Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 21, 25 January 1922 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, JAN. 25, 1922.
PAGE THREE
RANDOLPH TAXABLE PROPERTY ABSTRACT IS FILED BY' BROWNE
WINCHESTER. Ind.. Jan. 23. James M. Browne, Randolph county
auditor, has completed the abstract of
taxable property and polls for this county. It is as follows: Taxables, $690,956.30; current tax. $1,178,562.68; delinquents. $29,060.68; polls, $4,571; steam and electric railroads. $8,998,960; telegraph and telephone property, $431,370; express companies, $8,730. Organize War Post McKinley Post, Spanish-American War veterans, with U. G. Daly as commander, has been organized in this city. There are 35 Spanish War veterans in Randolph county. Seeks Property Partition Petition for partition of real estate has been filed in the circuit court by Levi Dull et al against Jacob H. Dull. Dora E. Powers, Mahala A. May, S. I. Dull, Will R. Dull and John M. Dull. Real Estate Transfers Union Heat, Light and Power com
pany to Sedan Body company, lots 19, 20. J. D. and P. addition, Union City,
W. P., $2,100.
Peter J. Vettel to Mason P. Vettel, 100' acres, White River township, W.
D.. $1.
Fred S. Calwell, commissioner, to! Seth R. Jackson. 40 acrqs, White River
township. W. D., $5,280. Randolph County bank to Francis L. Manor, lot 111, Mumma's addition, Winchester, W. D.. $1,100. Close Revival The Church of Christ of Union City lias just closed a revival of many weeks' duration, where they claim many were received into the church. The Paekard-Saxton revival now being held in the Church of Christ, in jthi3 city, is atracting large crowds -each night. The interest extends over the entire county. There is special music each night, and many convertions are claimed. Sentence .Forest Brown
Forest Brown, alias Flossie Jenkins,! entered a plea of guilty before Judge A. L. Bales to a charge of grand larceny and was sentenced to Michigan City for a term of from 10 to 14 years. Jenkins was implicated in stealing a number of boxes of cigars from Gruber's pool room in Union City a number of weeks ago. DeWitt Curry, also implicated in the same robbery, was not ready to enter a plea and was released on his own recognizance. Marriage Licenses The following marriage licenses have been issued: Charles Jennings Mock, 23, Ridgeille, and Irene Baker, 23, Union City. Harold EIroy Brown. 23, Montpelier, and Pearl May Mock, 20, Ridgeville. The bridegroom of the first named and the bride of the second are brother and sister. File Paternity Charge Paternity charges have been filed in the circuit court by the State ex rel May Alexander vs. Charles Daum. Order Punchboards Out All punchboards and similar devices have been ordered out of Union City poolrooms on the Indiana side. The law which keeps minors out of pool rooms and forbids the sale of cigarettes who have not attained the age fixed by law, Marshal Henning says, will be enforced. There are no poolrooms on the Ohio side, the first time . In many years.
EATON JUDGE GRANTS
TWO DIVORCE SUITS
EATON. Ohio, Jan. 25. Judge Abel Ilisinser, in common pleas court, has planted Ora Flora a divorce from Minnie Flora and Augusta Kendrick a divorce from William Kendrick. Both decrees wsre granted on grounds of pross neglect. The Floras had been married 13 years and the Kendrick's four years. Mrs. Kendrick was awarded custody of Iheh child and $4 a veek for its support. Revival services, to continue two or three weeks, were inaugurated Tuesday evening in the Christian church by Rev. Hilev Baker, pastor, assisted by Miss Ruth Beery, Pleasant Hill, as evangelistic singer. Presented by local talent, and sponsored by the Council of Mothers, the musical fantasy, "Miss Hob White." efirned a net sum ot $132, which will be expended for local charity and pi her purposes by the Council of Mothers.
Garland's "Soul Twin" Won By "Spirit Face" BOSTON, Jan. 25 A pretty, slender girl, dressed simply in a blue serge, a short brown coat and black satin
tarn, explained her philosophy here today a philosophy that par tly ex
plains the most recent eccentricity of Charles Gar land, youthful Harvard graduate, who recently accepted the $1,600,000 inheritance from his
V J? . t "
Exit Motherhood By FREDERICK J. HASKIN
Lillian Conrad
Mrs. Charles S. Garland father, which a year ago he and his brother refused. The girl is Lillian Conrad, young Boston art student, whom Garland describes as his "soul twin". Garland proposed to his wife that Miss
NEW YORK CITY, Jan. 25. A Cali
fornia professor of zoology has recent
ly aroused considerable indignation
among New York feminists by writing a book in which he declares that the new woman is a traitor to her race because she refuses to marry and have children. The blame for this he places largely upon college education which,
he asserts, tends to develop the fem
inine mentality and inspire it with the ambition to have not babies but a
"career."Professor Holmes for that is the name of the brave gentleman has develoyed his theme in a most discreet and dispassionate manner. It is obvious that he is entirely sympathetic toward the new woman's aims and desires, and is merely interested in setting forth their biological significance. Nevertheless, the new women do not like it. Nearly every day tine of their resentful number bursts forth in the
ADOPT CITY-MANAGER PLAN. tBy Associated Press) KENOSHA, Wis.. Jan. 25. Kenosha by a majority of 872 votes decided to discard the Aldermanic form of gov-
j eminent and adopt the city manager
"readers' columns" of the daily press it seldom pa.vt-as well L-itVi a etirn rphnlr for f i nrYif:rn- ! A .1
...v.. v - ui iiioiiey-iuaKiug anu
Charles S. Garland
Conrad share their farm house home at Dedham, Mass. Mrs. Garland left and is now with her parents in Dedham. Little Margaret Garland, the three-weeks-old daughter of the couple and the direct cause of Garland's recent acceptance of his father's estate, is with her. "I love Charles Garland for his ideals, not alone for the man himself," said Miss Conrad. I know that his wife looks upon me as a thief, a vam
pire who has stolen her man and broken up her home. I pity her, but my first duty is to Charles. "He is free to go back to her if he wants to. I am ready to go to him and live with him as his wife if he wants me to. I will share him with any one else. Or, if I must, I will give him up forever. Whatever is best for his spiritual development must be done. "Yes, it is true that I love him. And
I love his wife. He needs both of us. Mary Garland does not understand. She has left him. Why can't we three live together? "The three of us have talked it over. Mary doesn't understand. I have seen the tears in her eyes as she vainly fought for her man. But she is selfish. Stye wants all of him. "He needs a girl that understands him, a mate who will not tie him down to sordid domesticity. A home is tlfe last thing in the world that he wants."
0
Let Contract For $6,600 Bungalow On Kinsey Street
Contract for a $6,600 brick bungalow, to be erected on Kinsey street, has just been let by Oscar Chase, of Cambridge City, it became known Wednesday. Mr. Chase expects to make his home here in the future.
and a defense of the feminist's noble
character. The college girls seem to feel particularly insulted, and are taking great pains to explain in elaborate detail just why they do not marry. It
is not, in their judgment, because of their own liberal education, but the lack of it in most men. , The reasons for this widespread spinsterhood among intelligent, welleducated females are doubtless many and varied, but Professor Holmes is chiefly concerned with its effect upon the race. His greatest alarm is over the fact that women of the lower
classes continue to produce husky offspring at a mid-Victorian rate, while those -of superior stock are limiting
their families to one or two, or declin ing to gd in for motherhood at all. College Women Stay Single
it may be said that about 50 per
cent of college women remain unmar
ried," he writes in his recent book. "It j is apparently true that women of superior intellect and force of character are those who, "whether college women or not, are pretty apt to be selected for
spinsterhood. They are more likely to win positions which permit them to enjoy the comforts and many luxuries of life; they develop other interests which often detract from 'he appeal of matrimony. In some cases tlley lose a certain feminine charm, a misfortune that arouses a deep-seated, instinctive recoil in the opposite sex. There can be no doubt that the race is losing a vast wealth of material for motherhod of the best and most efficient type Many of the women who are nowadays most prone to sacrifice motherhood to a 'career' are just the ones upon whom the obligation of
motherhood should rest with the great
est weight. It may be seriously doubt
ed if the growing independence of
women, despite its many advantages.
is an unmixed blessing. Thus far it has worked to deteriorate the race in the interests of social advancement, a process which isbound to be disastrous in the long run." Yet Professor Holmes evidently thinks that the new woman's treachery to the race is more involuntary than it
is deliberate. She is, he shows, large- j ly a victim of her own environment; t merely the product of an industrial age which is devoted to the accumu-j
lation and guarding of property not
eral. The stay-at-home method at least was more conducive to the reproduction of superior stock. Now, it is the immigrant woman who remains at home and has the babies and nurses them into superior health and enduring vigor. Reproducing Studidity. Thus, if you follow Prof. Holmes' argument to .its logical conclusions, you reach the pleasant prospect of a race ultimately reduced to the general level of intelligence of Little Italy, Of course, the whole argument will strike you as distinctly absurb unless you believe in the generally accepted the
ory that mental ability is hereditary. "Still," declared one college girl in discussing her share of responsibility in speeding the race to its doom, "I don'e see what we are going to do about it. You can't' leap into matrimony as
easily as you can leap into a job. and
This is a day
quick profits.
NEGLIGENCE DENIED BY PHONE COMPANY
GREENVILLE, OMo. J. .-Th. to. peclM. l.cU.e,,
American leiepnone aaiu considered a women s victory as they
had organized change.
to back the proposed
to be false.
company has filed an answer and cross petition to the suit for $25,000 damQfrAe in -4 il i. in nnrnmnn Tvl Cil s fOll ft
. ,, Of fifteen alarms of fire in London some time ago by Charles Dull against Jn one day recenllyf ten turned Qut
uie company - lor injuries in-c"" when his automobile collided with a
truck belonging to the company, which
was standing along me siae ui wo road between Weimer's Mill and Coletown, where telephone poles were being unloaded. Dull claims to have received permanent injuries. The company denies any liability and savs the accident was not caused
by the negligence on the part of the company and asks that his petition be dismissed, and for other relief to which they may be entitled.
Fire Destroys Empty Stable On North Third Fire at North A and Third streets, at 10:40 o'clock Tuesday evening, almost completely destroyed an empty stable. The building burned rapidly and almost the entire roof was on fire before the alarm was turned in. It is believed that sparks from a switch engine started the blaze.
CARR, OF
and there's no money-making or quick
profit in having babies. Perhaps if the race would only pay us for having good, strong, healthy, bright children as well as it pays us for iacilitat'ng ;ts business, we might get veally interest
ed and do our best to save it from
ruin. Perhaps the day will come when
the state will recognize motherhood as a valuable service, and remunerate it accordingly make it worthwhile." Another college girt believes that the modern woman would take more
interest in matrimony and motherhood
if there were only a greater preponderance of intelligent males. "I firmly believe," she says, "that the average college woman is perfectly will'ng to marry and have children. The trouble is whom is she to marry? Her mentality has been developed, and the is no longer content to spend her life with a man who has nc interests
beyond the stock market or the latest
musical comedy. The col'.ege girl is taught to think, to take an interest in politics and economics, drama and art; and what companionship can she find in the average man w.hose ideas on la
bor are: 'If they did a little work they wouldn't have so much to growl at. Bolsheviks al' of them ' Or on politics: 'We should worry about Europe. We have enough troubles of our own.' A man who finds a symphony a bore and 'o whom the theater means mere y Ed Wynn or Al Jot son. What wonder that the college woman finds more congenial companionship in her own sex and prefers to make her own living rather than to marry a man she cannot respect. "Prof. Holmes should divide his responsibility for the trend of the race. He should not place it all on the New Woman but hand half of it to the Old Man."
For Constipated Bowels Bilious Liver
(Continued from Page One.) action would result in a small increase in the prioe of corn,, for instance, and That our farmers would sell their corn
nrnviriins there was a moderate ad
vance in Drice." he remarked.
Mr. Carr states that he will not raise any corn on his fa-ms this year
and ;hat he is not planning to raise any next year. He says his fields will be in grass and rye- "For the time being I am going to raise cattle," he said. He believer that if his policy was generally followed for the next
year or two it wouid result in cheaperbeef and higher corn. Labor Indorses Tariff.
Rep. Richard N. Eliiott has submitted for publication in the Congressional Record resolutions adop;ed by the Cential Trades and Labor Council of Richmond, Ind., indorsing the pending protective tariif bill wiih its provision for American valuation. Incidentally, Washington will be the Mecca for thousands of American mannfacturers next week. They are to meet here for the purposo of urging the senate to act as spedily as possible upon the tariff bill and to retain in it the provision for American valuation. Invitations have been sent to 25,000 manufacturers to attend this meeting and it is expected that at least 8,000 will come. A large Indiana delegation is expected.
Marries Suffragist. Washington friends of Raymond Swing. Germany, correspondent for a New York newspaper and a former resident of Richmond, Ind., were recently advised of his marriage to Miss Betty Gram, an American musician, in Berlin. Mrs. Swing took a very active part in the "votes for women" campaign which led up to the enactment of the equal suffiage amendment to the federal constitution. About a year ago she went to Berlin and resumed her musical studies and there she met
The nicest cathartic-laxative ';o physic your bowels when you havts Headache Biliousness Colds Indigestion Dizziness Sour Stomach is candy-like Cascarets. One or two tonight will empty your bowels com
pletely by morning and you will feel splendid. "They work" while you sleep." Cascarets never stir you up or gripe like Salts, Pills, Calomel, or Oil and they cost only ten cents a box. Children love Cascarets too. Advertisement.
Tn the arctic regions there are 762 different species of flowers, but with
in the antarctic circle there has nev-J Mr. Swing, who is also a musician o? er been found a flowering plant. note.
Clifton Bingham, the writer of 'In O'd Madrid'" and other popular songs, oTten writes as many as fifty verses without rising from his desk. v :
Modoc School Notes Modoc was well represented at the invitational tournament at Hagerstown Saturday. Miss Faith Jordan spent Saturday and Sunday with Miss Kathleen Engle. Robert Merrill and daughters, Pletes and Ethel, and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Clouser, called on J. T. Engle Sunday afternoon. Miss Lavonne McGunnegill spent Sunday at Newcastle. Rex Edwards went to Frankfort last, week and was absent two days from school. Gilberta Edwards was absent from school Monday because of the illness of her mother. Gent Retz is suffering of blood poison, caused by a scratch received in a basketball game a few weeks ago.
The senior class is arranging the program for a reception to be given the first of February. The local basketball team played a fast game with the Huntsville team last Friday evening. At the end of 10 minutes the score was 12 and 12. Two extra periods of five minutes each were played without "the score being changed. By mutual agreement the game was then called off to be played again at some future date. The Whitewater team will play here next Saturday evening.
children. As many other students of J the problem have pointed out, women :
i are simply being absorbed by industry ;
as everything else is being absorbed ; by industry, which is like a huge 1 sponge that will some day absorb the race itself. Every year, an increasing number of young women enter sedentary occupations in business offices and shops which. Professor Holmes thinks, contribute to their physical debility and multiply the hardships of childbirth. There is no doubt, he says, that "the conditions of present-day civHizalion have in the last few generations seri-1 ously weakened the physique of thej modern civilized woman." For one j thing, both her willingness and ability! to nurse her children has decreased very considerably an unquestioned; disadvantage to her offspring, as it has 1 been found, according to a medical; authority quoted by Holmes, that ! "breast-fed children are superior in
later lite to those artificially red, in weight, character of teeth, intelligence and general physical development." Only a few years ago, the majority of girls of American upper-middle-elass families of refinement and edu
cation were not dashing madly around 1
in theindustrial world. They stayed home and married and had babies and did very little else. It was doubtless less" exciting than directing a personnel department of a large industrial concern or selling bonds, but. it was, it seems, better for the race in gen-
Yon wouldn't put on hobbles to run a foot race
Then why load up on handicaps for the day's work? A good deal of food, unwisely chosen, does weigh the body down and clog the digestion, and dull the brain. Why put on the hobbles? Grape-Nuts is a breakfast or lunch-time dish for those who
want food efficiency, and mind and body efficiency. Grape-Nuts satisfies and nourishes. It delights the taste. It is ready to serve whenever you are ready to eat. And it digests easily, quickly and completely leaving no handicap of heaviness and drowsiness.
Grape -Nuts is the food for health and action. "There's a Reason" Made by Postum Cereal Company, Inc., Battle Creek, Mich.
WARNING! Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin. Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 22 years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache
Lumbago
Pain, Pain
Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions. Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggists. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Sallcyliracld
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These big Grey Granite Jumbo Basins on sale this week only
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