Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 14, 17 January 1922 — Page 12
PAGE TWELVE
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, JAN. 17, 1922.
MAY RAISE VISCOUNT TO PEERAGE BEFORE WEDDING PRINCESS
fBy Associated Press! LONDON, Jan. 17. It is generally expected that Viscount Lascelles will be raised to the peerage before he weds Princess Mary late in February. At present he is a 'commoner' his title being czly a "courtesy" one. He possesses no heraldic distinction except his Distinguished Service Order. When the princess i3 married, she would transfer her coat of arms to ihe sinister (left) side of her husband's new escutcheon Her present
crras, like those of the queen, bear no J motto. No woman except a reigning;
queen, has the right to a motto on her coat of arms, according to heraldic laws. Princess Mary will be attended by
eight bridesmaids, two of whom are!
her cousins. Princess Maud, a younger daughter of the Princess royal, and Lady May Cambridge, daughter of the Earl and Countess of Athlone. Two others will be the princess girl friends, l.ady Rachel Cavendish, youngest daughter of the Duke and Duchess ot Devonshire, and Lady Mary FoxStrangways, daughter of the Earl and Countess of Ilchester. Four others are still to be selected, and there is great expectancy among debutantes of a suitable age. The guard of honor outside the church on the wedding day will be furnished by the Royal Scots, the senior infantry regiment of the line, of which the princess is a colonel. The Grenadier Guards, Viscount Lascelles' former regiment, will also be prominently represented. BELIEVE CINCINNATI OBSERVATORY OLDEST OWNED BY ANY CITY
CINCINNATI, Ohio, Jan. 17. Dedication of the new municipal observatory at Des Moines, la,, has brought out the Interesting fact that Cincinnati probably has the oldest municipal observatory. The Des Moines Institution was erected under the auspices of Drake University, and Dean Morsehouse, recently declared, in his opinion, the
Queen City has the most autnentic j claim to the oldest municipal observatory. Tin's is declared to be true by J. G. Porter, who is in charge of the Cincinnati Observatory, which is situated on Mt. Lookout, the highest point of land in the city. The father of the movement that resulted in the establishment of a municipal observatory in this city was Ormsby Mitchell, famous astronomer, who later achieved a great military record as a Union general in the civil war. General Mitchell in 1841-42 conceived the ' idea of establishing such an observatory. The Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge then was in existence and the members bought shares at $23 each to further the plan. By this means $7500 was raised, and Mitchell sent abroad for the purpose, 1'iirrhased a telescope in Munich. The lens was neary a foot in diame
ter, and after much hard work, an additional $10,000 was raised for the mounting of the great glass. Through the generosity of Nicholas Longworth I., grandfather of Congressman Nicholas Longworth. a site was obtained on Mt, Adams, then an ideal location, and the construction work was begun. The corner stone was laid November 9, 1843. The oration was delivered by John Quincy Adams, then 77 years of age. In 1815, the telescope was received and mounted. In 1S4S, Professor Walker at Philadelphia, and Professor Mitchell at Cincinnati, were f-ngaged in determining the telegraphic signals.
Princess and Lascelles Afield on Boxing Day
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Princess Mary and her fiance, Lord Lascelles, riding to the West Norfold hounds at Tittles-hall, near Kakenham, on Boxing Day, an old-fashioned English holiday.
Shall the Forests Change Keepers? By FREDERICK J. HASKIN
WASHINGTON, D. C, Jan
interesting struggle between two departments of the governments seems to have arisen over the propositionembodied in several bills and also considered as part of the departmental re
organization scheme to take the national forests out of the jurisdiction of the department of agriculture and place them under that of the department of the interior. Ostensibly, of course, there is no struggle between the two departments, no difference of opinion or desire between the two cabinet officers at their heads, no rift in the. administration lute. None of these things ever appears on the surface. Nor do the ostensible reasons for the proposed transfer suggest any it-sue worth struggling over. But the ostensible reasons are not the real ones.
What everyone really familiar with the situation sees in the proposed transfer is an effort to modify the Roosevelt-Pinchot policy of careful
conservation in favor of one
17. An I this wild treasure under man's con
trol. Nature to the pioneer was not a thing to be studied and cared for. She was a grim enemy for strong men to fight. Game was killed, forests to be felled, land to be plowed. The pioneer developed toward the natural resources of the earth an aggressive, embattled attitude. He rejoiced in every wilderness, and he hated the sight of the wilderness unconquered. The typical pioneer has never got over this attitude, just as he has never got over his hatred of the Indians, and Secretary Fall seems to be the typical pioneer. His expresions nearly always
have the ring of sincerity, and they
express that pioneer attitude toward nature in all its simplicity.
"Man cannot exhaust the resources of nature and never will," he proclaimed in an interview published in the Colorado Springs Gazette, Sept. 29, 1921. And this premise he follqrwed with several logical conclusions .from it.
then they urge, the whole science of'
conservation, as practised all over the civilized world, is a mistake. This
science which has enabled the French! and German to perpetuate their for-j ests and game down through the cen-
tunes, ine lacK or wnich nas lert so, much of China a barren waste torn j by floods, is really all unnecessary. ;
in fact, the secretary seems to have taken, in his Colorado Springs interview, a high and lonely position where the conservationist snipers can crack away at him from several different directions, and they have not neglected the opportunity. This, then, is the real issue behind
the transfer project. The only osten-1 sible reason brought forward for it is' that the interior department is the of-j ficial real, estate office of the nation! and should have charge of all land j deals to prevent duplication. The for-i est service has certain grazing rights ' to lease and a limited and diminish-1 ing number of homesteads , to give away along streams. The interior de-j partment, it is claimed, should exer-j
cise these functions. But it also wants the forests themselves. This, the conservationists say, is a case of demand-
I ing the hide because you deserve the '
tan and tne two cannot be separated. ! But this whole contention is a minor one, a smoke screen to hide the real j issue. I At first it looked as though the' transfer might be rushed through as ;vi part of a general reorganization ! scheme without much attention being focused on it. But it has been embodied in several other measures and so brought out in the open, where its' enemies have a better chance to at-.
. tack it. and its friends to defend it !
J The Alaska forests are a special'
pnase ot tne question, which will be
taken up in a future Haskin letter. The main fact, which this article aims to set forth impartially, is that, the transfer is intended to be. and will be to some extent, if it takes p'ace. a change of policy toward the national forests from that of scientific conservation in the Roosevelt tradition in the direction of "free use" in the pioneer sense. The fact that Secretary Fall would have charge of the forests, in view of his expressed policy with regard to all natural resources, seem
sufficient proof of this.
STEEL MAGNATE'S DAUGHTER ELOPES
! PTOMAINE POISONING i GHOST IS LAID LOW i BY SCIENCE, REPORT
(By Associated Press) LOUISVILLE, Ky., Jan. 17 Science his laid low the ghost of ptomaine poisoning, according to members of the National Canners' association, who are here for the fifteenth annual convention of the organization which
is meeting in conjunction wnn ine i Canning Machine and Supplies and the National Food Brokers' associa- ' tion. j Food poisoning, as it is ordinarily j understood, it was declared, is often i due to improper diet or the careless j handling of food on the part of the j consumer. j The vanguard of more than 5,000 members of the organization began to j arrive from almost every important i agricultural section of the country, j Speakers at a dinner declared that the
j canners are spenuing ?:u,mm annuany in original research and that some of j the notable i'esults have been final eradication of the danger due to botu-
linus, especially from canned ripe olives. Prominent Speakers. Speakers inclu'J d Walter J. Sears, of Chillicothe, Ohio, and Henry Burden of Casanovia, N. Y., both former presidents of the Canners' association;
Dr. W. H. Bigelow of Washington, D. C, director of the association's laboratory and C. H. Bentley, of San Francisco, vice-president of the California5 Packing corporation. An extensive exhibit of canned goods and canning machinery ha been arranged in conjunction with the convention which will continue for five days. Meanwhile speakers prominent in the organizations are on the program for sectional meetings of those who conserve what was declared to be about 25 percent of the nation's food supply and whose output, it was stated, is valued, according to the last federal census, at $300,000,000 an
nually.
CI T THIS O I T IT IS WORTH MOEV Cut out. this slip, enclose with 5c and mail it to Foley & Co.. 2!fa5 Sheffield Ave., Chicago. III., writing your name and address clearly. You will receive in return a trial package containing Foley's Honey and Tar Compound for couiThs. colds and croup; Foley Kidney Pills for pains in sides
and back; rheumatism, backache, kidney and bladder ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly cleansing cathartic for constipation, biliou.-mes, headaches, and sluggish bowels. A. O. Luken Drug Co., Main Su Advertisement.
RED PEPPER HEAT STOPS BACKACHE The heat of red peppers takes the "ouch" from a sore, lame back. It can not hurt you, and it certainly ends the torture at once. When you are suffering so you can
hardly get around, just try Red Pepper Rub, and you will have the quickest relief known. Nothing has such concentrated, penetrating heat as red peppers. just as soon as you apply Red Pepper Rub you will feel the tingling heat. In three minutes it warms the sore spot through and through. Pain and soreness are gone. Ask any druggist for a jar of Rowles Red Pepper Rub. Be sure to get the genuine, with the name Rowles on each package. Advertisement.
COLUMBIA GRAFONOLAS
I Opp. Post Office Phone 1655
Art and Artists
The Corcoran galleries of Washington, D. C, are said proportionately speaking to be outdrawing and outselling the Chicago and New York galleries this year. Pictures have been selling fast at the Corcoran during the
Korris L. Henderson, Jr and his bride, nee Miss Adaline Corey.
Norris L. Henderson, Jr., son o"
a wealthy and socially prominent eastern manufacturer, and Miss Adaline Corey, daughter of Alfred Corey, Jr., the steel magnate, are honeymooning in Miami, Fla., following an elopement de luxe which surprised even their closest friends in New York.
paintings at prices lower than those listed in the catalogues had become so common in all the important exliihitinns nf thp. munrrv 1 hat the mar-
present exhibit. Listed among the,ket was demoralized. most successtul artists of selling pic-1 purchasers, it is said, who are out tures are the following artists who!, . m . ,,., .. will be represented in the eastern ex-if" bf.f :r , L a h hihitinn tc h in tb0 inci raii.Ho in ' selecting paintings or sculpture at the
March: Daniel F. Garber. W. Elmer
Chauncey F. Ryder.
'All nahip'il ,n . - ! i 1 .1 Vir
..-.II nllnn, i mnnli i r, - nf'.i f, f timhar I - '
w in auun ex ill u v ti i n w use ui liiiiui,
grazing and other natural resources under the protection of the forest fcervice. "Freer use" is the term used by the friends of the proposed change. "Exploitation" is the word the conservationists prefer. You can take jour choice. That a change of policy in the administration of the forests is the thing aimed at is evidenced in various ways. For one thing, it is knosvn that the proDOsition to make the forests ser-
the present generation," was another
of his expressions, and he also announced that "there is enough timber rotting every year to supply the normal demand." Can Resources be Exhausted? Now the friends of the Roosevelt policy of conservation in all parts of the country have seized upon such expressions as these and made a Roman holiday. It scarcely seems necessary to set forth their rebuttal, which the
intelligent American newspaper read-
Daniel Garber, who is an Indiana artist, is home being at North Manchester, received the gold medal and $2,000 prize that goes with it at the Corcoran gallery recently. In addition the prize picture, "South Room; Green Street," was purchased for the permanent collection of the Corcoran gallery. He will exhibit here in March.
Announcement was recently made that the Chicago Society of Artists!
has agreed to mark their paintings at fixed prices and to hold the same at least six months. The action was taken because the practice of offering;
vice a part of the interior department i Pr easiiy imagine. With regard
originated witn secretary oi tne in-;to the secretary's great major p rem terior Fall, and Mr. Fall has repeated-1 jse tiiat natural resources are inex
ly placed himself on record as favor- j haustible, the conservationists havej ing a much freer use of natural re- j pointed out that this, as a matter ofj sources and as opposed to the eonser- fa(.t. aDr,iips onlv to air and water.!
vation policy which has been followed j an(j thcy go on to give the long i-rt in this country since Roosevelt's ad-i0f natural resources that have been ministration, and which is regarded exhausted or impaired in this cVunby many persons both here and in;try. if the secretary is right in say-
Europe as the most successful of Amer-1 ing that natural resources should be
SULPHUR SOOTHES UGLY, ITCHING SKIN The First Application Makes j Skin Cool and Com- '
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j j At Felt man's 1
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I OSTARRHALJEUY i L Feltman's Shoe Store 1 I ! is guaranteed by 30 years I The World's Largest Shoe Dealers 1 ft service t0 millions of I 35 stores 724 Main Street M Americans. Kondon's wor'c wonders for your 1 KgJ cold, sneezing, cough, i zZ:::::::KSsSv chronic catarrh, head- I
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exhibitions, haggling with the sales
: agent, and if not satisfied with results,
visiting the artist s studio tor a personal agreement on lower prces when the exhibition is over.
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Jasper Robbins, Centerville,
Is Dead of Pneumonia CF.NTKRVILLR. Ind., Jan. 17 Jasper Robbins, 72 years old, died Tuesi!hv morning at his home four miles couth of Centerville. He had been ill several weeks. Death was caused by bronchial pneumonia. lie is survived by a sister. Eva, and nephew, the Uev. Merlin Robbins. Funeral services will be held at 10
ican administrative achievements.
The Pioneer Policy
Secretary Fall's attitude is the mosti
! interesting factor In the situation. 'Some of his enemies have described
him as the agent of certain western
capitalistic interests which desire to exploit the forest resources, and there
fore as not sincere In his
made as easily accessible as possible.
if you are suffering from eczema or! I TIES See Our New Values
Claims Old Age Due to Glandular Inactivity
policy. But there is evidence that he
is perfectly sincere. Mr. Fall is an American of the vanishing pioneer type, which will be forever extinct in this country in another generation. He went to New Mexico as a young man when the Southwest
was a truly wild country. As everyone
Scientists now claim that the vital
proposed 1 glands do not shrivel and become in
o'clock Thursday morning at the Lo- knows, to the pioneer of that era the
cuBt Grove church. Hhe Kev. Ernest i natural resources of the country seemClark of the Centerville Mrthodist j ed inexhaustible. The vast forests.
' c hurch will officiate. Burial will be in j the seemingly limitless prairies, the
herds of buifalo that reached fartner than one could see all of these were purely more than man could ever use.
Locust Grove cemetery.
Charles Robbins, a brother of the deceased, died two wc-U ii;T" of bron filial pneumonia, and Mis E-.a Robbins, sister of Charles mrl .Turner Robbins, is reported seriously ill with the ilieaso.
active on account of old age but rather that old age is itself caused by these
glands becoming shrunken and in
active. Many experiments have proven i that the vital glands of young animals I have remarkable powers for restoring to normal activity the corresponding glands in the human body. Thous- j ands of men and women are now tak-i ing animal glands to increase their vitality, tone up the nervous system j and build up weakened, run down con-! ditions. Many state that they feel I and look years younger, reporting that
improvement has taken place in two
some other torturing, embarrassing ' 1 skin trouble you may quickly be rid of j 1 it by using Mentho-Sulphur, declares a noted skin specialist. if This sulphur preparation, because of!l
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j Head Stuffed By
Requests For Free Seed Should Be Made at Once Representative Richard N. Elliott announces that the agricultural devartment has allottedt o him several hundred packages of garden seed for distribution within the sixth congres
sional district of Indiana. Any resi-l If your nostrils are clogged and your dent of the district desiring a package head stuffed because of catarrh or a of this seed, should address a request cold, get Ely's Cream Balm at any
Catarrh or Cold ? Use Healing Cream
BUY THE BEST Victor Tires (iill Piston Rings Elston Storage Batteries Richmond Tire Service
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to Representative Elliott, 2! House Office Building, Washington, D. C. The seed probably will be sent out by the agriculture department some time in March. Requests for it should be made now.
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7XyS'BVM'S
New Spring Dresses Just Arrived White Goods Featured in Our January Distribution Drive. ALL THIS WEEK
Millburn Prices Are Down Chenoweth Electric Service Company 1115 Main St. Phone 2121
One of the Very Attractive Items of Our JANUARY SALE is this Beautiful Overstuffed Tapestry Living Room Suite
J
Chevrolet "190" Touring $525 E. W. Steinharl & Co. 10th and Sailor Streets . Phone 2955
HARTMAN WARDROBE TRUNKS
1 '-rH
827 Main St.
Thistlethwaite's The Original Cut-Rate EVERY-DAY PRICES in Effect at All 7 Stores
"One-Day" Cold Tablets
24c
Vick's Salve 98c, 49c and.
24c
Antiphlogistine $1.39, 89c, 59c and.
29 c
ALL SCRAP TOBACCO.
3 for
25c
Ladies' plain handkerchiefs, regular price 10c for
Ladies' plain and embroidrred Handkerchiefs, OfT three for tlt Ladies' fine Linen (white and colored embroidered) Handkerchiefs at 39c 59c 75c SI S1.50 GO AT ONE-FIFTH OFF
Embroidered White Swiss, half yard to 1 yard wide, regular value $1.00 to $4.50 at ONE-HALF PRICE All Laces and Insertions at ONE-FOURTH OFF Imported Lace Collars at $1.25 S1.50 S1.75
Buster Brown Collars at
' i i f 1 i' rff' prrfSST ', !liFT?T II, Vji if
White and Cream regular value 29c sale at
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Stamped Gowns, sizes 17 and 18, worth Q-j fK $1.75. at vJ-t)0 Allover White Lace, half to 1 yard wide, regular value $1 to $2.50... HALF PRICE Barber Towels, per dozen 75c & $1.00 White Huck Towels at 15c 19c 25c
Net Guimps, regular value $2.50, now priced rjg White Jewel Cloth. 1 yard wide, for making scarfs and bed spreads, at $1.00 & $1.29
White Scrim, regular value 45c Sale price QKn only OOt Dresser Scarfs, 98c to $4.00 values, at HALF PRICE ALL WHITE GOODS AT SPECIAL PRICES
Exactly like the picture; loose spring cushions, spring backs, luxuriously comfortable, covered in high-grade tapestry fT A f( and priced very special at. V--Ot:UU
Yon'll Do licttrr Here
Thlrly Kret from 7th St.
"The Price is Always Less at Druitts"
36-INCH-WIDE CABOT A heavy Unbleached Muslin, at
15c
Lee B. Nusbaum Co.
February Delineator Now Ready.
Butterick Patterns
39c ft
(3
