Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 63, 15 March 1922 — Page 10
,'PAGE TEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND.f WEDNESDAY, MAR. 15, 1922.
SALE OF HONG KOHG CHILDREN DENOUNCED BY BRITISH SOCIETY
(R Associated Prs)
LONDON. March 15. The sale of j boys and girls at 'Hong Kong has been
denounced as "an abominable ecanaai In a British possession" at a meeting of the Anti-Slavery, Aborgines Protection society here. St-Loe Strachey, editor of the Spectator, wrote that if the facts were as represented, the state of affairs In Hong Kong represented the vilest form
of slavery in existence wnen young ; people were deliberately sold and subjected to the cruel lust and greed of their purchasers. A resolution was passed declaring that continuance of the system amounted to the connivance of slavery under the British flag. It was estimated at tie meeting that those held in bondage under this system numbered 50,000. A score of societies were represented at the conference which was held to determine what steps should b taken 'to stop the sale of children. Would Abolish System Viscountess Gladstone, who presided.
declared that the system ought to be abolished. She said she did not think that any British man or woman could have believed it possible that any-
: where under the British flag children ! four years of age and upward could be openly sold and handed over as chat1 tels to their purchasers to become drudges or victims of prostitution. She said, however, that the matter was not so simple as it looked because ' "the adoption" system was not a wrong thing in itself. , ' Charles Roberts,, formerly under
secretary for India and president of
the Anti-Slavery society, said it was !an established fact that Chinese girls
pnd boys were sold and bought in Hong Kong at from $10 to $15 per year j and it was a significant fact that high-1 rr prices were obtainable when girls 1
;were sold for purposes of prostitution. Yet they could not get the Colonial office to admit that the system was one of slavery. It was enough for him that it constituted traffic, in human " beings which ought to be put down by law.
PRESIDENT HARDING ARRIVES IN FLORIDA FOR VACATION
r ., 3; $ 1 : M mm II 0 I 1 W' $ h t f ll'il ft mi...
ped the whole consignment within three weeks. Too often American blindness to foreign attitudes has caused the Iost of millions of dollars. The American mistake frequently has been to put blindly into efTect systems which have been successful at home. For instance, several American firms put mil Hons of dollars into big electric advertisinK slims in cities of France.
After all of this money had been.
t the American merchants re
sponsible . learned that the French people will not buy foreign goods advertised in this way. Our foreign trade has gone through th mill of bitter experience. Luckily
it has profited by its mistakes of th past. Now a big exporting concern gives as much thought and care to picking its foreign representatives as It does to picking its chief executives in the home office.
tuce, potato salad, gelatin and fruits and cake and coffee were served.... Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Collins and daughter, Miss Hellen Collins, and Mrs. John Harding and daughter, Miss Marie Harding spent Sunday afternoon with Charley Smith and family. .'. .Mr. and Mrs. James Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Otis Money and Mrs. John Money
spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and (former's home. Mrs. Ed Hatfield and
meetings were conducted by Rev. Carl Tucker, Rev. Knowls and Frank Byrd. ....Mr. and Mrs. Frank Linderman and Miss Llnnie Hatfield were the, L, guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Miles w Bradbury and Elizabeth Shafer . Mrs. John Gockey and Mrs. Paul Brooks delightfully entertained their
club members Thursday evening at the
Suburban
Left to right, Secretary Weeks, Airs. Harding. Speaker Gillette, President Harding. Edward Bt ale Lean and his wife, Attorney General Daugherly and George Christian, Jr. '
Presndent Warren G. Harding, Mrs. The
Harding and members of the cabinet" vicinity
have been guests of Edward B. Mc- shore
Lean on his yacht, the "Nahmeoka," members of the party to stage several during their Florida vacation trip. ! rounds of golf. The president faces
BETHEU Ind Mrs. Henry Wolfal,
Mrs. Irma Baker and baby, Mrs. Gar
Skinner, Mrs. Mat Endsley. Mrs. Ida Harlan and Mrs. Dora Hawkins spent Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Reason Wolfal. Mrs. Wolfal is (ill Mrs. Merl Coleman spent Thursday with .John Harding and family Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Thompson and Mrs. Sarah Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Eli Hyde and Miss Wyvona Hyde were miests Sundav of Mr. and Mrs. Lafe
White Milton Harlan sold his property here to Mr. and Mrs. William Lee
of near Braffitsville. Mr. Lee bought the property here Tuesday and moved here Friday. Mr. Harlan stored his
goods in one room of the house, until
Mrs. William Lee... .Oscar White and
family spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. John Weidenbaugh. j. . . Mrs. Isophene Brown spent Saturday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Gamber of Hollansburg. Mrs. Gamber had a stroke of paralysis last Tues-
J day and she is in a critical condition.
GREEN'S FORK, Ind. Rev. and Mrs. Knowls, Rev. Tucker and Frank Byrd were dinner guests Saturday of Mr. and Mrs. Newton Brooks and family Prayer meeting Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. Martha Wisehart at 7 o'clock Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Martindale, Mr. and Mrs. Alpheus Martindale and daughter of Cambridge City spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gause and family Mr. and
Mrc. Frank Burg and family of Fountain City and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burg and son were guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Burg Rev. D. L.
Mulligan preached at the Christian
Mrs. Dave Brooks and Mrs. Charley Bradway of Knightstown were guests.
SCHOOL DEMANDS SKIRTS BE WORN OVER BREECHES RENO, Nev., March 15 Reno school girls have been advised by their teachers that skirts must be worn with riding breeches in the schoolrooms. Several girls appeared with breeches and w?re told such costumes were not appropriate for classes without the more feminine skirt. The girls explained they were forced to walk through deep snow on their way to school from their homes.
The Blue Devil is a fine dish washer he leaves no rings in the pan. Advertlsement. IF BACK HURTS BEGIN ON SALTS
sionally. If You Eat
Much Meat.
party has! been . cruising in the i perplexing problems on his return to he can make some other arrangements
of St. Augustine, putting into) uasn,ngton. including the coal crisis - tV" ThV Inn of Mr. and
just often enough to enable the a"u lue neeQ OI spaaing up ueworn ra " W R Tharpe and Miss Ruby
now pending measure.
including
bonus
The Foreign Business of America By FREDERICK . HASK1N
Kinsev of Lynn were married Satur
day evening. They will live on W. R. Tharpe's farm in his tenant's house
Mr. and Mrs. Leighton Brown en
tertained the fallowing guests Friday ' evening: Mr. and Mrs. Guy Anderson, t Mr. and Mrs. Everette White, Donald
Windel and Miss Wyvona Hyde, Elmer
DISCUSSION LEAGUE CONTEST AT PARKER
WASHINGTON. March 15. Foreign trade follows the lending of money to foreign governments and cities. I'. always has and it always will. This condition is as inexorable as the succession of the seasons. And yet it is but recently that American bankets and business men have been convinced of this fact, according to Franklin Adams, counselor of the Pan-American union. "A few years ago, if another government a nnrnarhpri nnr hankprs nnrl
WINCHESTER. Ind., March 15. At asked for funds, those izovernmentr:
a meeting held Tuesday by the Ran-ejther were turned down absolutely,
dolph county high school principals, in the county superintendent's office,
it was decided to hold the county contest of the Discussion league at Parker, Friday evening, March 31. The
uiscussion contest oiine eignin ens- Worid war, was tho result of the ig tnct will be held in Winchester, Fri- f m-rrhnT,ta and hank-rn
or so much delay was encountered that
the applicants grew tired and went elsewhere," says Mr. Adams. "The condition, which existed long before
the entrance of this country into the
day evening, April 17. ' ., Marriage Licenses. ' Marriage licenses have been issued to Lloyd Forest Tharp. 20 years old. Bethel, and Ina Ruby Kinsey, 19 years old, Lynn. Harold Harvey Brown, 24 years old, Williamsburg, and Clara Roxie Wright 24 years old, Lynn. Grants Divorce. Judge A. L. Bales has granted a divorce to Chole Humphrey from Emmitt Humphrey. Sues For Divorce. Suit, for divorce has been filed by Marie Nearon" against Harry El .Nearon. They were married June 26. 1917, and separated Feb. 21, 1922. The defendant is charged with abandonment and failure to provide. Fire Destroys Home.
Fire destroyed the. home of D. H
norance of our merchants and banker
of the fundamentals of foreign trade. But with the opening of the war and the greatly increased demand for ou.' goods in Europe and in Latin America as well as the far east, our national
mercantile vision widened perceptibly. It is still widening." In the old days, if the government of one of the countries to the south of the United States wanted a loan to build a railway, that government would send a special representative to the United States. These emisaries would spend weeks and weeks in American financial centers before they got a hearing, and probably it would be weeks after that - befor-i there was a decision. Today the financial houses in tlie United States have representatives practically all over the world and
McNees, and part or the household j these men are looking for places to goods, in Farmland, Tuesday. . There ilend American money. The Latin was no insurance. Fire is supposed American city that wants to build a
ing Spanish in schools and colleges. But they must go a long way beyond
merely learning to converse in Span-j ish to fit themselves for posts as for-J eign representatives of American business.. . Of course knowledge of the language, and a thorough knowldge at that, is the prime requisite, but it is only a part of the necessary knowledge and training. The most perfect Spanish scholar in the world is of no use to an American exporting firm or bank if he is not also a good salesman. The characteristics of the Latin American people must be. taken Into account. A lack of understanding of these cannot be balanced by the greatest fluency in Spanish. Some big American export housed have stablished their own schools for training young men to represent them abroad. The teaching staffs can tell within a few weeks whether a man is going to be a success as a salesman on foreign soil.
Foreign trade. is receiving the close
attention of some of the big American universities. Once the banks anu business houss had their eyes opened to the opportunities so long neglected, the colleges were not slow to take up the subject. Officials of the PanAmerican union discovered that a young employe there was taking a foreign trade course at one of tho
universities in Washington, specializ-i
ing with regard to Latin America. His studies include Spanish physical gc ography, principles of accounting, export sales practice, staple commodities of world trade, histories of Latin American countries, and foreign trade conventions. When this list is com
pared only with the study of a foreign
men who will visit four or five towns between dawn and dark. This method in Latin America would result in absolute failure. I Tfi 'i In i-1 ii n .a .
large export houses in the United " lrA tit- o-
to have Hue.
been caused by a defective
Masonic .Calendar
Wednesday. March 15, Webb lodge No. 24 F. and A. M.. stated meeting. Friday. March 17, King Solomon's chapter No. 4. R. A. M.. special meeting. Rehearsal In Most Excellent Masters degree, 7:30.' ' Saturday, March 18,Loyal chapter No. 49, A. E. S.. stated meeting and initiation of candidates.
FALL RESULTS IN DEATH ROCHESTER, Ind., March 15 Elsie
W. Fromm, 75 years old, a resident of Rochester since 1866, when she came
here from Germany, is dead as the re suit of a fall which produced compli
cations to her already failing health.
A daughter and two sons survive.
States have brought men into theL home offices who have been trained in Central and South America, men who know not only the needs of those countries, but the habits and customs
as well. The judgment of thes men j is used in selecting men who probably will make good. Harder to Land Jobs. Wit hthe realization that much more is necessary than the ability to talk and understand the Spanish tongue, it is becoming harder each year to be chosen for commercial work in tho Latin-American field. The standard is ever rising. It may be truly said
that commercial scientists now are in
charge and are. directing the Latin American trade of the United States. American business blundered into many queer situations when it started out to capture foreign trade. In or.3 incident, a South American firm wanted to purchase $100,000 worth of phirts. It sent a representative to tho United States to make he purchase-. Many concerns were inerviewed. The foreign buyer wanted a certain alteration made in the style of the shirts. Not one of the American houses would consent to this, and in desperation, the South American agent sailed for England. Even there the shirt makers would not meet the South Amet-
1 ican requirements, and the buyer went
on to Germany. The first tirm upon which he called told him that of course the alterations could be made, got. the exact specifications, and' shii-
and coffee were served Mr. and Mrs., Amos Black and daughter, Lucile, and son, Robert, of New Paris, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Spencer About 30 friends of Mrs. Jacob Endsley gathered at her home
Friday to remind her of her birthday Saturday. Refreshments of popcorn
and candy were served .... Miss Hellen Collins who is staying at New Paris
until her school is out there spent from Friday evening until Sunday here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Collins Harry Hawkins and family moved on Mrs. Thurman Constable's farm east of town Thursday. .. .The
Ladies' Aid met at the home of Mrs. Oliver Spencer's Thursday afternoon.
There were 18 members and 13 visit
ors. Three new members were added
to the society. The meeting was calld to order by the president. Scripture reading by Mrs. Oliver Spencer, then prayer by Mrs. Mattie Bond. Songs by society and roll call. After the business session refreshments of pressed chicken sandwiches with let-
church Sunday morning and evening. I ri ' i r r ....Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Bonn andirJUSh YOUr Kidneys OCCa-
daughter Opal of Richmond spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Stanton and family. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Lark Hoover and Rev. D. L. Milligan and family were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Lute Hatfield Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Cummins and family Bpent Sunday at Sulphur Springs with his father and mother Miss Gladys Meyers of Muncie normal spent Sunday at home with her parents and had as her friend, Miss Ethel Ballenger from Muncie Mrs. Theodosia Deeter and Mrs. Georgia McDivitt spent Sunday at home. , . .Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Benson spent Sunday afternoon with
I nir. auu jurs. veryi fcnaner ai w u-
namsburg Mr. and Mrs. Wade Kennedy from Kitchel were guests Sunday of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cranor. . .Rev. Milligan preached to a large audience Sunday morning. His subject was "Sanctification."
....Mr. and Mrs. O. Lundy and family from near Centerville were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd DimitL Miss Thelma Stackhouse spent Saturday and Sunday with Miss Cuba Sowers Revival meeting closed at the M. E. church Sunday evening. The
QUICK RELIEF FROM CONSTIPATION
Get Doctor Edwards' Olive Tablets
Men Blind to Woman's Suffering
How many men, think you, have any
street railway, for instance, after some
American financial agent arranges for
the necessary construction funds and money for rolling stock, has pointed out to it that the United States ha1? civil engineers, steel rail mills, and means of providing all other equipment needed. It is natural that the government making the loan should want to repay as much as possible the people of the country advancing the funds. Thus contracts for equipment which cannot be furnished by the borrowing country itself follow the American loan to American firms. The result Is a considerable foreign trade arising from this single project. This expansion of the American viewpoint is being met by the education of young .men to fit them for posts of business and financial delegates, notably to the Latin American nations. A great many young men are study-
tongue, it js seen what strides Ameri-jidea of the pain endured by women in
ineir own nousenoia, ana ouen wiui-
ca has taken in recognizing the ground
work necessary for preparing youus men to go out and creditably represent American business abroad. The studies enumerated above are only those included in the first year 'cuiriculum at this university. It is a fact that our Latin American trade has a Jock on it that is turned with the key of social graces. To be
a successful salesman in inose cuun
out a murmur? They have no patience when the overworked wife and mother begins to get pale, have headaches, backaches, faint spells, or is melancholy and can not sleep. There is help for every woman in this condition, as evidenced by the many letters of recommendation which we are continually publishing in this paper for Lydia. E. Pinkham's Vegetable
tries, one must be not only a master ( compound, it will pav any woman of knowledge of what he has to sell, ! who suffers from such ailments to give
but well versed in the socal forms ro . it a trial. Advertisement.
dear to the Spanish-Amercan heart, and thoroughly aware of the way our southern neighbors prefer to do business. The breezy type of salesman who tries to get into a town on one train and out on the next, dealing with Central and South American merchants, will have nothing to show in the way of orders. In our own country, there are sales-
That is the joyful cry of thousands since Dr. Edwards produced Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician for 17 years and calomel's old-time enemy, discovered the .formula for Olive Tablets while treating patients for chronic constipation and torpid livers. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not contain calomel, but a healing, soothing vegetable laxative. No' griping is the "keynote" of these little sugar-coated, olive-colored tablets. They cause the bowels and liver to act normally. They never force them to unnatural action. If you have a "dark brown mouth" bad breath a dull, tired feeling sick headache torpid liver constipation, you'll find quick, sure and pleasant results from one or two of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets at bed-time. Thousands take them every night just to keep right. Try them, 15c and 30c. Advertisement.
I Had Catarrh So Bad I could not hear my congregation sing in church. I was fortunate enough to get a treatment of Dr. Burkhart's Vegetable Compound. I have been restored. My health is good and I owe It all to this great medicine. Rev. A. S. Andrews. Salt Lake City, Utah. Don't fail to write for a treatment. Pay when cured. Address 621 Main St., Cincinnati. O. 30 days' treatment, 25c:
70 days, 50c. At all druggists. Adver
tisement.
No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid, which i clogs the kidney pores so they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the waste and poisons trom the blood, then you get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver troubles, nervousness, constipation, diziness, sleeplessness, bladder disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull acnei in your kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine Is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment. Irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from
any rename pnarmacy and take a tablespoonful in a glass of water just before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid c grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations , to flush clogged kidneys and Etimplate them to activity, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it n-... longer causes irritation,' thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts is Inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink, which all regular meat eaters should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications. Advertisement.
This Will Help You Put On Pounds of Good Firm Flesh And Round Out Face And Figure If You Are Weak, Thin Or Emaciated Due To Causes Explained Below
Get a FREE $1.00 Package of Genuine Yeast Vitamine Tablets Today as Explained Below Try Them for Ten Days and Watch the Results Science has at last shqwn how we sometimes grow weak, thin, and emaciated on an abundance of food (lacking in vitamines) while with a much smaller amount of food, rich in vitamines, we may quickly take on good firm flesh, increase in weight, and make a remarkable gain in strength, energy and endurance, provided your blood contains sufficient quantity of oxygenated organic iron to enable your body to assimilate your food properly. Without organic iron both food and vitamine are absolutely useless yonr body can-
lWin- cells and tissue nnles. hTwT l l DO N0T BE MISLED BY IMITATIONS 17iSJi iSTi- !?i? Plenty WHICH OFTEN CONTAIN DRUGS.
j FREE $1.00 Coupon I ' This coupon, if use- within fi-e days. no. ! til. t M 1 -
For centuries scientists tried in -sin to make
organic iron. At last the problem was solved so that you may now obtain pure organic iron like the iron in your blood from any druggist under the name of "Xuxated Iron".
I j .u . .w fMKuw m It has been arranged to give to every pnr- of Genuine Yaast Vitamin Tablets, at chaser of Kuxated Iron, who wishes something I solutely free with each bottle of Nnxated f
to help put on flesh or increase weight, a large I 'ron porcnaae. u your dealer regular $1.00 package of Genuine Yeast Vita- I do"" hT? w Vitamin Tablets be
mine Tablets absolutely free. Be sure to take I u".l. V?" 1T L1" i
. . ' , ' H-mmc iuicl -ci present it to tout dealer today, i with Nuzated Iron. - 1
Qid you ever fry Grape Nuts O With stewed prunes or peaches:
THERE Isn't anything better for breakfast or lunch than a dish of Grape-Nuts, with cream or milk, and sttwed prunes or peaches. This, delicious combination gives you the elements of a well-balanced food. For it contains not only the material needed to build tissue and furnish energy, but it also supplies fruit acids, that help keep the system in good order. .
Go to your grocer today and order a package . of delicious Grape-Nuts. You will find that it will digest more readily than most other cereals, and it will "stay by", you longer because it's so , richly nourishing.
Grape'Nutsr Heedth- J
"ttere's a Treason "
8
I r
WHO APE THEY?
MAIL HER B DRESS CHVRTMAN GOT REAL MAD NOT THY DOOR LAD O ARE NOT IN MOON NO BEE IN RUGEE LOONS SAWA GRIN DAM NO LARD IN THE CAKE I WILL SELL AS RUM Vt GIN RING IS MUM , ' BENT MOST COPY
Can You Solve This Movie Puzzle? On the Movie Screen, above are the names of 10 Movie Stars rearranged. The operator played a joke on the audience, and you'll admit it was a good one. TO SOLVE THE PUZZLE, rearrange the letters in the funny sentences on the screen so that they will spell each actor's or actress' name. For example: No. 10 is Betty Compson. If you can name all ten stars you can win the Oakland car or $1,000. Probably you know the names of the most popular stars, but just to refresh your mind we are mentioning below a few of the most famous players: Douglas Fairbanks, Betty Compson, Elsie Ferguson, Norma Talmadge, Antonio Moreno, Charlie Chaplin, William Russell, Gloria Swanson, Anita Stewart, Richard Barthelmess, Katherine MacDonald, Irene Castle, Dorothy Dalton. Harold Lloyd, Eugene O'Brien, Irving Cummings, Wallace Reid and Mary Pickford. 185 "Points" Wins First Prize You will receive 10 "Points" toward the Oakland Touring Car or the $1,000 for each name yon arrange correctly, or 100 "Points" if you arrange all 10 names correctly. You can gain 60 "Points" more by qualifying your answer. This is done by proving you have introduced HOME FOLKS an interesting and educational magazine for the Home, to five people. The final 25 "Points" will be awarded by three judges, not connected with this company, to the person making up the nearest correct list of words from the initials of the first and last name of each Movie Star. But DO NOT send in your list of words now. Send us your answer to the Puzzle first and we will write and tell you how to get up your word list Costs Nothing to Try You Can Win You will not be asked to subscribe to HOME FOLKS or spend a single penny of your money In order to win. We merely want your help in introducing Home Folks to five of your friends. Just write your answer to the Movie Puzzle on one side of a sheet of paper and PRINT your name and Fifrinnftne TPhPAr"ghtoW CSr"er The"5wer -aining 185 "Points" will win the Oakland or the $1,000. There are 25 Big Prizes in-all. In ease of a tie, all tieing contestants will receive l?wn,e pr,z Do yoar be8t and you en Wln- Contest closes May 27, 1922. Answer the Puzzle NOW and send your answer to: ,
4 Chamber of Commerce ST. PAUL, MINN.
nmnmiuiiiiHmmniiuimtimnnmimuiuftifm I ASK FOR I Abel's Velvet Ice Cream! IT'S DIFFERENT 1 Retail Phone 1901 1 Wholesale Phone 1439 -i""HiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinitiiiiiiiiriimuiimiiniirauiHiiiHiiiMiiliimmiiii9
We can save you money on Furni
ture and Rugs. Just received a new shipment of Rugs at Reduced prices. Guttman Furniture Co.
405-407 Main St Phone 6160
For More Pep, Use RICHMOND GASOLINE More Miles per Gallon Richmond Oil Co. 6th St. and Ft. Wayne Ave.
Home Folks Publishing Co. Dept.
FOOTWEAR "Better for Less" FIVELS SHOE STORE 533 Main
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Ijohn h. niewoehnert S - '' s I Sanitary and Heating Engineer 819 S. G. St Phone 1828 I s - twimmu-miiMHiHiMii
