Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 24, 28 January 1922 — Page 5

v.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND.. SATURDAY, JAN. 28, 1922.

PAGE FIVE

The Middle Ground By MARION RUBINCAM

and formally forbidden to raise her i and great benefactions from Ameristatu3 in the future. ca. France has taken on the familiar

' psycholotrv of a more or less suppli

cant dependent, that the more you do

Clean-up" Campaign Costs Government Over 2 Million (By Associated Press)

RE-ENTER DICK. I Chapter 71. Meantime the spring had warmed into summer. The opera season closed. Amy's salary stopped and Amy's lessons in the opera school ended. Her course in classic dancing stopped, too. The teacher gathered up her more prosperous pupils and went to Aix-les-Bains, where she had a summer school. Amy longed to go . Paris was (he one place in the world she wanted to see. "Its time she rested a bit, she looks fagged," her mother confided to Luther. "Do you know I think I'll see whether your father wants us to come home for the summer the country air would do Amy good." The strenuous season had told upon even Amy's glorious health and vitality. Sometimes she touched up her cheeks when her own pretty color was wanting a proceeding that shocked her mother beyond words, at first but that lately she had accepted calmly enough. Amy's pretty brown eyes had blue shadows under them. But she never missed a performance, rehearsal or lesson, and she faithfuliy attended the Italian class and the French lessons Claire gave her. Piano

practice suffered and her mother suffered from occasional bursts of irritableness. The opera company separated one star had a shack in the mountains a shack attended by 30 servants; onother had a villa in the smartest seaside resort on the coast; one had a summer home in an old chateau in France, and one went to taly, taking refuge from the heat among the mountains. Two went to California to work in the movies, and some to South America, where the smart season was on and more gold and glory to be had. And the richest and most famous retired to a small farm in New Jersey and raised chickens during the day nnd paddled a canoe over a tiny lake when it was moonlight, and where she lived in gingham housedresses.

blazed, but she treated Dick with exaggerated sweetness. Only she called him "Richard," a? she always did when she was mad at him. Monday A Sense of Justice.

i WASHINGTON, Jan. 28. The cost

4 4kH .

There still remains, however, many.1" "s government ior me vocational

BALLOON PASSENGERS FROM DAYTON LAND NEAR FOUNTAIN CITY

Facts Needed

i " " LaLim;l.. PVn !for her the more she demand,.

cvun; no; iiiiUL HO. UCtfil 1UUUU UY : flirt rTOrr'lQP rf tot ovni inncin(r

France to feel so badlv.' France I Americans who Doint to what they j training of men who were disabled in

j could not resent the present fact that! 5ay j3 tm? one mndamental factor , tlle World war jumped more than two she is now an inferior naval power. about France. That factor i3 her ; million dollars between the months of jEut there is a difference between that!fpar that Germany miEht again grow September ami vnmk.,

military sen.se and mav asain attack

I and being formally and definitely ear

: marked as a second rate power, far

inferior to Japan and being required j France"

10 years to come. It was especially this formal earmarking of France as a second-rate j naval power that hurt her feelings. i Never the less, th oficial action

United

to figures prepared by the

States Veterans' bureau. Col. Charles R. Forbes, director of

the bureau, attributes this Increase j 0f the bureau.

directly to the "clean-up" campaign in

to overcome the handicaps of their disabilities. On Sept. 1 there were 82,738 men receiving training under the direction

which thousands of disabled war vet- In remote parts of England are still erans, ignorant of the assistance the'to be seen cottages with sloping walls. . ,r , . They were built slightlv out of the government offers them were discov-jfrue bcaUie of curious superstitution ered and placed in schools and shops, j that if a house was built exactly square where they are receiving Instruction ' it was bound to collapse.

which the French delegates tookon

ThpsA fripnds of France say thatk..n

fear will cause nations as well as in- A dividuals to do unreasonable things. They say that if we will give France ' the one thing that will cure her ofj' fear, namely, a treaty guaranteeing ; M tr, . -n . rimot TirHain shall ' fe.

- - vw- .ww- w KV." v&X" jWW" JW jKSK" SC" W' j fV.v- 4. - - I " -k

Never to Make Treaty. If this is the only cure for the state of mind that causes France today to

be the one impediment to the restora

tion of the world

then, so far as Amer-; fc

FOUNTAIN CITY, Ind., Jan. 23. this matter of capital ship ratio was(COme t0 iier rescue if she is ever I Aerial visitors made a call upon Law- very fortunate and appears to be of a j .-.gain attacked, then France will again. f&

1 . ' - '1H 111 11, 1111 1 11 1 I 11 t 111, SUUIU 111 I " , CIV 11 1 1 Y 1.. u, 1 1 1 1 111 1 11 J 1 11 I V-... ""

here. Thursday afternoon, when a bai- No one :an ay positively what was i Cf minj.

loon from McCook Field, with five ! the motive or the trench in insisting passengers under command of Cantain j an the right t0 bui,d 10 capital ships, Mclntyre, landed in a 30 acre field in ! an insistence which, it was apparent front of the Mitchell house would be a death blow to the whole Leaving the Dayton field at 10:30 in j Hughes plan and would cause the conthe morning, the balloon had slowly I ference to be an admitted failure, traveled wet until the nasspnwrs if- I - Motive Unknown

ciaea to lana auring the afternoon, a '""'." J "l me son 01 ireaty uiaL ffaute wam?.

favorable spot being elected in theSonaoie PrlQe- iNO one f an say exacny j The only means that will assure to, level ground south of Fountain City. I wnat il was- because the motive is : France the kind of future help from-l A nice landing was made, with no wholly a matter within the minds of 1 America that she has had in the past; damage to the gas bag, which the j the Frer,cn delegates, and from the j i3 So to act now that when and if the j aeronauts packed in the basket for outside it can only be guessed at. j Occasion arises we will have the sort j shipment before they left They wen ' But scme newspaper men who are un-j of friendly and sympathetic reeling; aided in the landing by Mr Mitchel! ' (3erstood to be more or less familiar , utout her that will lead us to helpi ?

who happened to be on hand at. th. v"' ul bum ; ner.

ica is concerned, there is nothing to do; "-

aVmit it Anitrira will DPVpr mMP .

America will never make ', fa

time.

The party proceeded by auto to

Richmond where they took an .inter

at the time that

bartering one . It was said that

the motive was a

j Probably one good way for America ; i to reach a conviction about France is'

not ' to try to make a clear distinction -be-)

France did

urban for Dayton. No information was i ,ly lntend t0 build these shiPs- and ! ,ween tne French people, on the one eiven out as to the reason for the. t.rin. did Rot even mean to take a final ! band, on the other hand, the French M

politicians. That some of those poli-,

ticians are willing to play a vickediy

given out as to the reason for the trip

nr the results obtained. The captain in charge promised to send an auto truck for the balloon Saturdav.

FRENCH PIQUE

(Continued from Page One.) tions of the world she was a very

stand on their right to build the in,

It was said that the motive was one

or oartenng wun tne British; that ; s- fish lole, would not be a unreasonthe French wanted to use this threat : able inference from recent events in in order to compel the British to con-! that country.

sent to matung a treaty with France It would seem that they are not un-j -! of the sort that France wanted. 'willing to stimulate the fears of -their ; If this motive was true one, it was j own people, and to play upon those j '?; thoroughly reprehensible and showed j fears in order to elevate themselves j a complete failure on the part of the! to positions of personal power. I W French to grasp the spirit of the con-1 In the newsnaners and in all sorts! 'H

y4

I ; Vis.

weak fourth. The gap between her i 'prence. This conference, as one of : of public and private discussions, we

strength and that of any of the other three was so great that she was in a class apart. Mentions Only Three

unaer tnese circumstances it was

the American delegates once ex-i use the terms "France" and "The; pressed it. a meeting in which nations j French" as if we meant the entire

An1 ln aUornatelv wilTltfr! tO Pe

Newport. California, France, or Italy, ! natural that Hughes, when he began to or any place but the hot city whs; 3 tP,rms, of naval armament, men-

she lived. " Wouldn't vnn like to EO back to

I tioned only the three treat naval now

. .-..., ; ... 1 1 1 1 . . 11.;.. 1 1

1 ' anu ignuitu r 1 suit, in itiis r raiun

the farm?" her inoiher askeu her ouo very warm June night. 'Heavens, no! That's the last place in the world!" Thor.e who stayed in the city did sc because they could not afford to go away. Claire hart to stay. Her show ms limning we'l into the hot weather. Luther's vacation came in August. Adam was building a house on the Hudson, and had rented one nearby

10 watcn me ofk. "-"f" the United States alone, caused it to a week end Darties. to which Claire . j..: ...

had reason enough for wounded feelings. She felt that it was only the extent of her exertions en land during the war that had put her in a position so inferior, and she may well have felt a sense of injustice at being treated as an inferior.

are expected to give up things not to get things. Bargain Deplorable If France was willing to wreck the conference or even to threaten its success, merely for the sake of a trading point with which t-.he could compel one of the other nations in the conference to make a bargain with her, that was as deplorable as could well be imagined.

fortv millions of French neonle. where-

as in fact the thing we are really talk-j fa ing about, and the only thing we can' have knowledge of, are the actions and j

1lmicihs ui must? rieucn politicians who from time to time are able to get hold of the seats of power. That some, of the politicians now in control in France have the power and seem to have the disposition to act with reckless disregard for France's

and Jim and others were asked, ana . niv as well. Mrs. Talbot refused to

. . . 1 rA her selKi'l " ur

!ci Ainy go um-uapouu, ; Baron Kato. but saw very little of Bri

nr Ola-iasnioneo tiecuiuiu uciu "" raged by the idea. Amy stormed, bur

obeyed, when Luther aauea nis au. ihoritv to his mother's. Adam tactfully asked Mrs. Talbot as chaperon and she spent several weekends at his much too grand house feeling uncomfortably in the way whenever she was in the room with

Irili'tli,. thin fliij fi.. At- I,-

. i.iv.n, ...an m,.-, ,nr lau nia.1 .ui., larger aioinient 01 sunmannes was o Hughes and the others, treated naval 1 the nature; that she did no reallv want armament, especially as rtgards cap- them, nor have tiie monev to build ital ship tonnage, as being so much , them, nor even the intention to bui'd a concern of Great Britain, Japan and; them, but merely wanted to uo this

opportunity to hold the conference up as a trading point with which to compel the British to make a separate! treaty lhat France wan'.d. i It must be remnibernd, of course,' that these ascriptions of motives to the French are necessarily in th field of surmise. It is ;. field in which it is easy to do injustice. What the American people want to know now is how we should IVel

It was further said bv .'oni who . tfceni allies, and to block the indisare supposed to be familiar with th ! Pensable restoration of the world, French point of view and svmpathatie ! ?cf,'ns to f'.dmit of litt!e doubt. 1 to it, that the French insistence on :i (Copyright 1H-- b ythe New York

Evening Fost, Inc.)

happen that during the first week or

ten days of the conference Mr. Hughes

saw a great denl of Mr. Balfour and

and, or any of the othfr French. Hughes was concerned with the naval ratio and the naval ratio chiefly concerned the three nations, excluding France. After the first few days of the con-

iiiilflttiiii:iiniiMHMniiiiiiiiiMiiiitiiMiiiiiii!iihiifi;iiniii!iiiiiiini(HlMiiitinHT::Mi I We Repair All Makes of 1 I - Electric Irons I 1 Hart's Electric Shop I 1027 Main Phone 2434 i!iM:riHiiiiiuitiiiifiiMtini:(HMtMuituMtHMtniiti!!tii!tiitniiiiti'ii!inii:!iiHiiiniiiT

the Other guests tune - - st tutine for it of an nUi;incp inelnrl

those special week-ends. jng 1ue L'niteil States. Adam, to Amy's annoyance, was m Same Thjng Hsppens no Imrry to make r.ny agreement v.mti IIere a.ain (h(? game thjn happPn. Amy. There w.-.s one very prettj '''-jpd. France had not been in the Anglotic brunette, hard, ambitious, but witn , Japanese alliance and in th" discnstrreat deal ol charm, who was, ! sions in this field, France was asrain MUnte Amy, "after him in the m0 relatively out of the picture. Obviousshameless v. ay. Mother, she is worse ly and net.esariy Ine )h..0( nations than I am, for at least I put a decent concerned were Great Britain. Japan front on it." , and the United States, and it was with I don't see how you are going lO;lne (jeienrales lrol Great Britian and Miake a mr.n propose if be doesn t ; japarl (nat Mr fll?hes was holding want to," Mrs. Talbot observed, wit., j the bulk of his conference, a touch or sarcasm. j As a result of all of this, it would "You make him want to." Amy ar. j not jJ(1 surprising if Briand and the swered serenely. Hut this subtlety j French felt themselves ignored. One was btyond the mother. day Briand was absent from his hotel "He certainly won't at those parties 1 for a few hours. When he returned

there arc always 100 uwu; : me ratner excited reporters wanted

terence, tne subject that was next , about France. Her behavior undoubttaken up was the getting rid of the i edly threatened a conference on tlv Anglo-Japanese alliance, and the sub-'success of which Americans have et':

their hearts. As a consequence of this and many other tilings. American

ieeungs nave turned strongly ;:gainst

Cold Weather is Here

France.

Spoiled Child Belief In quarters v here this feeling is strong. France is spoken of as tho spoiled child among nations. It is said

BUY COAL

NOW

MONDAY SPECIAL

TURNOVERS each

New System Bakery 913 Main

nf his;

people around." "Exactly. But

around here." From which Mrs. Talbot interna that Ainv was going to bring matter:. 10 a head in her own home. Adam ,.a;i :.t 11. Jim was to come

there is no out

to know if he had been having a secret conference wiih Hughes, but it was learned that his absence had henn due to nothing more important than a visit to the movies. There were in the newspapers at ;

the time many allusion-" to various

WAYNE ELECTRIC WASHERS have simple mechanism and copper tub. They rock and wash thoroughly and do not tear the lightest fabrics. He1 it at WM. H. MEERHOFF'S 9 South 9th Pinie 1236

I p i

Siding k

Flooring. Ceiling,

and Yellow Pine Timber:

Yellow Poplar and White Oak Plank, and Timbers. Prompt Ccal Delivery

over tor , aspects of this fact

m,i tbpv were to motoi

unil -1 Tin'-tv ot tneni tri- (luiiani iiusiuess or

ro idhouso where one cuuiu seemeu 10 dp none among Mug;i-?. t;ai

Amy had pu

K! : nnrtant hmiinpec

1' rn 'ind :i l ) H : I f l i " ' ' -

v I . . I " , i. . ' need to a

dance on cool porches t 1.. ,., . mo ;iliilt I

" - . .1... 1, .

,,n the dres of golden ussuh . ;!"ed Sh- was seated at the p.ano

tcadv to sing cnoruses

,-r:is or to try her pretty

1 much beyond

that the

all the iin-

conferencc

four, and Baron Kato. and lhat the French were more or less out. of it. Cause Pique Such were the superficial and personal things that might readily have caused the French delegates to have a feeling of pique. This was the more true in as much as one or two of the French delegates seemed to be the

ire most qnn'k to

anu i taKe account ot anything thev deemed

to be a slight to themselves, or to

brilliance their country.

J'

voice on

her ability) ui

.. 1.:... ....niil ii- rusitime. as i.e

to sing iiim i" . . iii.-...i b:v ng Amy sine

r him. Tn.:le him feel like a Turk-1 sor of men who

, .. t -it on the coucn

.li. r the fopcs he wanted to hear.

.1 ;r. fii ovtra

oniMUi'W .,w,. More fund

,.f Amy s ;' ' ; cilences between Were the public crisis that arose over lhat, and the lon .. thp French at,itudp ab(,lf tllpjr nava, Uie songs. (,1(,,.vone and call- ratio. The dear fact at this moment

When you don't hioiv zvhat to say send your Photograph!

Appointments are mutually advantageous.

DICK S nou.-tr. . , -Come over, and pretend you ju. U'onued in casually." 6aldHUU appeared, trying not to seem out of breath. Hello Aimer, oh. hello, Mr Ainold " he said. "Hot. isn't it. I jus. eort of thought Id drop in and see

singing, uon; sni

that 1-ranee on the sea is a second

rate power. There is no escaping this fact; it is incontestable. It is a matter of figures. F,ut there Is a difference between France admitting that for the presen; due to conditions arising out of the war-conditions which she hops are

temporary, she is second class naval

OU. iO on Miiu-.i,. """v . TimVpr. ,) on thp nthfir h;1n1 n,lt.

V'H- . . n, .v,pro!ting that she is to be formally classAmy went on singing. But tneroj.,.- ? were no p;'uses between songs, or if. xriv ,w were, they were filled with j A BOTTLE OF WAYNE

animated conversation. Amy s eyes

Heart Problems

Dear Mrs. Thompson: Please tell ire something that is a god skin whit.ner: HARRIET. The following lotion is a very good whitener for the skin: A teaspoonful of tincture of benzoin to an ounce of

rosewater forms a well-known lotion,

vvh'.ch is excellent for whitening the

: kin. i :

Dear Mrs. Thompson: Is cnfde petroleum good for the hair? D. D. (.'rude petroleum is often used to prevent falling hair. It does not leave the hair too greasy, but it helps the .-alp. Use ;us little as possible at each application, rubbing into the scalp with gentle massage every night.

j DAIRY

UCTS

MILK

1 m$$m&z$z.

1 1 igaf. i

'II "t

! I PASTEUftlZf55

I I MiLK I j l I in reach

1 1 cnua in

fl I m prion

8 "i

: 722 MAIN SI RICHMOND. INO !

of every Richmond.

i..:'ujiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiii"M.iHMiiiiiiNiniiiiiiiMiiii!imiiiiiimiiiiiiiii:i!l ; i Globe-Wernicke f P SECTIONAL BOOKCASES 1 j FERD GROTHAUS j l Furniture cf Quality ; I 614-616 Main St. 7 iinl:liil.niitii;iiiii:tili:i.n.iM ;:,:;i.iiiiiit.!i:In...: . il:. ri n: '11 .1 :.- ."; (

Kellogg Battle Creek Foods French Capers Wild Rics Prepared Chop Sucy Fig Pudding Plum Pudding Grenadine Syrup 5 Fruit Syrup Old Virginia Fruit Cake Crystalized Ginger John M. Eggemeyer & Sens Bts Hive Grocery 3 Phones

The QUALITY of GENNETT RECORDS, coupled with our policy of releasing the new "hits" in advance of others, have won a recognition of eenuine merit on the part of the public and forced competition to endeavor to meet the situation. Cennett Records were the first to be sold at pre-war prices and today they offer you greater record value than ever before, regardless of price. On January 31st we are releasing two Gennett Records of unusual merit and every record library should have them: 1816 "Old Black JoeM .75 "Medley of Southern Songs" Sung hy Criterion Quartette. 10054 "Svmphonv in E Flat Major" .90 'Trelude of Third Act f raviata" By Symphony Orchestra. We will be pleastd to play for you any records you may be interested in hearing without obligation to buy.

The Starr Piano Go. 931-935 Main Street, Richmond

?4

Another Saving Feature Comes With The Hoosier Store's Big

Read below what von can buy here Monday at prices that mean dollars in your pocket. Yes, Monday is the day to Buy These Shoes

SPECIAL: 120 pairs Ladies' black kid or patent kid lace Shoes, welt soles, Louis heels, grey kid tops. These were just, bought from a factory that makes nothing cheaper than

?6 shoes; Monday-price

Men's 1-buckle Arctic, ail sizes at

S1.98 ivy Cloth S1.39

107c DISCOUNT on any Boy's or Girl's brown or black Shoe for Monday only. Every pair guaranteed solid leather.

SPECIAL: Ladies' black pattent leather lace Oxfords or 1strap Slippers, low heels, new patterns. Why pay more? Our Monday price is One lot of Ladies' black vici kid lace Shoes, Cuban or low heels, plain toe or tip. for dress

or comfort; four styles of ?4

shoes; Monday at

S2.98

MEN', LOOK! 50 pairs Men's Shoes, brown and black, new goods, all sizes but not of each style; on table (Jo fQ Monday at t$d)J Choice of any Men's Dress Shoe in our stock, brown or

black, kid or calf, all styles;

Monday at ?4.4S and

$5.48

Misses' black gun metal lace Shoes, solid leather, for dress

or school, sizes 9 to 2 at

81.98

SPECIAL: Choice of SO pairs Ladies' black kid lace Oxfords and Pumps. Louis heels, all

sizes; not a pair less than $d

value; Monday

at

....S2.48

Yard Goods Values for Monday 20c extra good quality bleached Muslin, far better than Hope, Monday, yard 15o 25c yard wide Percales, Monday, yd. 19? $1.00 All Wool Serge yard wide, Mondav. a 'ard 69c $2.50 heavy Cotton Blankets, size 64xS0; Monday, pair SI. 39 20c heavy Outing Flannels for Monday, a a:d JO J1.00 Comfort Cotton In one sheet, size 72x 90; Sode Rile. Monday, roll 69C Clark's O. X. T. Sewing Thread, spool 5 25c yard wide Comfort Cretonnes. Monday. yard XJ)C $5.00 Home Made Comforts, large size. special S2.9S Minerva Yarns in Germantown Silk, mixed and worsted, at special prices.

House Need Values for Monday ?5.00 Sample Axminsicr Rugs. 2Tx54-in., Monday S1.89 ?12.30 guaranteed Felt Mattresses, full size, Monday SS.98 ?1.00 Cocoa Door Mais, good size, extra quality TOO Large Cretonne Remnants for Mondav, cath 10c Buy your Spring Uugs now from $10.00 to $25.00 saved on room :-iz? rugs. Make a small deposit if you don't need one now and we v.iil hold them for-you until spring. Dark Green Window Shades, spi-cia'Oc $1.25 All Feather Pillows. Monday 79f Flat Curtain Rods, each IOC Rubber Stair Treads for Monday --loC

Ladies and Children's Ready -to-Wear Specials for Monday

One lot of Children's Gingham Dresses, long and short sleeves, sizes 7 to 11 years; special for Q-J ff Mondav Ul.UU

Petticoats

Plain colors and figured

cerizt-d Petticoats, special Monday . . .

89c

Ladies' Winter Coats All new models in the most wanted shades, all sizes, divided into two special groups for Monday $10 and $15

Children's All Wool Serge Dresses in navy, with red flannel trimmings, all sizes 7 to

14 years; choice Mondav

S4.29

One rack of Ladies' Siik and Wool Dresses, handsomely embroidered and braldeJl all

sizes. 16-4t; Monday

S10.98

Hosiery and Underwear Specials for Monday Ladies' fleeced high neck ankle length Union Suits, $1.00 grade, Monday 79? Child's 39c Flannelette Bloomers 29

Ladies' Coutil Corsets, Monday . . .

Ladies' $1.00 Strap Gloves. Monday

79c

Wrist Chamoise'.te 89c

One lot Ladies' $3.00 Glove Silk Hose, black or cordovan, special lot to close Monday at S1.95 Ladies' full fashioned Dure silk Hose in black or cordovan, $2.25 grade; M-jndav sP'cial at 81.05 Ladies' full fashioned imported mercerized Lisle Hose, plain or lace, black or brown; Monday 9 Ladies' Lisle Outsize Hose, fine ribbed tcp. our regular 75c number, black or cordovan; Monday 69c One lot Infants' Cashmere Hose, black or white, special lot to close Monday . -ISc

Men's and Boys' Values for Mondayone lot of Boys' Corduroy Trousers, sizes S to 16 years; special Mondav, a Pair 99C Men's heavy fleece Union Suits, sizes 34 to 46; special Monday, a suit S1.C9 One lot of Men's Work Trousers, dark mixtures, sizes 2S to 42 waist; special Monday, a pair j'jj Boys' Flannelette Blouses, plain grevs and stripes, sizes 8 to 15; special 45p Men's Socks, grey mix, black or brown; very special, Monday, a pair 1QC Men's and Boys' Sweaters, grev only, all sizes, special Monday --95C Men's Corduroy Trousers, all sizes, special Monday, a pair S2.39 Boys heavy wool mix Trousers, full lined, sizes 8 to 17, $2.00 quality, Monday, a pair S1.49 Men's Jersey Gloves, seconds, special Monday, a pair 5C Men's heavy ribbed or fleeced Shirts and Drawers, all sizes, special Monday, a garment 79C

iff

V,'

. t.

3

s