays. Is the school system, the city, the recreation organization, and a number of other agencies to rear the child, or is it the duty of the parents? Have the fathers and mothers delegated this important function to other hands? One can't help wondering along these lines when he notices the multiplicity of the agencies that are supposed to be essentially necessary for the training of the modern child. Children must have experts to supervise their playing, it seems. Other experts must be members of the school organization to supervise accessories in the educational system. Societies and clubs must teach mothers and help them develop certain faculties of their children. And yet, seldom is the home mentioned as the real seat of training and fathers and mothers recognized as the real teachers of their offspring. The high duty of parenthood has been bandied about and shifted about so incessantly that father and mother seem to be lost factors in the process of rearing the child. But that's where we are making the big mistake. Fathers and mothers are using their time, deploring conditions and seeking remedies, instead of applying themselves personally, to the rearing of their children. Father expects a community service man to teach his boy how to play. Mother expects another expert to teach her daughter how to sew and can. Father turns his boy over to the Y. M. C. A., expecting that institution to inculcate athletics and morals. Parents rely on the Sunday school to supply the child with religious teaching. And so, the training of the child, instead of being rooted in the home and proceeding

from the home, is extraneous to the home and is done by rank outsiders in most cases. , .. , , Children don't know what home life is. In the morning they go to school ; in the afternoon a recreation expert trains them on the playgrounds ; in the evening they spend part of the time in the Y. M. C. A., or are to be found at some other popular meeting place. Is there any wonder that many of them walfc the streets when by rights they ougt to be at home? If parents intend to turn over the entire work of rearing their children to outsiders, they cannot expect them to look at home excepting as a boarding house. Many a father and mother of Richmond, who is trying to elevate the standard of civilization, would be doing a great thing if he or she did some of the actual work of training a son or a daughter, instead of delegating it to others. Sons and daughters cannot look upon home as a lovable place, and one about which cling the tenderest sentiments and noblest affections, if the fathers and mothers do not create this home

sentiment by participating actively in the train

ing of their children. If a father will enter into the games of youth, and not depend upon a hired instructor to do it, he will accomplish infinitely more for the boy's development than a professional expert can. And if a mother, with wise counsel and ready suggestion, will teach her daughter the many duties of housekeeping, she will bestow a boon for which her daughter will be thankful. The morals of a nation are not shaped by the pulpit cr by the reformer who shouts from the street corner. They are created in the home where parents and children" congregate, where their interests focus, and where they learn to value the good and despise the evil. Our civilization has more to fear from the lack of parental training in the home than it has from any of the popular brands of evil which are emphasized

so strongly today. If fathers and mothers become expert and accomplished instructors of the children, teaching them fundamental virtues and preparing them to face the temptations of life with proper training, the nation can face the future serenely. But if they persist in shirking this solemn duty, and keep on handing over more and more of it to substitutes and strangers, the strength of the home will be wrecked and the nation suffer the consequences.

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Good Evening By ROY K. MOULTON

PATIENT CONSTANCY OF CONVICT'S SWEETHEART IS ABOUT TO BE REWARDED Chicago, Today. Marie Tamborne has gone to the penitentiary at Joliet on visiting day every week for four years to cheer her sweetheart. Whenever the neighbors saw her pass with a bunch of flowers or a box. filled with home-made pies and good things to eat they shook their heads sadly. "It's a pity, bo it Is," they mourned, "for a fine girl like Marie to throw herself away on that convict. She could have her pick of a dozen steady lads. She'd better grab one while she's young and pretty. She'll be a faded old woman when Joe Bousk gets out of prison. He'll stay behind bars for ten years yet." Joseph R. Bousk is serving a sentence of fourteen years for murder. Marie Tamborne was his sweetheart when he killed Policeman Bruno Fredericks at a dance in Roti's hall near the Chicago Commons in 1916. She had gone to the dance with him. She went to the police station with him after the shooting. She sat outside his cell every day until his trial. Then she was in court every day. When the clerk read the verdict, "We, the Jury, find the defendant guilty," a young woman in the crowd fainted. That was Marie. Visits tier Sweetheart Weekly for Four Years Four long years Bousk has been in

Joliet. For three years he has been an honor prisoner. And all the while Marie has hovered over him like a-

guardian angel. Her weekly visits have been the only bright spots in his life. Many a time the convict has marveled at her constancy. He has advised her to forget him. He has ruined his own life, he tells her; why should she allow him to ruin hers, too? He urges her to marry some good man "on the outside." Marie answers always, "I love you, Joe." That's her only answer. It answers everything. Bouek's mother died ' recently Through Marie's intercession State Representative Conlon obtained from Governor Small a parole for Bousk to attend the funeral. After the obsequies Bousk reported to Conlon for the trip back to Joliet. - "Enjoy yourself for a few days while you've got the chance," said the genial Conlon. "Show your girl a good time." Bousk spent five days in Marie's company. They took auto rides. They swam at the beaches. They strolled in the parks. They attended the movies. They crowded some sort of pleasure into every minute. Then Bousk reported again to Conlon. "Go back to Joliet by yourself," said Conlon.. "A man as honorable as you are doesn't need a guard." Bousk went back to prison alone. Now a vigorous effort is being made to get him out. Legislator Conlon is behind it. And back of Conlon is Marie. Judge McKinley, who presided at Bousk's trial, has asked the board of pardons to grant Bousk a full pardon. The board, it is reported, will grant the convict his freedom before the summer is over. "Then well be married," says Marie Tamborne. :. "I'll be waiting for him at the prison doors and we'll go

straight to a minister's. I've waited j four years. I'd wait fifty if necessary. Iet these foolsh neighbors wag their!

always love him. He is a convict, but he is a man. I will be the happiest

TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can", "Take It". "Up- . THE POTLUCK OF THE DAY - Acceptance is one of the great virtues of the human heart. And not until one is fully equipped to accept life and all its offerings and chances, is he able to enter Into the full business of living. We must learn to take the potluck of the day! Sometimes it will rain. There will be days that are hot. Some very cold. The very fibre of many days will be streaked with disappointment and discouragement But there will also be days that will fairly giggle with mirth and luck. - The law of averages touches the path of us all. Let us take what Is set before, as the product of our toil and thinking, knowing full well that if we would partake well, we must work well and give well. To none of us does it yet appear what we shall be at our best. I have in mind a woman who recently wrote me one of the most cheerful and encouraging letters I have ever received. She told me that she had been crippled for years, but that she had come to take her lot with good and happy grace. And although almost useless in body, she kept filling her mind with building thoughts and writing to those who helped her, thus helping them. Come into my life, Oh friend but take potluck with me! I have always liked to drop into the home of somebody whom I care for and to sit at their table and take food pot-luck with them. I never want them to apologize though for what they give me. That would spoil it all. For I wouldn't come to be fed, but to be filled and that not with food, but with love and understanding and cheer. Each day dawns for all. And the conditions under which it arrives are the same for all. . You wouldn't be less brave or enterprising than the one next to you. would you? He dives in, willing to take what is given, determined to make things come if they aren't around. Potluck for him and glad of the chance. "All are architects of Fate, Working In these walls of Time; Some with massive deeds and great, Some with ornaments of rhyme."

woman in the world when I am his wife."

Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today

Consumers of ice who had been receiving the commodity in large quantities and paying 15 and 17 cents respectively, per hundred pounds, received notice that upon expirations of contracts with the company the price per hundred pounds would be raised 2V4 cents.

Correct English

Don't Say: Every animal will defend THEIR own young. When each of the men drew THEIR pay, THEY went home. The committee HAVE submitted THEIR report. Nobody in THEIR right senses would commit such a deed. Each of the gentlemen paid THEIR own way to the concert. Say: Every animal will defend ITS own young.

Clark's 17th Orient Cruise by sumptuous S. S. Empress of Scotland, 25,000 gross tons; 18 days in Egypt and Palestine, etc. Feb. 4, 1922; 63 days. $600 up. Including shore excursions, hotels, guides, drives, fees, etc. FRANK C. CLARK, Times Building, New York.

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The New Damp Wash Try

Phone 2766

Richmond Home , Laundry

TRACY'S Coffee Fresh Roasted Daily we seii skinners the highest grade Macaroni, Spaghetti, Egg Noodles and other Macaroni Products.

When each of the men drew His pay, He went home. The committee HAS submitted ITS report. Nobody in HIS right senses would commit such a deed. Each of the gentlemen paid HIS own way to the concert.

FRECKLE-FACE Sun and Wind Bring Out Ugly Spots. How to Remove Easily Here's a chance. Miss Freckle-face, to try a remedy for freckles with the guarantee of a reliable concern that it will not cost you a penny unless it removes the fleckles; while If it does give you a clear complexion the expense is trifling. Simply get an ounce of Othine double strength from any druggist and a few applications should show you how easy it is to rid yourself of the homely freckles and get a beautiful complexion. Rarely is more than one ounce needed for the worst case. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength Othine as this strength is sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles. Advertisement. .

Who's Who in the Day's News

.JANE ADDAMS Another honor has been added to the many which have been heaped upon Jane Addams, famous Chicago settlement worker, during the past

few years. At the recent convention of the International Women's congress in Vienna she was unanimously chosen president of the organization for the

'& It has been 32

years now since Miss Addams took the step that has since made her int e r nationally famous and founded Hull House, in Chi-

time to write

much and to give lectures in many parts of the world. Among her publications are: Democracy and Social Ethics; Newer Ideals of Peace; The Spirit of Youth and the City Streets; Twenty Years at Hull House; A New Conscience and an Ancient Evil, and The Long Road to Woman's Memory. Miss Addams was born of well-to-do parents In Illinois 61 years ago. She was educated at Rockford college, Rockford, 111.

cago. Sue has found

Answers to Questions

his lot we probably owe the creation of the Smithsonian Institution. James Smithson was associated with some of the most noted scientists of his time. He passed a large part of his life on the continent. He was buried in Genoa, where he died, but in 1904 his remains were removed to the United States and interred in the grounds of the Smithsonian Institution.

fcmitnson was never in America, and it is not known what induced him to give his fortune to the United States, except that a sense of wrong in the illegitimacy of his birth alienated him from his native land. In referring to his bequest he wrote: ( "The best blood of England flow in my brains; on my father's side I am a Northumberland, on m v mntVior't r

am related to kings, but this avails me j

noi; my name shall live in the memory of men when the titles of the Northumberlands and the Percys are extinct and forgotten." On his mother's side Smithson was related to Lady Jane Grey, Henry VII, Henry VIII and Queen Elizabeth. Reader mnx ohtnln inawrr to ura. tlona by TrrKIoK The I'alladlnni Questions and AnNvrers department. All questions ahonld be written plalnlr and briefly. Anawera -will be riven briefly.

Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON

VICTORIAN rAVS

The age Victorian, methinks, produced some able writing ginks, although they're jeered at now; the modern wielders of the p?n insist that

ASPIRIN

Who was the founder of the Smith

sonian Institute and is it true that h

nevpr livpd in the T'nitof! Qtotas')

- V . L. V MICA I. J .

As the illegitimate son of a duke and j a noble lady who was the descendant! Of kings. James Smithson. founder of '

the Smithsonian Institution, came

into the world unwelcomed; his life was embittered and blighted by the thought of his tainted birth; he died in Genoa he never had a hnm .

without a single kinsman at his deathbed. To the tragedy of his birth and

tne injustice wnich he felt had been

Name "Bayer" on Genuine

PESKY BED -BUGS P. D. Q.

Trv ff nrtrsa T T f t

r preventive or to rid Bed Bubs, Roaches, Fleas

mua Apis, tvery family should use P. D. Q. house

tie a nine Umt to euard asainst the Pesky Devils and to prevent moths. - P. D. Q. is nol an insect powder, but is a new chemical that kills insects and their etttrs. Each packaee contains free patent spout to enable you to eet to the hard-to-eet-at places and saves the juice. A 35 cent package makes one quart, enouch to kill a million insects and their eegs. your drueeist has it or get it for you.

Nell Bread A good Bread Always fresh Sold by all Groceries Frank Jacobs 623 N. 12th St

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The Best Place to Trade After All

cr-man

frlWIllUIMlMUIMMUKIIIUluni

i 2

The Bank of REAL I

Service I i 2nd National Bank!

Try Our HOME-MADE BEEF LOAF

It is Delicious Sterling Cash Grocerv

A. R. Bertsch, Prop. 1035 Main St

prudery was then behind each bulging brow. The authors of that bygone time wrote tales of love, intrigue and crime, in palace ana in hut; and all their tales were good and clean, they wrote up life, both high and mean, but left out all the smut. The beastliness of life, gadzooks! Why write it up in mighty books, in language coarse and curt? Why overlook the blooming rose to show that soil from which it grows is largely made of dirt? Our later scribes resolved to strike against convention and the like, and show life as it is; and when I read their stirring tales of gas the sewer pipe exhales. I weep and cry "Gee whiz!" They show up every morbid phase of life as lived these sordid days in slum and den and style; and if the tales they tell are true, and life is such a beastly stew, the world had better die. The prudes Victorian were wise; they

ruie in rainn ana snining skies, clean dames and decent men; they knew

the world had filth and vice but figured that it wasn't niee with such to soil the pen.

A Brooklyn boy has established a newspaper route in Sheephead bay among fishermen who sit in 6ilent vigil in their dories on the fishing grounds.

would stop that itching. No matter how severe or stubborn the trouble, unless it is due to some internal disorder, Resinol Ointment usually clears it N away in a reasonable time. Try it and see. At I1 drtgiitm. Trial free. Dept. 11 -T. Roeiool. iialtiiaore, Md.

FOR BAD STOMACHS

For indigestion headache, dyspepsia, gas, bloating and all stomach disorders A five day trial free of charge will be sent to your address. Name Address

brrf ntnTi vm-J rVV.TIf

Sold and guaranteed by all Thlstlethwaite Drug Stores and at drug stores everywhere. Advertisement.

Btware! Unless, you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for twenty-one years and proved safe . by millions. Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer package for Colds. Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago, and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacejicacidester of Salicylicacid. Advertisement.

Fountain Drinks that will Quench

Your Thirst

1

The Miller-Kemper Co. 'Everything T Build Anything" LUMBER MILLWORK BUILDERS' SUPPLIES Phones 3247 and 3347

"luuiiuHiMiiiinnniiiinniiiiiiuirHiniiiiiuiiiiiiniminiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiDnitimM. 1 Ladies' Oxfords, Pumps Qrt QfT and Strap Slippers piJi) Bowen's Shoe Store I I 610 Main """"""mnuimnnimiiimTHniiiiniiuiimuiuTmiuiiiuuiiiniiuiimiiiuaml

PvM lr ffZ5 Machine Work, Air Compressors, :; l"Vyji 'J"mfmim'k l!' asoline Engines, Motors; Over.!' j;! hauling Trucks and Cars. ; j; Richmond Air Compressor Co. j: N. W. First and Railroad i

1 '' " " -i-.-ywyM-M wwMNnniyjiArij-,rlH. ,

S.iiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiitiitiiiiiiiiniiiniininiiniiniiiMtniiiiniiimiiuiiiiiitVacation time is here. Better get I

a good Accident policy before!

I leaving.

KELLY & KECK

! (Insurance Service) I 1 Phone 2150 901'2 Main St.! liiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinitiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiHiiuiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiH

COAL

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BUY IT I NOW! I

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Phone 2194 :

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John H. Niewoehner 6anitary and Heating Engineer 81P S. G St. Dk. tett

pTOniHiuiiinimiiiiiiTiiiMiiMinimnniiminiiHiiiiiiiiMiiiiuiimMuniimHiiiiv

Klehfoth-Niewoehner Co.

i

CMnMimimmifuimtniMiutuiimiuimitHHiiiniiiniuuHmmrniuiNiuiwmaJ

Teeth Tell Tales Free Examination DR. J. A. THOMSON DENTIST Murray Theatre Building Open Evenings and Sunday Phone 2930

STRAW HATS

Choice of the stock yz PRICE

LICHTENFELS ! I 1010 Main Street uMimuiiiiiiiuiiMiiiiiiiiinmiiiiiniiMiiuiiiiiiiiuHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniMiuiuiiiiiiiiiiMif

BUY COAL NOW We have the right coal at the right price. Jellico & Pocahontas Lump. ANDERSON & SONS N. W. 3rd A Chestnut Phone 3121

Don't Miss Our Big Used Car Sale Chenoweth Auto Co. 1107 Main St. Phone 1925

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

WATCH REPAIRING

If you want your watch to run and

ucycuu uu guou ume, Dring them to us. A specialty on high-grade watch repairing C. & O. watch inspector. HOMRIGHOUA

1021 Main St. ph0ne 1867

PRICE COAL CO. 617-519 N. 6th St. PHONE 1050 Dealers In High Grade Coal

GOOD CLEAN COAL Prompt Delivery RICHMOND COAL COMPANY - - Telephone 31654379

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HAVE YOU TRIED "FAULTLESS FLOUR" Ask Your Grocer Milled by a perfected process

iiii.imnmiaHiiwiimiiu wwwumimimn inn m ! DR. R. H. CARNES 1 DENTIST- Phono 2665 I

Rooms 15-16 Comstock Building i 1016 Main Street Open Sundays and Evenings br appointment. " 1

LUMBER and COAL MATHER BROS. Co.

Special Prices on Manhattan and Apex Tires Oldsmobile Salesroom 1026 Main St

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