Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 4, 5 January 1922 — Page 12

PAGE TWELVE

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., THURSDAY, JAN. 5, 1922.

TO MAKE HINES HEAD OF STATE NORMAL SCHOOL TOMORROW

TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Jan. 5. Lin naeus N. Hines. former state superln

tendent of public instruction, will be' formally inaugurated as president oil Indiana State Normal school tomorrow., Students will have charge of cere-i

monies tonight which will open the installation, .program but the formal ceremonies will be held tomorrow William Wood Parsons, president rmeritus, will pre3lde at the first ceremony tomorrow morning. Dr. Parsons has been connected with the school "0 years. Addresses by Benjamin JBurrls, present state superintendent of public instruction, and A. E. Winship of Boston, editor of the Journal of Education, are on the morning program. In the afternoon S. M. Keltner, president of the board of trustees of State Normal, will preside at the inaugural exercises. President Parsons will make his farewell address and President Hines will deliver his inaugural message. Messages of congratulation will follow from President John E. McGilvrey of Kent Normal School, Kent, Ohio; Dean Henry L. Smith of Indiana university, and President Robert J. Aley of Butler college. President Hines will preside at the night meeting and addresses will be made by Governor McCray of Indiana, and Martin G. Brumbaugh, former governor of Pennsylvania. The duties of president of State Normal were assumed by Mr. Hines Jast September. Inaugural ceremonies will be held at the Muncie branch of State Normal on Jan. 13.

The Blessed Meek By FREDERICK J. HASKIN

HAGERSTOWN COUNCIL COMMITTEES CHOSEN

HAGERSTOWN, Jan. 5. The new rity council held the first meeting of the year Monday night and an adjourned meeting Tuesday night. Frank Sherry was installed president, he being the only member who was on the board last year. He appointed the following committees: Fred Murray and Blair Hartley, street committee; F. E. McKinnon and T, L. McConnaughey, general- committee, Charles Brown is the new clerk and Thad McCown, treasurer. Harry Thornburgh was employed as marshal. Tuesday night the board took action against granting license for pool tables and card tables.

APPOINT BONUS WORKER (By Associated Press) FIND LAY, Ohio. Jan. 5. Frank Bell, recently appointed assistant in the office of John Gallier, division engineer, by Governor Davis, has been named chairman of the Hancock county ex-service men's bonus committee.

MRS. EDGERLY GAINED WEIGHT

Also Strength and Perfect Health by Taking Vinol. AH Worn Out Now Well

fit 8? CpSM J

" WASHINGTON, Dec. 5. With India harassing the British government by means of its non-co-operation movement, with Egypt In turmoil, with the negroes forming a world association

unaer Marcus Garvey, with the Jewish Zionest movement well under way, and with the Chinese patiently bin stubbornly asserting their right to bo

iet aione. inviting all the other nations of the earth to go out the open door and close it after them, this seems truly to be an epoch of self assertion on the part of oppressed peoples. - The dominant nations absorbed in their own debts and wars, seem hardly aware of the widespread and spontaneous character of this movement toward self-assertion on the part of the peoples who have worn the yokes for centuries. Servitude, exploitation, personal and national prejudice, con tempt, these peoples have all known some or all of these oppressions. Barring the Hebrews, who are a case unique, they have all been known as inferior or subjected races. Now all,of them, but especially th3 Indians and Chinese, are showing signs of a growing inchoate strength. They lack organization, unified purpose, and they probably will lack these things for generations yet. But it is in these things that they are growing. And the strength they have is an immense racial vitality and persistence. While the dominant nations of tho earth are becoming vast polyglot mobs in which the best strains tend to decrease while the poorer increase, the Chinese and the East Indians retain their racial identity and homogeneity. They are conquered, owned, and exploited by alien races ; they are carved into spheres of influence and protectorates; they are subjected to massacre and famine and oppression; and yet by tending steadily to the businesses of raising babie3 and crops, thev have remained distinctive peopled with distinctive ideals. An Englishman or an American in these days may be a Mediterranean or a Nordic. He may be of an old indigenous family or he may be an immigrant of a few years only. The streets of all the principal cities of the great western nations are streets nf rsahr.i

In them swarm vast motley crowds ! a i i .... I

ul men wno nave notning in common except their hunger for food and money. Melting pots where the ingredients do not fuse are these, great cities, so that an American or an Englishman may be anything. But when

you say a Chinese or an East Indian, you know exactly what you mean. The word summons a picture of a distinctive kind of man. These peoples anj united in aspiration and purpose because they are uniform in blood and tradition. That is one great advantage they have over the nations which now dominate the earth. When you say Great Britain you mean a government, and governments have always been trans ient and troubled things. But when you say China or India you mean a people, solid and homogeneous, and that is a thing as real and permanent as a continent or an ocean. The reasons why these peoples persist, retain their racial identity and multiply, while the occidental nations lose their identity and die out at the top, seems to be chiefly two. In the first place, they do not go in for war, and in the second place they have no talent for industry. War, as has been pointed out a great many times in the last few years.' really threatens the destruction of western civilization. The Napoleonic wars weakened France enormously, and are said to have reduced the average height of Frenchmen several inches. The Franco-Prussian war was a further blow. France has not, in any line of human endeavor, reached the greatness she had before those wars. The Civil war in its effect on our own south is one of the most striking examples of the results of prolonged conflict. But all of these wars were minor affairs compared to the one just passed. Wre know that it killed ten million good young men; that it crippled the principal European nationj in every department of human endeavor, and that it left them all in a backwash of reaction by destroying the young blood which is the only possible source of progress; but its full effects are yet to be seen. Furthermore, these nations are now steadily

I moving toward another war, and one

which will inevitably be far more destructivve than the last. What will be their strength and status after the next world war? Meantime, the "inferior peoples" steadily refuse to impair their racial

vitality by killing each other. The I Chinese, for example, simply will not

fight. They are supposed to be earning on a civil war now, but it is sc mild that few men are. killed in it, while communications and businesses are not interfered with. During the World war these Chinese were used as laborers, but it was found impossible to make combat troops out "of them. The Chinese in some respects, show great courage, but the murder of their fellow humans is simply a business for which they have no stomach. Among the East Indians there is more of a war-like tradition, but the present non-co-operative movement of Gandhi has for its basis that force must not be used, that the enemy's blood must not be spilled. The invader must he expelled by simply ro fusing to obey any of his commands or to co-operate in his undertaking-;. In addition to escaping the scourge of war, these oppressed peoples have held aloof from the industrial system. In China there is said to be a stroni; feeling against its introduction, and in favor of building up the Chinese civilization on its own ancient foundations, so to speak. The Gandhi movement in India is also to some extent a revolt against the industrial system. For example, the people are urged not to buy factory-made clothing but to return to the making of their native fabrics by hand. There can be little doubt but that the industrial system, as at present constituted, is like war, a source oi race weakness to the dominant nations. It has improved greatly in the past 50 years, and it may yet be made a sound basis for civilized development, but at the present moment, as anyone may see for himself, it is in a badly disorganized state. In the first place, it has produced a class consciousness which results in an ever-growing social unrest, with im

mense waste of life . and energy through strikes and revolutions. In the second place ,it has become badly entangled in its own . mechanism, so that all of the industrial nations are subject to periodical spells of "haid times,' due to the failure of the sys tem to work properly. The whole occidental world is now thrown out of gear by . the failure of r the industrial system to function. Thus the oppressed peoples, being; largely free from organized war and organized industry, have advantages in the conservation of their racial vj. tality, which are now already telling and which will tell even more in the future. It would seem that the dominant nations had better learn something from the oppressed ones while the learning is still good. A coupli more world wars, and the old Bible prophecy may come to have a new and vivid meaning: "Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth."

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MRS. J. P. EDGERLY Boston, Mass. I goi into a very rundown condition, was nervous, could not sleep. I did not feel able to do my housework and had no ambition. I tried different remedies and was treated by a physician, but did not i-eem to gain. One day I was in a More in Boston and was told about Vinol and decided to try it. It made me gain in strength and flesh, and I have been greatly benefited by its

use. so now I am able to do all myi

work Mrs. J. P. Edgerly, Boston, Mass. The reason Vinol built Mrs. Edgerly up after all other remedies had failed is because it contains the strength creating and tissue building properties of rod liver oil (without oil) aided by the blood making and vitalizing elements of iron and beef peptones. $1.00 a bottle guaranteed. Clem Thistlethwaite, druggist, Richmond, Ind. Advertisement.

Prompt, Courteous Service Kahle Bros. Groceries 98 W. Main TWO 217 So. 5th Phone 3033 STORES Phone 2626 Cash Grocery Free Delivery

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From Early Morning 'til Late at Night Our seven stores are open ready to serve you with just the Medicine or Toilet Article you want and at the best price in Richmond.

At these Low Attractive Prices

30c Grove's Bromo Ol Quinine C ?0c Hill's Cascara )On Quinine OL 35c Tape's Cold OQ Compound fritJKs Baume Anaelge- JQ siqfue Bengue UO C

"One-Day" Cold Tablets . ..

24 c

Vick's Sale 98c, 49c and.

24c

Antiphlogistine $1.39, 89c, 59c and.

29c

50c Drake's Croup Remedy

43c

30c Piso's Cough HQ Syrup tL 30c Bell's Honey O A and Tar AHtC 60c King's New JQ Discovery Ttttl, $1.20 Foley Honey AQ and Tar VOC

The Best Place to Trade

After All

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Hamilton Beach Electric Sweepers are the Best Made Weiss Furniture Store 505-13 Main St.

Broken Lenses Duplicated

Clara M. Sweitzer, Optometrist 1002 Main St. Richmond

"If there were no Thistlethwaite Drug Stores there would be no Cut-Rate Drugs"

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Eagle Brand Milk, per can

20c

Sal Hepatica 98c, 49c and...

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35c Tonsiline 29 C

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25c Woodbury's O -j Soap 30c Resinol Soap O A . for ...Z4C 30c Cuticura Soap no for OC Palm Olive Soap, )r ri 3 for wDC Sayman's Soap 1 O for JLOC

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Nature's Remedy

89c, 43c and

BAYER'S ASPIRIN

1 doz. tin 15 2 doz. in bottle 30 100 in bottle 93c

Bromo Seltzer A 98c, 49c and Z4:C

DeWitt's Kidney Pills, 93c and....

43c

60c Hind's Honey and Almond Cream

47c

Stein's Theatrical Makeup Complete Line

Prophylactic Tooth' Brushes ,

45c

All Baby Foods at Cut Prices

Colgate's Tooth Paste for

21c

$1.10 Wampole Cod Liver Oil

89c

$1.20 Pinkham's Compound

89c

$1.10 Miles' Nervine for

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$1.10 Wine of Cardui ...

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65c Pinex-for

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Men ! Buy Your Furnishings Here DENNIS-GAAR CO. Tailors and Furnishers 1010 Main St. In the Westcott

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PRICE'S OYSTERS Order them from your grocer Fresh Daily

Every department shares in many savings Domestics, Silks, Wool Goods, Hosiery, Underwear, Ready-to-Wear ; in fact, everything.

Buy ur furniture at

LEATHER GOODS DEPARTMENT Leather Music Rolls $1.00 to $2.50 20 discount Leather Fit-All Adjustable Toilet Kits. .$2.25 to $10 10 discount Khaki Adjustable Kits 65c to $2.75 Half Pric Lot of Coin Purses, values to 75c 25c Lot of Ladies' Leather Purses, values to $1.25. . . 49c Children's Purses, silk and leather, especially priced at . 25c to $1.93 Lot of Velvet and Leather Bags and Purses, values to $2.50, at 98c All Leather and Velvet Bags, Purses and Vanity Cases in price from S1.75 to $12.50 20 off Leather Boston Bags, regular values $2.25 $1.93 Men's Leather Bill Cases 75c to $5.00 10 discount Men's Leather Belts and Buckles 75c and $1.00 10 discount

Lee B. Nusbaum Co. NUSBAUM BUILDING

j PALLADIUM WANT ADS BRING RESULTS

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Big Sho Sale

Ladies' and Mens Shoes and Oxfords at Attractive Prices

Ladies' Brown Kid Boot Full leather Louis heel, medium and long vamp; Semi-Annual Sale $2.95 Black Glazed Kid Soft and pliable, military heels,

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Ladies' Brown Calfskin Oxfords With Cuban heels, wing: tip3, sizes up to 5 only; our regular fG value

$2.95

Extra Special FOR the GROWING GIRL Patent Kid leather, with genuine Kid top; good, solid Foles and low heels. Cheaper than sole leather

$2.95 Tan Calf Oxford Stitched tip, Cuban heels; SemiAnnual Sale S3.95 Extra Special One lot Oxfords and Pumps, brown and black. These are Oxfords formerly selling at from ?6 to $11. While they last

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Some Real Values for the Man

Cordovan in Black and Brown Brogue style, extra heavy soles $5.40 Men's Black Straightlast Vici Kid With rubber heels, welt-

Men's Black Kid Tramp Last Oxford, Nature toe, comfort able at the start S3.95

S4.50

Black Call Button

toe, rubb iUal Sale S2.95

Medium toe, rubber heels; Semi-Annual Sale

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Men's Black Kid, blucher style, medium toe, welt sewed soles and rubber heels. Don't wait! We nil n j j have all sizes. Better buy two pairs KUOOer tOOtWCar RedUCCd

Feltman 's Shoe Store The World' Largest Shoe Dealer 35 STORES 724 MAIN ST.