Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 111, 10 May 1922 — Page 6

'PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1922.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Port Office at Richmond. Indiana, as " ' Second-Class Mall Matter. MEMBER Of THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Th Associated Prss la exclusively entitled to the is for republication of an news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights ot republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.

V

and its individual initiative thus curtailed. Amer icans may go to sleep and imagine the league issue is dead, but the European statesmen and the league supporters in this country will not. They will take advantage of every device known or possible of invention to gain their point. America's manhood of military age and its billions of wealth are the stakes. And every Eurppean statesman is a Napoleon when it comes to love of those two things.

Marplot ?: i What of the Plot?

Every? time ex-President' Wilson writes he sends a more edito to the dictionary. Just at reientJ the expresidentj is engaged in a campiignito,' exterminate such Democratic senators as placed citizenship above partisanship and voted for-our country by. standing against the League of Nations. , . ""' Senator Reed, of 'Missouri, is up for re-nomination, and Wilsoh Is- at work actively to defeat him. In a letter to the governor of Missouri, who is helping the , ex-president's campaign against: Reed, Wilson charged Reed with being a marplot.

Now, a marplot is "one whose officious in

terference mars or frustrates a design or plot." Senator Reed had the honor to assist in de

feating Wilson's League of Nations treaty, whereby this -nation would have been inextricably a part of the European mess. How hopelessly immoral and selfish this meis is becomes patent when one considers the present Genoa conference. ; , If Senator Reed is a marplot as charged, then the t ex-president has unwittingly placed his scheme, which he declared the senate would have to adopt "without the dotting of an i or the crossing of a t," in the light of being a plot Many people so regarded it and by their votes helped roll up the overwhelming majority that made Harding president. Wilson's interference in Missouri politics revivifies the League of Nations issue. Maybe this is his aim. If Long, Wilson's candidate, defeats i Reed, the result can be paraded before the American, people as a mandate from the Democrats of Missouri to bring forth the league as a national issue,, '"V ' Under existing economic conditions the politics of such a move would be good, from the standpoint of those who favor the Europeanization of our country by going into the league. Ordinarily the political party in power during i, trade depression losses in the next presidential election. Therefore, if the League of .Nations plank - is in the Democratic platform in 1924, and that party is swept back to power by the votes of . millions blind to anything else than resentment at the prevailing depression and forgetful that it got under way in the last year of Wilson's term as president, the United States would be put in the league. Americans must remember this. It will take at least two generations for Europe to recover from the results of the recent war. European statesmen know this and know that their task can be lightened and their game of international emperialism immeasurably strengthened through a league in which the United States is a member

John Patterson John Patterson was generally regarded as Dayton's foremost citizen, not only because he

was head of a gigantic business enterprise but;

also because he applied to' his industrial plant! new principles that made his employes doubly j interested in their work. - j He did not coddle and pet his employes but taught them to think. He was one of the few men who could concentrate his entire intellectual apparatus to the solution of a problem, the re-, suit being best expressed in the magnificent industry which he created. But he believed this power to think, to concentrate, to fix the mind on -the immediate task before it, was something every one of his em

ployes snouia learn. so ne advocated it constantly. He rewarded visibly and substantially the men and women who did think about their work. For every suggestion that improved his product or reduced the cost of operation, he paid money. To stimulate right living and right thinking processes he published pamphlets that contained "rules of success," which eminent men bad found valuable and which were worthy of imitation. He provided lectures and entertainments for his employes. He adapted his whole plant to the purpose of making the men and women who worked their satisfied so that they could give to their work not only the physical power that was necessary but also the mental ability that in the long run was worth infinitely more. Mr. Patterson applied these identical principles to civic problems. At the time of the great flood, he took charge of the relief work, and within a few hours, by deep concentration, had evolved a plan which enabled him and his associates to function with '100 per cent effi

ciency. The speed with which the work of al

leviating suffering and of restoring order out of

chaos was done, astounded men who were accus

tomed to handle problems of this kind. His death will . not cripple the company, either, for he has been training his -son in the duties of management for many years., and employes say that the son possesses the same executive grasp and administrative ability that marked the father. His success, as said before, was founded on his rare ability to eliminate everything else from his mind and to think clearly and logically on one matter until he had it settled. Few men possess this quality, but all of them can strive to attain it. With Patterson it probably was a matter of development and growth, a quality that became more acutely efficient with each problem that he solved. -

SfcOv SIGNAL FOR f ONE - ONLYON

POLL UP

NO VACANCY

Tedious Pastime Waiting For a Seat in the Dining Car

YoU OBSERVE LOAD GO TraY cf Svusll. Food

You .see a PA.'kseNset?

JUST FlNllSHtMlS

I l-T . t hf tt DUU T VJWO 1 1 '.'1 j 1

,C0N TOO ND Trie LUCK HE IS ORDERImC AMD ' M.ORC COFFEE

at Last there is A VACAMCV AMD YoU GET S6NAL To. ADVANCE

' YOU GET A SE"AT rOeKT To The ausle, at Tml op ' FOOR AMD f?lD6" 55ACKVUAPID

AD YoO TRY To PPCAR

EATIMG

XarrruM. IMt.lt. V.Tl

Answers to Questions (Any reader can fret the answer to anv question by writing The Palladium Information Bureau. Frederick J. Haskin. director, "Washington. T. C. This offer applies strictly to information. The bureau does not Kive advice on lesral. medical and financial matters. It does not attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor - to undertake exhaustive research on any subject. Write your question plainly and briefly. GIv full name and address and enclose two cents in stamps for return postage. . All replies are sent direct to the Inquirer. v Q. - What Is meant by "gold reserve?" J. F. A. A. The gold reserve is the amount of gold held in the United States treasury for the redemption of United States notes (greenbacks) fixed at

$152,000,000. Should this reserve fall telow $100,000,000 the secretary of the treasury may sell government bonds to replenish it. Q. What is meant by . saying tha note paper has a deckle edge? . A. A rough, untrlmmed edge Is meant by deckle edge. This is the edge" left by the deckles, which are the curbs on the sides of the aDron of r. paper machine confining the flowing pulp, this determining the width of the paper. The deckle edge on note paper is usually an imitation of this. Q. What is the derivation i of the word "cbal?" S. A. E. A. "Cabal" is a coined word. In 1671, five persons in the English cab

inet, Clifford. Arlington, Buckingham,!

Ashley and Lauderdale signed a treaty with France against Hplland. The initial letters of the names of these five men united, came to signify a group organized in opposition to, someone or to another group, ; . . Q. Are there many varieties of mistletoe? H. L. D. , A. Mistletoe belongs to the family Loranthaceae. This family contains more than 500 known species, mostly tropical and parasitic. Of the genus mistletoe there are many species. Q. , How, many watermelons does a pound of seed produce? D. G. S. A. The average yielding of each pound of watermelon seed in 1921 was 133 melons. Q. What is "commercial paper?" H. S. h. -f -V , A Commercial paper is a general name for checks, drafts, notes, bills of lading, bills of exchange, warehouse receipts, treasury warrants, orders for delivery of goods, certificates of stocks and bonds, etc.. and is sometimes applied to contracts and agreements. Q. What was the change in the political complexion of Congress made by the result of the election ot 1910? H. J. H. -

A. In the 61st Congress there were 61 Republicans and 32 Democrats in the Senate and 219 Republican and 172 Democrats in the House. In the G2nd Congress, following the election of 1910, there were 51 Republicans and

Who's Who in the Dav's News

J

Mi

f .1 r

usings ror tne livening

Ten men were fishing for mackerel in a boat hardly larger than a skiff off the coast of New Jersey. A sixty-mile gale came up, and they -were blown out to sea. They were" lost, and the newspapers gave them about twelve lines. One prize fighter wins from another in ten rounds and the newspapers publish a column about it. A chap hits a "home run." in a ball game and there is another column in the papers. Newspapers know "what the public wants. Marcel Steinbrugge.

ADOLPH JOFFE "Treaty Maker of the Russian Soviet," is the title given Adolph Joffe, one of the best known leaders of the Communist party and now one of the

"Big Five" in the Russian delegation at the Genoa economic conference. Joffe It was who acted as chairman

nf the ne.acfi com-!

missions that negotiated the treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Germany.;

"W- "with Poland at

Riga. Both of these documents

ooi p w jorFE attracted worldwide attention and comment After the Brest-Litovsk conference Joffe was given the Important mission of Soviet ambassador to Berlin at a a time when closer alliance between the German and Russian Bolshevist forces was sought. In the revolutions of 1918 he was expelled, but returned later to continue his labors. He has been the target of anti-Bolshevists. When the Poles captured

Vilna In 1919 it was reported that Joffee had been captured and shot.

Health expert now advises that all kissing be done through silk handkerchiefs. Did you ever eat a piece of papier mache chocolate cake? The loud squeaking you hear occasionally is some old brother limbering up on the golf course for the first time this season.

TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Ad'ams, Author of "You Can," "Take It," "Up" WASHING THIS SOILED ORLD There is a saying that cleanliness is next to godlin'ess but why isn't cleanliness godliness of itself? The beautiful yard where your home nestles, the clear water at the bottom of. the. spring, the neatly dressed man or woman, the orderly desk where you work, clean hands and face, and a cleared out mind, free from thoughts that degrade and pull down are not these evidences of beauty and sure suggestions of happiness? Most domestic and wild animals are naturally clean In their habits. Nature has a way of disintegrating and absorbing that which dies or becomes soiled. So that a large part' of our lives are taken up in washing this soiled world of ours and making it a fitter place for ns to breathe in and to carry on our work. ' I am wondering if every clean thought though unexpressed does not enter into this cleansing process and become a permanent part of the working of the world toward better times and1 better things. After a rain how Xresh is everything, as the sun cornea out to dry and warm its creatures, both the dumb and green growing things and us who walk around and see the beautiful earth and are inspired to earn, create and build. I am of the opinion that even those who do no more than to appreciate are vital factors in blessing mankind. . For where would any of us be without appreciation? I have no love for that art which is forever appraising the sordid and unclean in life and trying to pass Itself off as a contribution to literature. L would rather read Thoreau and walk with him among the rocks and'Tiave him tell me more about what birds do when they get discouraged or long for companionship. I woulfl rather pick a dandelion and take it to some lone spot where I can hold communion with its secret wonders. When we are clean in mind and body we are bound to have a feeling of newness and find In every expression about ns something to lift us out of ourselves.

an 4 if you cannot smile and sing, you might be pounding sand." I am an

old and wintry man, with furrows on

my brow; my teeth are gone and I eat

bran like a horse or cow; and is this

why I dourly scan the way the world

goes now?

Lessons in Correct English DONT SAY:

This Is the only solution TO the

mystery.

He is familiar with the rules re

garding THE EXERCISE of care. I do not know IF I can go. SAY:

This Is the only solution OF the

mystery.

He Is familiar with the rules regarding THE EXERCISING OF CARE. I do net know WHETHER I can go.

Dear befctre the board of works was

gone and mone appeared. This meant that West Main street from the river to West Kighth street? would be paved. Bids for &ie improvement were advertised for and would te opened for a contract cat once.

;,Hat Patterns

I rant and scold without a good excuse? Is it becaus I'm gray and old I turn the language loose? Is it because I'm filmed with mold, my veins devoid of juice? The youngsters do not seem to dread the evils I foretell ; they scoot around with sprightly tread the, spring aid and the belle, inviting nie'to soak my head when I would mourn and yell. "Oh, gaffer, you've beon on earth too many years,' they cry; "you can't distinguish sterling worth from Johnson's whiswers dye; and you would queer the young folk3' mirth with your despairing cry. Because some changes have been sprung

After Dinner Stories "Darling, will you marry me?"

pleaded the love-sick gent.

"This is so sudden! Why, you old

confirmed bachelor; when did you ever

get the idea that you ought to get married?" "I decided it yesterday." "But what decided you?" "I won a side-saddle In a raffle.M "I observe," said the manuscript collector, "that you write 'laughter and 'applause' at intervals through your speeches." "Yes," answered Senator Sorghum; "I do so with no pretenses to proph

ecy, but merely as an evidence of my best intentions." "Did you break a bottle of champagne over the bow of your new yacht when you launched it?" asked the friend. "We broke a champagne bottle over It." replied the millionaire.

There Is a movement to make hospitals more homelike. They can easily do so by having eight or nine phonographs and three or four player-pianos

on every floor, eight or nine crying babies, a 6wearing janitor and a dumbwaiter that squeaks, and have the landlord drop in every week or two to raise the rent.

Isadore Duncan, the dancer, is

barred from France because she is be

lieved to carry the bolshevik contagion. Paris does not care for that modern dance, the Leon Trotzky.

How To Raise Baby Chicks Put Avicol In the drinking water

in human walks and ways, since those dead times when you were young, you talk of pipe dream days, and from an old and battered lung send forth unseemly brays. Go to, old man, you've had your fling, the youngsters own the land ; new generations rise like spring when winter has been canned;

Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Age Today

West Main street wa3 to be bricked. That was settled definitely, for the last chance for remononstrators to ap-

Sturdy

Rippling Rhymes By Walt Mason

Most people lose half of every hatch, and seem to expect it. . Chick cholera, or white diarrhoea, ia the cause.

An Avicol tablet In the drinking water will save your chicks from all such diseases. Within 48 hours the sick ones will be lively as Crickets. Mr Wm. May, Rego, Ind., writes "I was losing 10 or IS chlekn n dav

from diarrhoea before I received tha

Avicol. I haven't lost one since."

It costs nothlne to try AvicoL Haw it

either for preventing or treating white diarrhoea and all bowel diseases of poultry. If not satisfied, your money will be promptly refunded. Sold by most druggists and poultry remedy dealers, or mailed postpaid for 25c. Burrell-Dugger t

jo., 2U2 joiumDia mag., inaianapoiis. Ind. Aavertuementl

babies

all over the country owe their fine development to iBordmS EAGLE BRAND CONDENSEO MU

Iml

Tomorrow Alright HSI A" vegetable f 1 aperient, adds tons and vigor to the digewtiva and. elimiBative ayatem, improyea the appetite, relieyae Sick Headache and BU-' fonaneea, c e r r a c t Constipation.

ZUsed for over

years

W 1

Nt JUNIORS-Littl Nil

One-third the regular dose.

Made of same ingredients, then candy coated. For children and adults.

t

Thistlethwalte's Drug Stores

THE WICKED WORLD I look upon the jazzy crowd, and cry, "Oh, hully chee! Old-fashioned virtue's In its shrowd, as dead as it can be; this riot shouldn't be allowed it looks too coarse to me." I wonder if

TAYLOR & THOMPSON COAL CO. KLEAN COAL Phone 1042

Cuticura Soap Imparts The Velvet Touch Soap.OiBtBMnt.TsImn Xc.mrrwhm. Porsaznides ddrtm; CsUcaxa.LbortorlM.Ipt.X. aUlU&,a(us.

I JOHN H. NIEWOEHNER I i s i - Sanitary and Heating Engineer I i S

I 819 S. G. St NiuuionNnfMntniitiunttii uhm tuni i nimi

Phone 1828 i

j

"If Service and Quality Count, Try Us." COAL and BUILDERS' SUPPLIES Klehfoth - Niewoehner Co.

uiiMi!railimiuniiiiimimniiim:l!niilliiiiiiiiiMiliiiHili!iini:iiiniiiniiiiiiii I We Sell and Iietommend l Avicol I omerIg. whelan t 1 31-33 S. 6th St Ph&na 1679 s iniiinimiiMiiiiiiiiiiHHiimiiiiHiiiiiiiutmiiirtHiHintiiiiUiUHiiiinmiimiiHiiif

71GRAN'

Ladies' Shop

FOrl BETTER VALUES

"The Bank for ALL the People" 2nd National Bank

You'll Enjoy TRACY'S COFFEE Use It Daily iwisBmimnwnwimntmiMHmiimHHi

The Miller-Kemper Co. "Everything to Build Anything" LUMBER MILLWORK BUILDERS' SUPPLIES Phones 3247 and 3347

FORD LENSES

Passed with high record fTA per pair I UC

I WEBB-COLEMAN CO. ! Opp. Postoffice Phones 1616-1694

Big Yank" Work Shirts ullest cut in America 3( Rapp's Cut Price Co.

MILK Is a Food

ut Himes "Rros. Dairv

tjjy Phone 1850

For Better Baking Order a Sack of - FAULTLESS FLOUR From Your Grocer Today

Correct Dress Means NEAT Laundering CALL 2766 Our Work the Best Home Water Laundrv

Equal to AnySuperior to Many Used Cars

Studebaker Dealers

21-23 S. 7th St

Phone 6019

No. 118

Wheat aind! tiny berries form an unnsual fnwit facing for this up-turned small brim. The model pictured is of navy taileta with copen wheat and jade bendes. Black and pade, navy and Tosebrown and! eand. are just as

HAST PATTERN ORDER Haft Pattern Department I Richmond Palladium : Enclo sed find 15 cents. 'r " Please send me pattern

: No.

1 Name.

Street

City

Keep the Children Healthy See that they drink plenty of WAYNE DAIRY MILK.

Wayne Dairy Products Co. S. 6th and A Sts. Phone 5233

J '

Everyday Ad-Ventures That's What You Call Service

When you've decided that you , wvra't spend another summer In ' your present apartment that Is, ' you won't if you can find another one somewhere toward the outskirts of town at a price that will be within your reach r And you and your wife spends aj number of Saturday afternoons aid Sundays looking for the desirel opening, but without any success, and even when you turn to the Palladium's "Apartments For Itvnt" column you can't find what jcu want in the part of town In ABJiich you're anxious to settle '. And Just when you're the most thoroughly perplexed about the thing to do under the circumstances, your wife suggests' a little ad if your own under "Wanted jijpartments." And you get one of the Palladitan's telephone ad tsfker to help 3u fix up a little ad telling just What you want, although you really fcon't have a great deal of hope for tie outcome ' But within three or four days rfiu're handed a larce and pleasant : shock when you ge a number of "litters from people who have apartjnents that sound just like the kind Jiou want and you find that one of them is exactly the thing and ist made o your orders Qh Man, That's What You Call Service! (Copyright 1922 n :

41 Democrats in the Senate, and ZZ3

Democrats, 161 Republicans and 1 So N. 2nd and ASts. Phone 2194 cialist in the - House."