Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 320, 22 November 1921 — Page 10
PAGE TEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, NOV. 22, 1921.
U. S, ENGINEERS HAVE ! TASK OF MASTERING MISSOURI'S WATERS
Tco Expensive To Fight By FREDERICK J. HASKIN
WASHINGTON. D. C. Nov. 22. The next World war, if it tekes piace,
wil! probably be won by the strongest (By Associated Press) nation which succeeds in staying out KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 22.- Tam- of it. ing: the Missouri river, outlaw among' This consideration, which is based i . . . .1., l . . l .. : r : i : .
American rivers, is the task of theiul'u'' l"c l4";''ll'UU5 Ul miUU"'
i peris concerning miure wars, as wen ! as upon the obvious lessons of the one
wars in the past has gained thereby new sources of raw material to exploit, and new markets from which its competitors were wholly or partly excluded. This advantage has resulted in an accumulation of wealth in the successful country. This wealth is always in the hands of the relatively
few men who have money invested in
United States army river engineers,
whose headquarters are here. Theirusc ever, is undoubtedly a powerful foreign trade and exploitations. The sector is the Missouri river from Fort ; f'ce making: for disarmament. common man, who works for wages
u is prooaDie tnat eacn ot tne pnn- or a salary, never manes any but cipa! nations, in the next few decades, small and incidental gains bv a suc-
will strive for the limitation of armam-j cessful war, while he always has to do
FAMOUS WOMAN SCULPTOK MOLDS CHAPLIN IN CLAY
Jtliai the Eritish Empire can now best ! would Mve but o prevent a success-1 of Asia. She raicht make an immense
Benton, Mont., to a point, opposite Alton. 111., where the Missouri, wiih a
roar and a ruth joins the Mississippi, I ent and the adjustment of international J the fighting and also to pay the taxes, and thereafter sweeps with Eome do-! relation3 in such a way that its own 'He is induced to do these things by i liabilitv tr ho pmhrnilprt in war will be means Of sneeches ahnnt nntrirwtiam
srees of calmness to the Gulf olra", ihCk national hnn.r r ,
Mexico. The task of the rive.-
reduced to a minimum
It does not follow that this will aler.gineers is i ways make for international peace. It
to persuade f.nd coerce the Missouri , probably will do so in a general way, river into "staying out," and to coax but it means that while each nation It out of its long-time custom of chang- will do so in a general way, but it
mg its channel whenever
the national honor, the need for main
taining the greatness of his country, and so forth. War Profits Wane. Now two great changes have come over the situation. In the first nlace.
the whim;mean3 that whiie each nation will it-1 the common man is becoming inereas-
moves it. ; self strive to keep out of war, it will j ingly hard to befool. He is not so This may sound like an exaggera-! often be of advantage to a given na- J easily excited about the national honlior, but to anyone who has spent ajtion to embroil its chief commercial ! or and other pretexts for war as once day on the river with the army engi-1 rivals in a war. For example, some j he was. The change in this respect is neers, and has seen the Missouri eat-1 observers have commented upon the; slight, but significant, trig away at a cornfield with wicked j fact that certain sectiors of the French j In the second place, war does not so energy, swaliowing up earth, corn, Press dwell a great deal upon the i obviously and surely pay a profit, even wefds, fences and trees, it seems 1 points which may produce antagonism' to the investors for whose benefit it is
sometimes as if the river actually had a personality, and an outlaw one at that. Pile3 Up Sand
And while carrying away farm land
between Great Britain and the Lnited tought, as once it did. Thus the busi
States. It has been pointed out thatjness interests of France and England
should the United States and Great
Britain ever engage in a war without France heiris? involved in any way, at
from one bank, somewhere else it is!tnc end of that war France would ocequaliy busy, piling up sand, mud and : cupy a much stronger international podriftwood, making land out of what sition than she does now. It has been was a river a few days before. Then, suggested that the French government too, the river, has a habit of occasion- may not be wholly oblivious to this ally clogging its own channel, building ! fact- Whether it has any influence on Hand bars so long and so high that it (French policy or not, it illustrates the must needs become broad and shallow Point under consideration, in order to continue its restless course. The Case of England. It is a constant struggle, but it is Another illustration has been not a honeless one, and the engineers ' brought to light by discussions of the point with a measure of justified pride i Anglo-Jap alliance. Whether this alio those places alon? the Mream where liance sha11 be renewed or not is one I hey have built dikes, which resulted of the ('rial Questions of the conferin the making of land; to the concave ence- In.the canvass ot considerations bends where revetments have stopped ;hlch Probably atlect Lntish policy in the river from cutting its bank. Given thl3 regard, it has been pointed out.
a dike on nno i,ip anH a .cvMnnt nn as a reason wny Britain migni
the other, and constant diligence, so!
Ihat email K -.-. 1. a m v. : -i v 1 Case
nave obviously not as a whole gained by the late war, although they won it. They gained new "spheres "of influence' 'and "mandatories" full of oil, coal, forests, and backward peoples
with money to spend; but they are too! crippled financially to make use ofi
their prizes. Furthermore, thev sii.,n. mon ;
ce preserved by keeping out of future
i wars and letting its rivals fight. Jap
an maae herselt what she is by fighting first China and then Russia. Furthermore, the Japanese government still has faith that it can gain new advantages by new wars, and this faith is more justified in the case of Japan than it would be in that of any other nation. This is the simple and practical reason why Japan stands out as the most militaristic nation of the world today. If Japan had to fight the United States or any other western power, military experts agree that it would be a defensive naval war upon that part of Japan. The western power would be seeking to check Japan's exploitation of other Asiatic countries. Japan
Mr. Claire Sheridan s Oust Charlie Chaplin.
of
Charlie Chaplin, film comedy king:, has been added to the list of noted persons Mrs. Claire Sheridan, noted sculptor, has fashioned in clay, lie posed recently for the sculptor who made busts of Lenine, Trotsky and others.
Avoid Constipation And Enjoy Health Constipation is a real bunion, destroying health and hindering pleasures of all kinds. For this reason a prescription was tested and tried out and subsequontly put up in tablet form. It is called Oiiaxin and it permanently relieves the most stubborn cases of constipation. People who have tried Uilaxin say that the old axiom "Thenis nothing New Under the Sun" is all wrong. They say that Uilaxin is new. "i ou will soon see that Iilaxin grives natural action and is a liver regulator and not a puree, and contains nothing tnat Is habit-forming-. It contains the necessary elements to correct constipation and to aid elimination. It keeps the intestinal tract in a normal, healthy state, which promotes good health. If you are constipated or if vuu have torpid liver, bad breath, headaches, biliousness, etc., you do vourself an injustice if you do not give Uilaxin an honest try-out. It will not disappoint you. All druuirists all over I he wnrld
sell uilax
iui ciockaae. If she did this her bus:-1 gain by war without a heavy loss of ness interests would have established ; men or money. There is probably no their right to exploit the greater parti other nation of which this is true.
THOUSANDS OF THIN PEOPLE HAVE SPLENDID APPETITES YET FAIL TO PUT ON FLESH AND GAIN WEIGHT WHY? Strong. Stra fjhtforward Advice to; Thin, nervous. run-down people. Thin, Undeveloped Men and Women, j however, with impoverished blood and half starved looks are hailing with deIf you are thin, scrawny and unde-j light a quick and certain maker of veloped, if your face is peaked and s-olid flesh called EVAN'S' TRIPL your cheeks and neck exhibit unsightvi PHOSPHATES that is unequalled for hollows, it's almost certain that your j repairing faulty dige.stion and correctnervous system is at the bottom of the ing nervous digestive troubles. In trouble. You can eat three, yes. four fact the makers nf Fram' Trini
substantial, fat producing meals a day. i Phosphates guarantee that one month's but as long as your stomach has an i treatment will increase vour weight
insufficient supply of nerve iorce this food you eat will pass out of the bodv with little if any benefit. In order to assimilate properly the nourishing food you eat, and convert it into healthy tissue and fat the nerves that control the process of
by several pounds, and within ten days make you feel like a new being, full of ambition .vigor and a desire to accomplish things. Dafler Drug Co., A. G. Luken Drug Co., and leading druggists everywhere have agreed to sup
ply Evans' Triple Phosphates and
digestion and assimilation, must be ! euarantpp it in rh i-ut what i rkinv
put in first-class shape and until that I ed for it, or monev refunded, is done you might just as well quit I Caution: While Evans' Triple Phos trying to put on flesh. Vour system ! phates accomplish wonders in nm-nm
is starving tor someth.nir that wil
turn the food you eat into healthv stay-there fle.-h. and it can only be done in one way by correcting "faulty nervous digestion.
digestive troubles, and as a general nerve tonic, it should not be taken by anyone who objects to a lew additional pounds of solid stay-there flesh Advertisembent
fore they become serious, the river enSiners say they can keep the stream
fairly well anchored
Show Production of Corn, Potatoes in Ohio Counties fr.v Associated Press) COLUMBUS, O.. Nov. 22. Huron, Stark, Tuscarawas and Pike counties led in the production of corn the last season, according to a report issued by the Ohio division of markets, showing the number of bushels of corn and potatoes grown per acre in all Ohio counties. .Noble county led the other 87 in the production of potatoes, having an average of 91 bur-hel3 to the acre, the report shows the average yield for corn in the state was 41 57-S8 bushels an acre, and for potatoes, D5 55-88 bushels an acre. The rfport, compiled by George U. Marvin, chief of the market division showin? yield per acre follows: County Corn Potatoes Darke 42 55 Mutler 40 44 Montgomery 3!) 27 Preble 13 49
in at fiftv cents the box. The
their hninf. rivl in tv, T"-i. 0 . ujuucj. .iu soie aistriD'itor is the Maimolu Co., o7 ineir Dus-iness rivals in the Lnited I scarcely gain any prize that will re- j Garfield Hid.. Detroit. Mich, states and Japan, which did not getipay it; for it takes voun" men and Newspapers and billboards already intO the war far enough to get hurt ! mmJv i 'L. tiff , m?n,.an,a : are publishing advertisements telling of much Pninvin I , ?.U" my i .i1 the P"2e d hold It.; Dilaxim and it is only a matter of time
, J r iiiiuuoc auvau taf t 1 fie Urltl!
1 u V en- A na'ia series of successful wars, but
"iin-ii lusea m a war most or its
FTP 1
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SO A P
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SAVE THE TAGS
i Brit?h government doubtless pcrce
.j.- stipation's bi?cst enemy. Use Dilaxin it ' ; as directed and you will ag:ree that it g IveSiis remarkable. Advertisement. I
The Quality Wipes Out Price Distinction
Tuberculosis Tips
I to discontinue the alliance, that in
of war between Japan and the
United States. Great Britain could win that war by staying out of it. It is stated that if Japan and the United States fought for four years, during that time Great Britain would regain the position of controlling financial center of the world, which has now passed to the United States, and would also greatly increase her commerce. She would do this by selling goods and lending money to the bellieerents. who would constantly weaken
each other. Of course Great Britain's
relative gain by staying out 01 ine war is much greater by reason of the fact that if she went into it she would lose Canada, and nothing she could gain would repay her for that loss. But even leaving Canada out of consideration. Great Britain could gain only by staying out of such a war. The United States would lose her international
leadership by such a war, in all prob-,
abilitv, even if she won. a victory. The same factors appear in all calculations that are made concerning possible future wars. There are nations which might gain by successful war in certain circumstances, and these are noted to be the least enthusiastic for disarmament. But, in general, war no longer pays as a commercial adventure. You have only to look back a little way to see that this fact marks a revolutionary change in the basis of in- . : 1 rAltni, T J j q ,irmmr.n-
place of political economy that nearly j all modern wars have been fought for commercial advantage. To be more exact, they have been fought to give ., the foreign investors of a given coun-
try a preferential right in exploiting the natural resources of various parts of the world and in selling manufac
tured goods to various peoples. A na
tion which has been successful in its
The great white plague, consump!ifjn or tuberculosis or T. B., for short, ' ps ravaged the world fcr at leant :,n.i years. In the United States alone, tuberculosis kills 150,000 annually. Wayne county deaths helr o make up the ghastly total. Tuberculosis claims a victim every three .md one-half minutes. 17 every hour, over 400 every day. Does it prefer'tht old and worn out of society? No, most .of its victims are in the prime of life. One-third of all who die are between hc ages of 15 and 43. At this moment, one million persona in this country are active cases of tuberculosis. Inactive enses may become active at any time by weakness due to 0111c other disease, or by a cold, influenza, or some unusual physical strain. The tragedy of it all is thai many persons who do not know thev have tuberculosis are already its victims. More than 1C0. 000 young men were rejected by army physicians as unfit o fight and yet never suspected that they were defective. One-tenth of all men. women and children who die annually are victims of tuberculosis. Tuberculosis can be stopped by so1 iu! co-operation. Individuals must set together, communities must got
together, states and nations must get headache, dizziness, stomach gets sour,
logethrr and thus head off humanity si tongue coated and you feel rheumatic worst foe. Fresh air, cleanliness, de- j twinges when the weather is bad. ruction of germ-laden sputum ot Eat less meat, drink lots of water; consumptives, and wholesome food (js0 get from any pharmacist four will aid prevention and cure. Undis- ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonuvcred cases must be sought out and fuj ,n a glass of water before break-
induced to woik with nurses and , fast f0r a few days and your kidneys
IF BACKACHY OR KIDNEYS BOTHER Eat Less Meat, Also Take Glass of Salts Before Eating Breakfast. Uric acid in meat excites the kidneys, they become overworked; get
j sluggish, ache,' and feci like lumps of
lead, me urine oecomes ciouuy, inei bladder is irritated, and you may be
obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. When the kidneys clog you must help them flush off the body's urinous waste or you'll be a sick person shortly. At first you fed a dull misery in the kidney
region, yuo suffer from backache, sick
rhvsicians. The state is doing all it
ran. but it can take care of only on; use out of sixty. That is why Christ mas seais will be sold, to supplement, the work of the state. This is your fight; ?ret into it.
1 ! T THIS Ol T IT IS WORTH MOEY Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mail it to Foley & Co.. 2S35 Sheff! Id Ave , Chk-airo, 111., writing your name and address clearly. You will r-c ive in return a trial package containing i'oley's Honey and Tar Compound for coughs, colds and croup;
VoJev Kidney Pills for pains In sides
and back; rheumatism, backache, kid- kidnevs Clean and active. Druggi ney and bladder ailments; and Folye v av thev coll lntc of Tad Salts Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and npre sa tne sen lots or Jaa esaus
thoroughly cleansing cathartic tor constipation, biliousness, headaches, and si'ituish bowels. A tl. I.iikcti Drug Co., (C6-028 Main St. Advertisement.
will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive, cannot injure: makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the
Druggists
to
folks who believe in overcoming kidney trouble while it is only trouble-Advertisement.
For Every Room in the House In the kitchen SAPOLIO cleans pots.pans, oilcloth and cutlery; in the bathroom SAPOLIO cleans porcelain, marble, tiling the wash basin and bathtub; in the halltoay SAPOLIO cleans painted woodwork, doors, sills and concrete or stone
floors. See that the
name SAPOLIO is on every package.
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Suppose yon had the settling of your neighbors problem
s
POSTUM comes in two forms: INSTANT POSTUM (in tins) made instantly in the cup by the addition of boiling water. POSTUM CEREAL (in packages of larger bulk, for those who prefer to make the drink while the meal is being prepared) made by boiling for 20 minutes. Sold by all grocers.
UPPOSE it was Brown's case that was
up for consideration. Brown is heading
in a direction that has brought trouble to a lot of people a direction known to be full of risks. Brown himself isn't going any too good. There are days when he hits the bumps harder than he can comfortably stand and he shows it. There's another road that Brown could travel safely smooth, comfortable, pleasant, and absolutely safe. And Brown came to you for advice. And you'd look at the facts and you'd say: "Why, Brown, there's nothing to this thing. It doesn't take any argument to decide this. Turn to the right and take the smooth, safe road, and Do It Now.
Suppose the road Brown is on is the coffee or tea road. Hundreds have had trouble onthat road. Doctors have sounded the warning for the public, and raised the "no-traffic" sign for their patients time and time again. The drugs, caffeine in coffee and thein in tea, keep whipping the nerves tending to interfere with sleep, upset digestion, produce high blood pressure, and to wear down health and efficiency by the disturbance of rest and nervous balance. Some folks go a long way on the road ; some folks don't seem to notice the jolts for a while, anyway. But what would you say to Brown about choosing the safe road instead of the risky one? And suppose Brown were you? Postum users travel the sunrise road away from the coffee and tea jolts and risks.
Postum is free from the possibility of harm for any one, and full of comfort and satisfaction for every one. Even the little children can share in the delights of a hot, mealtime cup of Postum. No fears, either that Postum will rob the night of sleep as coffee so often does. Postum is a friendly drink for any one any time. And it's good! When you've tried"postum a few days you'll wonder why you ever thought of sacrifice in leaving off coffee or tea. Rich and flavory and satisfying, Postum suits the taste so that there's no longer any thought that you should drink it; only the thought that you want to drink it. Postum opened the better road and the safe road for coffee and tea drinkers more than a quarter of a century ago, and a steadily increasing multitude is traveling that road up and on to better enjoyment, better efficiency, better accomplishment. You can buy Postum wherever good food and drink are sold and served. You can begin, now, this turn to the right road which you would so quickly recommend for Brown by ordering Postum from your family grocer or telling your waiter at the restaurant to serve you Postum instead of coffee or tea. Make Postum according to directions and enjoy its delicious flavor; find the change in "feeling" after a week's use of Postum. Let the family join you in the trip up the sunrise way. You'd know what to say to Brown say it to yourself.
jjja ...
'There's a Reason9' for
POSTU
Postum Cereal Company, Inc. Battle Creek, Mich.
'i
ENOCH MORGAN'S SONS CO. Sole Manufacturer New York U.S. A.
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