Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 131, 2 June 1922 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 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 Post OKice at Richmond. Indiana, as Second-Class Mail Matter.
MEMBER OK THE ASSOCIATED PHESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for rrpubllcation of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news published herein. 'All rights of rf-publlcatlon of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
Common Sense Required With the increased use of the. highways by motorists during the Yummer months, the necessity of drivers using1 the utmost care is stressed by the constant menace of collisions and accidents at dangerous crossings. Automobile associations in' all parts of the country are trying to minimize the dangers of motor traveling during this season of the year, but all their warnings and all regulatory enactments will do little if the motorists do not use common sense. Even, the most careful driver is not safe if other motorists persistently violate the ordinary rules of conduct on" the public highways. The co
operation of every driver is required before the
highways will be safe to all motorists.
Grade crossings, which have taken a heavy
toll in lives, will not lose their menace if motor
ists do not approach them slowly. So long as motorists try to beat trains to the crossing frightful accidents will occur. No outomobile driver is
warranted in taking the chance of death at a crossing. His own common sense ought to be his constant guide as he approaches the right of way
of a railroad. The requirements for safe driving are few and easily learned. The opportunities to speed are innumerable. If the motorist intends to forget the advantages of safe driving in order to
speed at a terrific rate, no amount of advice and no set of rules will check the list of casualties that are bound to result. .The prevention of most accidents is to be found in the motorists themselves. They can eliminate most accidents by safe driving. The cause of most mishaps usually is traced to excessive speed, which causes collisions, spills, and accidents at crossings. If drivers had been proceeding with care and with their automobiles under control, only a few injuries would have resulted from accidents that produced death or sent men and women to the hospitals for .treatment. The constant endeavor of the automobile clubs to impress the advantages of "safety first" on their members will bring results , because therein is to be found the element that will eliminate bruises and fatalities.
Answers to Questions fAnv render can eet the.nnswer to nnv question bv wrlttner Thf Palladium information Ttureau. Frederick J. Hask!r. director. Washington. D. C. Thi3 offer applies strlctlv to Jnformatton. The Huron u dnes not erive -advice on legal.
inrdicnl and financial matters. - It does
nnr attempt to se-ttle domestic xrouoies. nor to undertake exhaustive research on any (subject. Write, your q-uestiot plainlv and briefly. Olv? f'lU name and uddrcss and enclose t'o cents in stamps for return postage. ATI replies are sent direct to the Inquirer. Q. 'What proportion of the mechanical devices that are patented com'? into successful use? H. G. B. A. Only one or two per cent of the articles patented are ever commercialized. Q. When -were headstones first furnished by the Government for soldier's graves? J. A. J. A. Under Act of Congress, March
1S73. the Secretary of War was au-j
thrirized to furnish suitable headstones for sqdiers. sailors and marines, buried Tn national cemeteries. By an Act of Oongres passed in 1ST9, the order was extended to those who wero buried in private village and city cemeteries. O. Does a stage of 22.3 inches in
a river mean that the water is thai: far above sea level? J. O. R. ! A. The Geological Survey says that j the stage of a river means the number) of foot above zero gauge. The eleva-j tion of ?ero depends upon the eleva-j tion of the particular place under con-j sideration. Q. Was Secretary of War Weeks, ever in the Navy? .T. S.j A. Secretary Weeks was graduated, at the United States Naval Academy! in 1SS1, and for two years thereafterserved as a midshipman in the United j States Navy. Q. Do they h.ive compulsory edu-. cation in France? "W. M. O.
A. Primarv education is compulse-
TODAY'S TALK By George Matthev Adams, Author of "You Can," "Take It," "Up" ' ' SPIRIT Why is it that some small colleges turn out so large a nurnber of big, useful men, and others, larger in numbers of students and more powerful in endowment, are scarcely commented upon as the years roll by? "Why Is it that In some offices you feel the very atmosphere of the place the minute you step into it? Why is it that you are attracted to one town and want to live there, and others make you feel .is though you never wanted to visit thfm again? It's because you feel the spirit of the college, the office, the town. What is this spirit anyway? Well, it is difficult to define, exactly. But I will try. It's that something that comes of the combined association of minds which seek to think and work for the good and happiness of the whole. You who once attended college know what class and college spirit is and how you felt bound, to give and to sacrifice when called upon, in oi'der to uphold this spirit. And you who work in offices where every success of the firm suprs your own spirit of work and loyalty, know it also. I go to a town and find fine parks and playgrounds and well kept streets rnd many owned homes, and I am at once impressed with the fact that here is a place every inhabitant would gladly strive to make more happy and livable. And there is a spirit in friendly association and mind contact. How many there are who stimulate and inspire us and how we, in turn, are made to desire also to give of what we are. We are all followers in some way or other. We walk alone into the valley and up the mountain, and we rest beside clear waters that ripple their stories to us, on huge rocks that recite hundreds of years of history to us while we live in spirit and feeling the. expression of them all. Spirit is movement that entertains and feeds the soul.
It Happens in the Best Regulated Families THINK IT f DoesIoT MiSS r ) I f MY (Secretary .(Sot 5W6UI--V00l ( PORKROAST LOOK I J UH HUK HER HMSt BOBBED " . I look FiNte sujetL. vwith hepi I Great. 6ee shs Does I hair BoBBeft j V -J' I lookmPlv 3x;6Ll J L ... r k ; ill! Ill kM m)
( I'll hwe mV HAift I ; f Triese! houj Do ". ' , " ( OF all
i I ; '
All-.. Tl. T - . 1- - ! oble bus, that makes my
rviiei Lmuei iiicks
'inner
t noble
makes
jealous solution and the feathers ruffled with
neighbors cuss. It is a thing of speed I the fingers to let the solution pene-
nd charm, and what it cost would
buy a farm. Its speed makes cops lie down and die, and it can climb a
church on high. Its curves I started to explain, but saw the artist had a pain. "You are not human, man," I said; "you view this dream in gold and red, with all its wondrous works within, and all you think about? is tin! Go paint your pictures, then, gadzooks, of pea-green cows in, purple brooks, and I shall step upon the gas, and men will marvel as I pass." What pleases you gives me distress; and so the world is a success.
trate, according to the instructions.
The beak should be held and the hen's head held under for about five seconds.-
Who's Who in the Dav's News
I others, and was entertained by the King, the Duke of Aosta and many
other notables, including the Prince of Wales and the new pope. !
DR. CHARLES UPSON CLARK Dr Charles 1'nsnn Clark, writer and
ry for all children from 6 to 13: thoso j iecturer, recently returned ..from an exwho do not attend the Government : tended trip through Germany, Austria
schools are obliged to prove tnat tbey an(j the other countries of central!
No. 189 Dime, Quarter aad Goblet. A dime is drooled into a tailoring goblet anil a quarter is dropped iu above it. The quarter naturally remains a short distance above the diaie owing to the tapering sides of the glass (Figure 1). The problem is to make the dime pass above the quarter without touching either of the coins or the goblet.
ill i in- .11. iX. Ill W... .l,v .l.C , j
K(?UiCl ill MIC riiir. i 1J ijuaiiT-i n in be tilted vertically, and 1 the strength of the air current will drive the dime between the quarter and the glass with .such force that it will either jump out of the goblet or fall back on the quarter, which will resume its horizontal position (Figure 2). Copurwiit, 1912, t'j Public Ledger Company
Advise Sodium Fluoride Dip For Poultry Flocks
receive proper tuition either in private J school or at home. I Q. Has Kngland a constitution! which corresponds to ours? M. B. ; A. The British Constitution is an! unwritten, indefinite body of legal j
rules arid principles wnicn are partly the re.-ult of judicial decisions and partly Acts of Parliament. They are nor collected. Q. Is it possible that turning a 200 watt lamp on and off causes the meter to register more? A. C. R. A. The meter registers only when dectric lights or heaters are burning. Turning them on and off will not cause the meter to jump.
ft' 'f
Musings for the Evening
I have always been puzzled why the
end of a school i omniencement.
year is called the
DC CHA5.U.C1.ACV
Europe., is startling his auditors with the statement that Russia, Austria and Germany are already in a newmiddle ages, so far as the middle classes and the intellectuals are concerned. He says America is the only hope of the world at present, as this medieval condition seems to be spreading
like a pestilence westward. Here, in danger, he says.
Rippling
Rhyme?
By Walt Mason
After Dinner Stories Senator Harrison said in an afterdinner address in Atlanta: "The race question goes to a great many people's heads. They can't discuss it without getting as confused as Lush. "Lush drove home one night in a taxicab. and the driver assisted him to the front door. Then, after a minute or two, the driver said: open your front door with that. That's openyour front door with that. That's your ciear.
"'Dear me hic-so it is,' said Lush, i mired but, just the same, they make
That means I ve hie smoked un my latch key. "
(By Associated Press) LAFAYETTE, Ind., June 2. The use of solium fluoride as a dip has been recommended by the poultry department of Purdue university as the easiest way of getting rid of the body lice in laying flocks. The sodium fluoride should be used at about the
of two ounces to the gallon of
water, it was said. It reouires about
live gallons of the solution to treat i00 hens. Luke-warm water should be used and the hens should be treated on a warm, bright morning, it was added. Hens should be stood in a tub of the
COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES (l'.y Associated Press) CINCINNATI, Ohio, June 2. Commencement exercises at St. Xavier's
college will be held June 13. Rev. James McCabe, president of the col
lege, will confer degrees on 60 students, and 25 members of the teaching sisterhood. Baccalaureate services will be held June 11, when Rev.
William J. Anthony will preach the
sermon.
Two girls In Germany recently took rart in a fifty-mile motorcycle race for a husband, and discovered after it was over that the bridegroom-to-be had taken the opportunity of their absence to flee from the country.
f : li I I m
1 have vaiiiiv sought to find the
of soup from the side of a spoon. A. Alexander Thomas.
too, America is
For many years fewer and fewer men have been going into teaching, and the decay of teaching was what ushered in the middle ages in the past. Dr. Clark maintains.
Many a man makes a strong start mi Monday, but has a week ending from Friday over Sunday. ADD FLAPPER DICTIONARY rm-chair A love nest. Cigar sign A good Indian who can't dance. Insured Engaged. The Cat's Cuffs A doubtful story. Lamp-pobt A piece of jewelry that stands cm'. Greers Money, kale, bank-roll. Reel boy One who takes his flapper to the movies. Siimp One who holds 'out on his obligations. Shimmers -Girls who attend studio parties. A flop A chair or seat of any kind. The bee's ankles All right, very good. Bozark Girl without brains. Charlie Young man who wears mustache.
The ady Astor earthquake seems to hate subsided as suddenly as it came. 'Twas always thus.
It seems a long time between presidents with flowing whiskers.
It is not announced whether Laddie Boy will run for another term as caddie.
Two beggar women met on
street the other day. "Fine coat you've got there. Where did you land it?" said the first one. "Old Mrs. Gobsa Golde gave it to me." said the second beggar woman. "Is that so? I've begged at Mrs. Gobsa Golde's a hundred times and she never gave me a cent. How did you work her?" "Well, you see." said the first he?.
par wntrifln Ktmlrinir Tioi. .- - .
"Roumania is the comins state in complacently. "I didn't tell her I wa '
""7" """ begging tor myself. I pretended I spent several monthts traveling all ; was beg?ing for the heathen." over Roumania. later writing hi.-j "Greater Roumania." Roumania is now
a state larger tnan Italy ana n:o populous than Spain. She is the country of the future in this part of the' world." ! Dr. Clark was for 15 years on the Yale faculty, and from 1916 to 1919 1 was direct' of the school of classical'
studies ot tne American Academy m Rome, resigning to re-enter the lecture field and resume direction of the Masawippi summer school, which he established at North Hatley, Quebec, in 190S. When America entered the war Dr. Clark, then in Rome, volunteered his services to the Italian government to bring to the American people a realization of the mighty efforts put forth by Italy, and in two country-wide tours delivered about 100 lectures. During his recent visit to Italy he had interviews with Orlando and Nitti, Generals Diaz, Badoglio, Piccioni and
j IN OUR BLINDNESS j ! The artist, took me to hi lair and ! j showed me noble paintings there. I j know thy're fine; the public print;j have roundly praised their gorgeous ! tints, and famous critics have ad-
ine tired. I love the artist; for his
sake, some words of praise I tried to
: lake; he listened with a shrinking (, : oar; he knew rav bluff was not si.n-
; cere. Aias, ne siyni -u, you urea s ; ;iy heart: You look upon a work of j art, the product of my anguished toil ' all it suggests is linseed oil!" 1 ! took the artist to my shed to see my new car, painted red. It is indeed a
TURN HAIR DARK WITH SAGE TEA
Memories of Old Days In This Paper- Ten Years Age Today
If Mixed With Sulphur It Darkens So Naturally Nobody Can Tell.
Free! A Box Quaker Kidney Pills
A fifty-cent box of QUAKER KID. KEY PILLS will be given FREE to all w'no present this coupon at Quigley's Drug Stores within the next tendays and purchase a bottle of QUAKER HERB EXTRACT FOR $1.00. QUAKER KIDNEY PILLS are reeemmended for Weak, Rundown Kid. neys, Backache, Inflammation of tha Dladder. Relieves the symptoms of Rheumatic pains, lack of vigor, Nervousness, sleeplessness, sediment In th Urine, etc. QUAKER KIDNEY PILL3 bring back the vitality of the ogsna Bnd are splendid for children who Wet the Bed. Call at once, obtain a box FREE by purchasing a $1.00 bottle. QUAKER HERB EXTRACT I Gained Strength Have Good Appetite J Sleep and Work Better Owe all to
i
A safe
! 11
skin treatment
Soolhinq &nd HcaJinq ftesinol Soap gently cleanses the clogged pores. EesmolOmtment heals the inflamed spots and blotches
Try 'iherrv ev week, aaid wevtcK your skirv improve
iiiiinMniitMfninMitiin.Miii'ii:iitii)iMtiiiiiiiiiitMiiinitininniiiitiHiiiitit!iiiMMtP 1 1 BATTERY RE-CHARGING 1 ;-vo!t, 75c; 12-volt, $1.00 fj 1 Lowest ratPs, Lest service. Why 1 pay more? Free delivery. Richmond Battery & Radiator Co. I 12th and Main. Phone 1365 f TiiiiniiiiutiiiiHiiMiiiti-.tiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiHiMninuiiiuKirirituiiiiiiHUUliMfitliliiii
In one minute corns stop hurting It's real!? wonderful how quickly Dr. Sertoli's Zino-pads bring relief. Healing starts immediately, while the tender spot is protected against pressure and irritation. Zino-pads are thin, adhesive, waterproof. Antiseptic; absolutely safe! Try them today. At -rug, shoe and department stores. Sizes for corns, callouses, bunion-
ZinQp&ds
FOR CORNS, CALLOUSES
Put one on the pain is pone
A Health-Building Food
Give the children plenty of WAYNE DAIRY MILK.
Wayne Dairy Products Co. S. 6th and A Sts. Phone 5233
Just Like a Mi
More than fiOO warships have hn scrapped by the various nations since tli eclnpe of the World war.
Nature Loves Bright Colors
Wo s.-e the truth of this statrment in j
the varicolored flowers, tne vivid sunsets, the birds of brilliant- plumage. But we never see it exemplified more attraetivelv than in the person of a splendidiv " healthy woman. How does nature paint this health? Why. in the rosv eheeks. the transparent skin, the smooth red lips of such a woman. And yhe molds it in firm flesh and rounded ntnnrv The ailine: woman is defic
ient in natural coloring, and she does
not even appear to advantage in cioines that would set off her more attractive v-ister Manv women who Ions for chv.vlntr health will find that they, too, n have these charms if they will ftwe ;i rial to that remedy which hrinps urenth to frail women Lydia h. I'tnkhanfs Vegetable Compound. Advertisement.
GETTING UP NIGHTS Thla Is One of atnrr'i Dancer Sltcnals. F.. IZ. Mullen Tells Kxperienee. E. E. Mullen. No. Kenova, Ohio, says: "For 10 years I have been troubled with kidnev and bladder. I had to get up 5 or 6 times each night. I had taken many kinds of medicine, but Keller Lithiated Buchu is the only kind that gave me any relief. My bladder is normal and 1 have only used the remedy for three weeks. If you want further facts, write me." L.ithlatd Buchu acts on the kidneys
(and bladder like epsom salts on the ! bowels. It cleans them out. relieving I the bladder of many abnormal deposits. iThese tablets cost 2e apiece. The price
makes it possible to place in the formula several drugs which are useful for relief. The formula is on the package. It Is not likely you have ever taken anything similar. Try a few tablets for backache, scalding, scanty or high-colored urine, and frequent desire at night. Be sure to get the Keller formula Lithiated Buchu at all drug stores, or write Keller Laboratory, Mechanicsburg. O.. or locally at A. G. Luken Drug Co. Advertisement.
The old-time mixture of Sage Tea I
and Sulphur for darkering gray, btrpaked and faded hair is grandmother's recipe, and folks are again u;-'ng it to keep their hair a good,
Charles R. Stoddard, of Sommerset, . even color, which is quite sensible. Pa, arrived in the city and started las we are living in an age when a work as city mail cariier, Xo. 8. He! youthful appearance is of the greatest was formerly a clerk at the Sommer-1 advantage. . set office, but traded places with Joe j Nowadays, though, we don't have Trieber, of this city, who goes to j the troublesome task of gathering the Sommerset as mail clerk. Trieber left sage and the mussy fixing it at home, several days before for his new j All drug stores sell the ready-to-use position. I product, improved by the addition of
i other Ingredients, called "Wyeth's
e a man very popular because nobody can dis-
"My husband suffered for several ' cover it has been applied. Simply years with stomach trouble. He often I moisten your comb or a soft brush had colic attacks that put him to bed. v'i,n 11 and draw this through your But a man can't stand the pains that hair, taking one small strand at a a woman can. He thought he was time; by morning the gray hair disapgoing to die and the doctors didn't ! pears, but what delights the ladies seem to help him any. Like a drown-j with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Coming man grasping for a straw he tried) pound, is that, besides beautifully Mayr's Wonderful Remedy, which a 1 darkening the hair after a few applinurse told us about, and now he is' cations, it also produces that soft
entirely well and eats anything." It lustre and appearance of abundance
is a simple, harmless preparation that i wnicn is so attractive Advertisement, removes the catarrhal mucus from the) "
intestinal tract and allays the inflam-j matlon which causes practically all i
stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. One dose will convince or money refunded. Clem
Tbistlethwaite (7 Drug Stores), A'. G.
Luken Drug Co., and druggists everywhere. Advertisement.
m
Quaker
Farmers' Nat'L Grain Assn. (Inc.) Dealers in High Gr.?dc Coal PHONE 2549 Office Room 302 K. of P. BIdg.
Herb Extract
It has renewed my strength, relieved trie of Constipation, sweetened my Stomach, built up my appetite, and I gained in weight. It will also do this for you, if you take QUAKER HERB EXTRACT, the Tonic and BodyBuilder. Price $1.00 per bottle or 3 for $2.50. GUAKER HERB CO., Cincinnati, O., and your dealer, Quigley's DrujJ Stores.
ittuiiiiiiiiiimMtiiiiiiiiiitiiiititiitnruiiniiiiniiiittuuiiiitiiiiiiiiiuiHiiiiMiiiMniH
The Store of Quality
oran em
liiiiHHiHitiiiiinfUiituinMiiiiMiiHuimitiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiimiiHiiiiuniiiitintiiiiiiiiiM
Teeth Tell Tales Free Examination DR. J. A. THOMSON DENTIST Phone 2930 Murray Theatre Building Open Mon., Wed., Sat. Evenings Sunday 10 a. m. to 12 p. m.
r Cream
We are making Richmond a Studebaker town. Brower Auto Sales Co. 21-23 South 7th Street Phone 6019
Special Canton Crepe BLOUSES
tseaaea ana em
broidery trimmed
in clever styles and all ( 4 QQ shades, up to $10 values. V.tU
VIGRAN'S L'f?
-Jill
The Bread that's made a 'hit' In Richmond ZWISSLER'S POTATO BREAD Sold at All Groceries ZWISSLER'S 28 S. 5th St.
Warm Weather Toilet Requisites
'.I
Good Coal
Cleanly Delivered Klehfoth-Niewoehner Co. Phone 2194 North 2nd and A "If Service and Quality Count, Try Us."
1 AT
mm b .
RED LETTER
OU
BIBLE pf PON ill ii 1 i
Richmond Palladium
1.98
O COUPONS $
mm.
SECURES
and IT
Present to thi paper three coupon lik Uii one together with price. MAIL ORDERS Add postage u follows: Up to 150 miles . .07 Up to 600 mUca . .18 Up t 300 mile . .10 Up to 1000 niles . .20 tec grata dausca at padnaata ul toi 3 lb. Dsrriririrt Specially bound In Benuln lCSUripUOn Limp Leather, overlapping Covers, red edres. round corners, sold lettered back, family record and many useful helps. EVERY WORD JESUS SPOKE PRINTED IN RED
