Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 144, 17 June 1922 — Page 8

PAGE TEN

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1922.

birth rate of all countries and all races. It is not generally realized that what happened to France's birth rate as a result of the war, happened also in greater or less degree to nearly all of the rest of the white part Of the human race. The lowering of birth rate, added to abnormal death rate due to war

TT-rt- conditions among recently born Chilly"" 'j ,,(-.i a ii v v -

a promisory note for'are no fleures available tt wait nmh-

HAS NOTE RETURNED TO JOSIAH RINEHART; FRAUD IS CLAIMED

June 17.-

EATOX, Ohio,

grounds that.

$500 was obtained from Josiah RIne-. ably worst of all in the largest of the

hart by fraudulent means, Judge A. C. j white countries Russia. Risinger, in common pleas court, de-j Whites Impaired creed that the note be returned to j Few realize how seriously the fu-

Minehart. Rinehart alleged that A. B. jture military ana economic strength of Rathbart, through frand, and for no 'the white part of the human race was consideration, obtained the note and impaired by the war. The rest of the then turned it over to O H. Mammer, ! human race, the yellows, browns and who allegedly knew of the fraudulent .blacks, suffered hardly at all, they have manner in which it had been procured. ' gone ahead at their normal rate of in.Tohn W. Bishop came Into possession crease. One way to picture the result

of the note The court held he got the note in good faith, but he had given no consideration for it, and had been informed of the manner in which it had been procured. The court or

dered Bishop to deliver the note to

would be to consider the military

strength of the white part of the human race at a period about 15 or 20 years hence about, let us say, the year 1938.

The military strength of the white

HENRY FULLE FITTED FOR PARK DIRECTION BY LONG EXPERIENCE

Rinehart, and he Is restrained from j part of the human race at that ime will delivering or transferring it to any- be composed obviously of the male one other than Rinehart. The note in children who were born between,

question was dated March 14, 1822,

and was for six months, with interest. Effect Compromise. Compromise was effected in a suit entered by Henry Koppe against Ross Focht, and the case was dismissed from the common pleas court. Koppe sued for $30, alleged balance on an account for material and labor for a cellar floor. Focht claimed the work was not satisfactory. The case had been appealed from a squire's court. Award Judgment.

Judgment lor $1,337.60, representing a mortgage note, was awarded Elmer Bennett against Jennie and Edward iE. Webb, in common pleas court. A lien of J. M. Lackey in the case was reserved by the court for further consideration. Fornshell Gets Judgment . Judgment for $600 against J. C. Connell. of Camden, serving a term in the penitentiary for automobile stealing, was awarded Edgar C. Fornshell, of Camden, in common pleas court. Fornshell claimed he bought a car of Connell that had been stolen and he later had to give it up. Orders Property Sale Sale of property sought by Nellie B. Miles, as guardian of Josephine Lambert, has been ordered in common pleas court. Appraised value of the

property is $3,000, free of dower of

Elizabeth Lambert. Payment Ordered In a suit entered by J. W. Rein

heimer and sons against William Null in common pleas court, judgment for

claim of $112.61 ordered paid from

funds in hands of Sheriff Jones, accruing from sale of chattels on execution. After payment of court costs, the balance of funds held by the sheriff is to the turned over to H. L. Risinger, assignee of Null. Early Wheat Cutting Indications are Preble county's wheat harvest will begin about two weeks earlier this year than usual. It is thought wheat cutting will start in some sections of the county next week. Reports indicate a good crop of wheat of good quality. Dutton to Preach Dr. J. H. Dutton, superintendent of the Miami United Brethren conference, will preach here Sunday in the U. B. church and conduct communion service. The fourth quarterly conference of the church will also be conducted at this time.

roughly, the year 1915 and the year 1925 It is possiblv not too much to

say that the number of white children who will have been born into the world during these 10 years, and who will have survived and come to normal strength through the vicissitudes of famine, under-feeding, and the other chaos of war and its aftermath the number may turn out to be something less than three-fourths, and possibly not much more than one-half of what

it would have been if the war had not happened. It has been said, and it is probably approximately correct, that if the re

cent war should be fought over again in the year 193S by all the European nations who took part in it, the total number of soldiers involved would be only about half of the number who were available in the recent war. That is a startling but probably correct statement. But In another way the total military strength of the white part of the human race, even including the United States, will be, in 1938, something less than three fourths, and possibly not greatly more than one-half of what it was when the recent war broke out. 4 Speculate on Conflict There are some who speculate on the idea that there may be ahead of us a great world-wide conflict between the whites, on the one side, and the non-whites on the other. There may

or may not be anything in it. But if there is enough in it to speculate about, and if one could imagine some great Bismarck of the non-white races looking forward to such a conflict, and trying to bring it about at the time of the greatest disadvantage to the

j f .

and blossomed into industrial anarchy ir. Russia when they make such statements as this: 'They (the economic laws) are simply a description of the way in which business and industry has worked to date, and it has worked out very badly for human life.' "It would be readily conceded that our social and industrial system has not invariably produced perfect results, but upon the whole it has demonstrated its superiority to every experimental substitute that has been offered. And the fact must not be overlooked that this great industrial republic has rewarded labor with its largest degree of liberty, prosperity and happiness. It is well not to hold us minor imperfections so close to the eye as to obscure its benefits."

The minority report to which to

Dye, Sr., is suffering from a stroke of; day Miss Elizabeth Conner and Mills Lake Thursday, It was largely

paralysis Mrs. Bertie Halbrook and j Miss Ruby Sanford spent Friday after

day's reply was made, was signed by! Mr. and Mrs. Orval Parker and daugh-

rthur O. Wharton and Albert Phil-

. lips. The third labor member of the i board, W. L' McMenimen, was in the ' east on an investigation trip when the ' minority report was issued.

Suburban

MOORELAND, Ind. Miss Freedith

! Holcomb returned home Saturday eve

ning from Newcastle. ... .Mrs. Henry Lilly called on Mrs. E. J. Holcomb Tuesday evening Robert Smith of

Carlos sDent Monday with E. J Hol

comb Miss Freditb. Holcomb called r.n Mro Melvin Wnnrl TllPKf1V PVen-

who is directing the work of putting . j Holcomb caned 0n Clifford

Henry Fulle

Henry Fulle, park superintendent,

children, Laura Ellen, Elsa Louisa,

Helen Geraldine and Hildred Haze lare visiting Mrs. Jennie Holcomb this week. . . .Carl Lilly called on Mr. E. J. Holcomb Wedneday morning Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lilly and family visited Mrs. Lilly's sister, Mrs. Anna Greves, of Muncie Mrs. E. J. Holcomb and daughter Fredith, and Mrs. Bertie Halbrook and children were in Mooreland one day this week H. C. Lilly is making hay this week Miss Mabel Grimm of Mooreland was in Newcastle Saturday. .., Misses Cora and Rebecca Grim were in Mooreland Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. Orval Parker and daughter Leoma were at Grace Chapel Sunday evening Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Foutz called on

noon with Verda Miller.. -Neil Logue, of Richmond, is visiting with relatives here Marjorie Benner of College Corner, Ohio, spent a few days this week with her grandmother, Mrs. Rachel Wright... Mr. and Mrs. Charles Meyers spent Wednesday evening with Dan Delong and family.

into shape for the season 160 acres of park land in Glen Miller park, be

sides other smaller parks over tne city, is a man cf unusual experience in this line. A resident of Richmond all his life, Mr. Fulle's first position was in the old Cascade greenhouse, at South Fifth and E streets, operated by Noah Leeds, 38 years ago. Fulle held that position for three years. Since -that time he has been engaged in florist work and landscape gardening over the city, going to tho Hill greenhouses when they were first started and remaining there for 30

Gable Tuesday morning. .. .Noah Ld

wards called on E. J. Holcomb Monday evening Mr. and Mrs. Seth Lamb returned home from Indianapolis Monday Mr. and Mrs. Guy Moistner and children of Newcastle spent Monday night with Mrs. Moistner's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Seth Lamb Mr. and Mrs. Earl Brown called on Mr.

and Mrs. Walter Canaday Tuesday.

ter Leoma Friday evening Miss

Freedith Holcomb called on Mr. and Mrs. Orval Parker and daughter Leoma Wednesday morning Mr. ana

Mrs.; Orval Parker and daughter Leo-i

ma were In Muncie one day last week. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Holcomb visited Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lilly Sunday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Orva'. Parker and Leoma Jane called on -Mr. Parker"s brother, Ottis Parker, Tuesday afternoon Miss Freedita Holcomb called on Mrs. Gertie Downing Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. Orval Parker and daughter Leoma Jane, were in Blountsville one day last week. Mr. Noah Edward called on Mr. Clifford Gable Saturday evening Miss Mabel Grim was in Mooreland Saturday evening Harley Grimm was in Farmland one day last week. . . Miss Freedith Holcomb was in Mooreland Saturday evening.

COTTAGE GROVE, Ind. Omar Miller and family entertained with a sur

prise party for Edward Williamson, at i

the home of Mr. Miller, Friday evening, June 9. Those present were Mr.

Thursday evening Mrs. Ellie Petro

vears Only two men were employed visited her daughter. Mrs. Gertie

by E. G. Hill when Fulle started work-' Downing several days last week

GRAVE DANGER

(Continued from Page One.

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Wood and daugh- j-.nd Mrs. Charles Roberts. Mrs. A. G.

Kay and baby son, Mr. and Mrs. Kavanaugh Robinson and daughter, Mr. and Mike Conner, Mr. and Mrs. V. C. Boring and daughter, Faye, Robert Toole and family, Walter Williams of College Corner, Neil Logue of Richmond, Mrs. F. F. Williamson and son

Sears, Miss Edith Keelor and Edward Williamson and family Mrs. V. C.

ter Lois took dinner Sunday with Mr

and Mrs. E. J. Holcomb Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Wood and daughter Lois visited Mr. and Mrs. Ashberry Wood

ing there. Mr. and Mrs. Krman bwam ana aaugnHis first experience at Glen Miller, ter Roberta of Economy visited Mrs.

park came when Charles Ford was su- Gertie Downing Sunday Miss L.ois; Boring and daughter, Faye, spent a

1917. Mr. Fulle1 Wood spent Tuesday aiternoon witnjfew days with relatives in Fountain

Pearl Manifold Mrs. jane

HOLLANSBURG, Ohio The Ladies Aid met at the home of Emma Chenoweth, June 7. There were six members and two visitors present. One member was added to the society.. . , .Local eighth grade graduates were at Greenville Saturday morning to attend the commencement exercises

of the eighth grade of the county, in Memorial ha'l. There were more than COO graduates from all parts of the

county. Professor Charles W. Cookson, of Columbus, county superintendent cf Franklin county, made the address to the graduates. Diplomas were presented by Superintendent Charles A. Wilt.... The township commencement of the eighth grade was held at New Madison last Thursday evening at the K of P. hall. Every seat was taken and many could not gain admission. The class address was given by D. L. Gaskill,. of .Greenville Children's day exercises at the Christian church Sunday evening were given to a crowded house. Before the program began the children were lined up outside in front of the church and march

ed in and up to the rostrum for the

opening cnorus. me utile rots were then given seats on the north side of the church and the balance of the children occupied seats on the front benches Mrs. Mildred Schloser spent Saturday with her parents, Mr. r.nd Mrs. Norman Morgan Mr. and

Mrs. Jonas Groff and children spent ' Wednesday with Jesse Baker and family Mrs. Elizabeth Hollingerj spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. i Jacob Hollinger and children, Mr.

and Mrs. lxweil Chenowetn, or .Newcastle, spent a few days last week with Mrs. Ella Woods. Mrs. Laura Thomas and Ella Woods entertained ihe following guests at the latter's home Wednesday: Mrs. Joe Newbern, Mrs. Charles Snell of Union City and Paul Newbern of Marion, Ind.

attended, ladies being present from

all over tho county Leroy Straup was arrested by Sheriff Lunday Fisher on a charge of grand larceny. He isj alleged to have stolen a Ford at Marysville, Mo Letters of administration have been taken out by William B. Meeks to act as administrator of the estate of Ida A. Sumalt, de

ceased. Bond of $4,000 was given... . .The races to be held at the Funk's Lake track, July 4, promise to be more attractive than those held on Decoration Day. The management is busy

making arrangements to handle the crowd and provide more seating capacity for the spectators. The grand stand is being enlarged and the entrance gate is being widened so that three machines may be taken into the grounds at the same time The Democratic Central Committee of Randolph county met Saturday afternoon in the new county headquarters in this city. John W. Tyndall, Eighth district candidate ofr Congress, was present and made a short talk. . . ..The senior class of the Winchester high school made o donation of $300 toward a fund for equipping a gymnasium for the high school.

TRAIL'S END "At last I've located one of those old-fashioned five-cent cigars." "Where'd you find it?" "Hidden behind a. two-bit label." American Legion Weekly.

Rocktall, a small island 250 miles north of Ireland, has sunk three feet in the last thirty-three years.

perintendent in

worked under Ford in the greenhouse. Later, when Ed Hollarn was made superintendent, he held the same post, and was made superintendent with the beginning of the Handley administration in 1922. Must Drive to Right Glen Miller park lies roughly in tho form of a "L" and is bounded by ths National road on the south, the Henley road on the east, the Pennsylvania railroad on the north, and North

Twentv-first street on the west. The

white race, that time would be some-1 driveways leading into the park exwhere about 1938. tend back over a mile from the main

The subject is much too big to be treated with the faintest adequacy In so brief an article as the present one. Not much more can be done than to

entrances. Driveways have been oiled recently and all motorists will be required to keep to the right in

following the park system. Motorists

set down a few of the more arresting i driving along the east side of the lake

Miss

Lamb, Mr. and Mrs. Wes Dye and daughter Wilma were in Mooreland Tuesday afternoon. .Mrs. Clydia Wood called on Mrs. Maude Brown Tuesday. ....Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Wood and daughter Lois were in Losantville

town, Ind E. R. Williamson and family. Robert Toole and family, and Miss Edith Keelor spent Sunday with Omar Miller and family Mrs. Kavp.naugh. Robinson spent Thursday with Robert Conner and family

Oliver Jarvis, of New Jersey, spent at

WINCHESTER, Ind. The County Federation of Women's clubs held a get-together meeting and picnic at

Ail M

If Your

waning, iHW"! Trv Our

Glasses

Clara M. Sweltzer, 1002 Main St.

Optometrist Richmond

Don't Wear Spotted Clothes Send them to WILSON to be Cleaned Phones 1105-1108

Monday night Mrs. Rose Dye and j few days this week with Omar Miller!

daughter Wilma visited Mrs. Jane and family Mrs. Jessie Widan and , Lamb Tuesday. .. .Mr.-and Mrs. Eariibaby daughter spent Thursday night! Brown and sons, Clarence and Claude, with V. C. Boring and family Mrs.; were Mooreland visitors Sunday Omar Miller and Mrs. Ilda Toole atMr. Wes Dye has received word that tended the all day meeting of the! his father is not expected to live. Mr. I Community club at Salem school, Fri-:

facts and speculations. In the long run, relative birth rate is the greatest

single factor in the future history of the world. It has the power of a force

must keep on around the lake instead of following the loop back on the north side.

The lake at Glen Miller park is an

of nature. It will overcome fortresses ; interesting feature, added at compara-

anu creep arouna Dounaanes. it is tivelv small ext.ense to the city. Tho

f linpriar in lt nAlpn c7 t r nnv T n -j cm '

1 - ... . - .... ' -' of Nations or to any conference or diplomatic arrangement. In the course of time, whenever the discrepancy goes far enough, the nation or the race whose mothers are willing to bear and bring up the most children will prevail over those whose women are less fecund. An official of

depression which forms the bed of the lake was filled with water by dam- j ming the lower end. and this dam now j makes the north shore of the lake. The site of the boathouse on the east side where five rowboats and a J small motorboat are kept, was once occupied by the old Hawkins grist!

nary birthrate relative to Germany's advancing birth rate that was France's greatness weakness during the war. But if the French birth rate was sta

tionary for 40 years preceding the j

v. n.r, it became, during the latter part of the war, and ever since, not merely stationary, but smaller. In one or

two years out. of the last seven, tho birthrate of France went as low as n:ne per thousand per year. The significance of this will be seen when it is realized that at this rate, it would le necessary for each and every child liorn in France to live 112 years in order to keep the total population at 40,000,000. Obviously, this does not happen. The French government and the leaders of public opinion in France ara '.veil aware of the menace contained in these figures. Tha organization known as "The National Alliance for the Growth of the French Population," calls repeated attention to the menace. The French parliament has voted on several occasions, measures for the encouragement of marriage and of large families, such as the remission of taxation and increased pension rates and bonuses on children above a certain number all apparently in vain.

Deal with Question. The French Academy recently gave one of its unique distinctions to a book dealing with this situation "La Natalite." Speaking of this book, one of the leading French newspapers, tho owner of which by the way, was

one of the French delegates to thej

recent Washington conference, expresses the hope that "the recompense of the author would encourage the bourgeoise to populate France." There is not space in this article to go more deeply into the figures of birth rate and of future population as they relate either to France or to other countries. A few suggestive thoughts, however, may be set down. The sub

ject affects not merely the relations of i

France and Germany, but every otner country. The relations of France and Germany, as we all know, affect the future peace of the world. But the rest of the world Is even more directly concerned In the matter of relative

----- - ' ' vimui, wmcu was opt'iaieu uy ii"8'!

amuimii uue saia lo ine present which now feed the lake. A mill race writer, with some excitement, that the ied to the mill at the place now fillJapanese women in the state have an ed in to make a driveway on the average of more than seven children, . north edg0 of the jake.

wiiiie tut? W uutj wuiueu average less ;

than three. (I quote the figures from! paid by some form of taxation on the

memory), ine orncial said this in nublic. nresumablv freieht rates.

some alarm about the future of the

state, coupled with something like indignation. I felt like asking him whether his indignation was directed

against the Japanese women for having too many babies, or the whites for having too few.

However, it is a complex question

with many more angles than can even

be attended to in the present article, which aims only to call attention and provoke thought. (Copyright, 922, by the New York Evening Post, Inc.)

SAY MINORITY

(Continued from Page One.) was a fair basis, were quoted by the majority members, who, after a lengthy presentation, said the standard of living for clerks under the rate prescribed by the decision is 12.1 above 1915. "It certainly affords grounds for satisfaction and encouragement rather than for inflammatory appeals for strikes," the statement said. Say Loss Involved. Recognition of budgets proposed by tho minority would result in the loss of hundreds of millions of dollars to the railroads each year, the majority

members continued. "This shortage would have to be

which would have to be added to the burdens of every individual in the country, rich and poor," they said. "It is well to remember, the state-

l ment continued, "that the time will

never come in this or any other country, when the ordinary rules of common sense or business call them economic laws if you wish can be absolutely ignored in the conduct of any industry. The latest instance in which these laws have been thrown overboard and replaced by fine spun socialistic theories both in railway and other industries, is found in Russia, and the result there is not one that this country cares to emulate. "The minority are sowing some of the tiny seeds that have germinated

Cancelled checks are receipts for bills

w rMJ

CHECKS are tKe receipts for bills you have paid. Courts consider checks as legal evidence of payment. We return your cancelled checks to you every month so you may keep them for reference.

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