Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 153, 28 June 1922 — Page 14

PAGE FOURTEEN

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1922.

SPEAKER SAYS GREAT GOAL NOW POSSIBLE

FOR BIBLE WORKERS

C13v Aociated Pre an.) KANSAS CITY, Mo.. June 28. Tbe

representative form of organization of

the International Sunday School Coun

cil of Religious Education makes pos

sible 'the mightiest co-operation in practical measures in the history of North American Protestantism," Rev. Dr. Rufus W. Miller of Philadelphia, 6ccretary of the board of Sunday schools and publications of tbe Reformed Church, TJ. S. A., told the convention of the International Sunday School association here today. "This council has come," Dr. Miller continued, "at a time -when by co-operation can a national system of religious education paralleling the public school system be possible. The goal is worth every sacrifice. "At the door of the child's heart and bidding the youth Godspeed all the demonstrations should stand together. Construction Policy

"Building together has been the dominant note of this great conven

tion. It means for the next four years, to phrase it alliteratively, 'the chal

lenge of co-operation, of confidence, of

cssh; and a challenge for the family, circle, for the community, for the child and for Christ and the church.'

"We exist for the community and not the community for us. The evidence of the last few years proves conclusively that communities can get together and do splendid work as cooperating churches of the community, in the establishment of the community training school, the vacation Bible school and the weekday religious school. One of our great objectives must be the development of religious education for the whole community and not for its isolated units. This is true because a child Is the supreme object of our endeavor, and all the children of a community can alone be reached by united endeavor. , "It Is not possible in any other form of church work, for all the denominations to hold together as closely as they can in efforts in behalf of the children."

IRISH FACTIONS FIGHT FOR CITY

- , j y z flu- I ? .rTl . : - in i , .

Belleek, Irish border town, is battleground.

The town of Belleek, along the terest fighting recorded in the Ulster-Free State border, has present Irish civil war. The town been the scene of some oi the bit- is in Free State territory, but

recently British troops took possession of it. The town has been quiet since its occupation.

Senate Power in Public Affairs By FREDERIC J. HASK1N

SPECIAL SERVICES AT REID MEMORIAL

Preaching services will be held in the Reid Memorial United Presbyterian church Thursday and Friday evenings of this week at 8 o'clock. The hour has been changed from 7:30 to 8 o'clock to permit those working on railroad time to get to the meetings. These are the first and only special services held by the Reid Memorial church since the Billy Sunday meetings. Opportunity will be given at the close- of each of these services for those who wish, to unite with the church to meet with the official board and take the preliminary steps toward

church affiliation. Thursday night the Rev. J. M. Rife of Fairhayen will be the preacher and Friday night the Rev. Dr. Frank Boyd of College Corner. Mr. Rife is a young man, having been graduated from Xenia Theological Seminary in St. Louis only a year ago, but has already marked himself as one of the coming young men of his denomination. Dr. Boyd is one of the most prominent men of the United Presbyterian church in the middle west. He was for a number of years pastor of the First United Presbyterian church of Cincinnati and has recently come to College Corner, having been forced to give up city work on account of Mrs.

Boyd s health. The quarterly communion service and public reception of new members will be held in the Reid Memorial church Sunday morning at the hour of morning worship. A large addition to the membership is expected at that time.

WASHINGTON, June 28 Students of politics in relation to the American ! government are claiming that the United States is beginning on a new cycle of political life. They assert that for the next few years, probably a decade, the senate of the United States will occupy a dominant position in governmental affairs. ,, It is a matter of historical fa that

since the foundation of our government we have passed through a continuous series of cycles, the dominant leadership shifting from the legislative to the executive branch and back again. The development now discerned is a variation of the usual. In

that it is the United States senate, rather than the entire body of congress, which has forged to the front.! Heretofore the succession has been between the executive branch, headed by the president, and the congress, as a whole. To trace the development in recent times, the close of the nineteenth century was a period of legislative control. These cycles are determined by a variety of factors, but the one which brings about the leadership of the congress is the existence of one or more great national issues. In the close of the nineteenth century the issue was the tariff. Such questions as tariff and taxation are in the hands of the congress. It alone can enact tariff and revenue laws. Following the Cleveland panic, the country was in the mood for a high

protective tariff, and this turned the public attention to congress, the tariff framing body. The McKinley tariff was enacted, and the congress was the focal point of the people's thoughts. Roosevelt's Domination. Then came the rise of Theodore Roosevelt. Here was a personality of extraordinary force and magnetism

coupled with a thansition to new Issues. The issue of conservation of national resources and'' various other matters which were more compactly handled by executive auhority than by legislative, forced attention to the executive and away from congress. The White House held the center of the stage for years and congress was an adjunct merely. The administration of President

Taft was a sort of interregnum, the

great executivejssues being somewhat dormant, but the momentum of the Roosevelt period carried over until The election of Woodrow Wilson, another dominant personality of a type new to the presidency. This was followed by the war, which, as a matter of course, focussed public attention on the president, the commander-in-chief of the army and navy. In no previous cycle of American development was so much power concentrated in the executive as during the war. It represented the widest amplitude of the swing of power from legislative to executive. It will b9 remembered how the congress enacted

law after law, placing in the hands of the president practically unlimited authority. Regulation of the most fundamental character was, in ' some instances, imposed by presidential proclamation rather than by legislative enactment. Prices were fixed in his name, the railroads were taken over and operated, and a multitude of other governmental activities carried on. With the close of the war, the pendulum started to swing back again, bringing in this case an extraordinary difference. As the taxing power lies in the congress as a whole, so does the power

of ratifying treaties lie in the hands

of the United States Ssnate.

One of the elements which brings

about these swings of dominance is the

personality of the chief executive. It will be remembered that with the

treaty signed at Versailles, the president fell ill and was forced to retire from public notice and from a conspicuous place before the people. Co-in-1 cidentally the treaty went to the sen-1 ate for ratification and for the first j time in its history the senate became alone the central point of interest.

The constitution provides that the

treaty making power shall rest In the executive and the ratification power in the hands of the senate. But in this case, the senate went beyond a mere consideration and the giving of its advice and consent. It proposed and enacted reservations. It assumed indirectly the treaty making rather than the treaty-ratifying power. Instead of merely taking the completed treaty and deciding whether or not It should be consented to, the senate

practically rewrote the treaty. When it finally was ratified it was a treaty

so different from that which the pres

ident had signed that when it wa3 re

turned to the White House, he pigeonholed it, never sending it to the other

signatory powers. Recently it is reported that the treaty as ratified has

been entirely lost

A Senator Becomes President. Now the curious result of this blossoming into the limelight of the senate was that for the first time in American history a member of that body was elected to the presidency. The prominence which the senate achieved brought its members into prominence and so when the time came for election, it was to the senate that the people turned for a president. The senate's experience in holding the whip hand caused it to undertake things which previously it had left for the executive or for con

gress as a whole. By resolution calling upon executive departments for special reports or for special action or information, it arrogated td itself functions which before that time had been otherwise taken care of. It conducted investigations and generally proceeded as a ruling body. The development of the dominance

of the senate went even further. From outward appearances, it seemed, after the inauguration, that instead of sending one of Its members to the Whito House, the senate" merely had annexed the White House as a part of itself. President Harding laid down his famous doctrine that he 'did not favor

one-man government, but that h would be guided by the best minds of the nation. He appointed Albert Fall, one of his colleagues in the senate, to his cabinent, and also John W. Weeks, a former senator. He maintained a sort of unofficial or kitchen cabinet composed almost wholly of senators. The whole atmosphere of the admin

istration was a senate atmosphere. How far this development will proceed is a matter for conjecture. It is not improbable that the senate half of congress will lose its dominance, but political students are convinced that the legislative branch of the government, as a whole, is in the saddle, as opposed to the executive branch.

for some years to come. The fact that the two fundamental issues be

fore the country today, taxation and

credit, are congressional functions,

lends color to this theory. Congress is at work now unon the

tariff and before long will be revising! the tax laws again. Bank credit and international credit are questions '

which will occupy the congress for some years, 6o it Beems more than likely that it will hold the whip hand again, until another turn of the wheel brings to the fore Some great issue which can only be handled by the single figure in the White House. The Judicial branch of the American government never has gained the sort

of dominance which the legislate and executive branches have achieved. That some such develoment may com, in the course of evolution; seems not improbable. In variousearlier civilizations, the Judges of the J nation were the dominant figures and ; such a situation again may arise. ;

HURT WHEN TORPEDO EXPLODES IN MOUTH TERRE HAUTE, Ind., June 28. Thelma Baker, 3 years old. Is suffering from burns and lacerations caused by, the explosion of a torpedo in her mouth. The child had found the tor; pedo and bit the cap.

COLUMBIA RECORDS

Odd. Post Office Phone 1655

Paint for 1 cent a square foot two coats use Sherwin-Williams PAINTS A. G. Luken Drug Co. 628-628 Main Street

aliiiliiiMiilmiiHlliniiiiuiilinilftimlHlliiniHHii!MiiililitiilMliiniMllliiliUHii'

0

A Clean Shave Gives you new pep. 5 skilled barbers Harter's Shop In the Murray Bldg.

niiirailinniiiiiiiiiiiiuiuiiiiuuiiiiuiuiHiiiliiiiuiiuiiiiiiiinHiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiini I White Mountain Refrigerators Only at

uwmiiuiiiiiiiitnmuiaiiiuiiHiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin iimnimnuiiHiiiiiiiiiMiiiui

QUALITY ICE CREAM

I Our Ice Cream in a recent test 1 by the state tested one of the I highest in the state, showing I that we are always trying to 1 give our customers the purest, 1 richest and most delicious Ice 1 Cream that can be made. Fiftyseven years with "Quality" our watchword. Take home a quart tonight. ' ' 1 Don't Forget the Community Chest a Civic Duty I I i BiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiifuuitiuiiniiitiHiiiiiiiutiiimittiiiiiiiiniiinifHtiimmiiiiiiiHS

SOUTH BEND MAN HEADS DUNE SOCIETY SOUTH BEND, June 28. George B. Beitner of South Bend, is the president of the Indiana Dunes society, an organization whoee purpose is to pre

serve the sand dunes of northern Indi

ana and to collect relics of the old forts and villages that have disappeared.

Have You Asked About Prudential Stock Investment Savings Plan Prudential Loan & Investment Co. Under State Supervision 20 S. 8th St. Phone 1727

FACTS ONLY

TRUTH ALWAYS

See Us for Values in Used Cars Chenoweth Auto Co.

1105 Main St

Phone 1925

EAT OUR BREAD It's Good Henry Farwig & Son 1031 Main St.

Thistlethwaite's The Original Cut-Rate E VERY-DAY PRICES In Effect at All 7 Stores SHAMPOOS Wild Root 49c Palm Olive .45c Q-Ban 49c Mulsified Cocoanut Oil. 43c Packer's Tar 49c ALL- SCRAP TOBACCO, OfT 3 for t)t

KUS'RaXJXTS - Continuing Thursday Our Month-End Sales UNDERWEAR SPECIALS

Mi'lii IBLJBtfVUlfB

At Feltman's

First in Richmondto display the new

Russian Boot

for Milady's Approval in Patent Kid RUSSIAN BOOT, 9 inches high, with stitched cuff, military heels; all sizes

$

6oo

Always First with the Latest

FeltmanJs Shoe Store. The World's Largest Shoe Dealers t5 Stores - 724 Main Street

Ladies' Knit Union Suits, 33 to 44, bodice top and rA loose knee OUC Carter's Union Suits for women; fine knit garments, all sizes 36 to 44; regular

values ?1.2o; special at Ladies' Knit Vests, special Men's Knit Shirts and Drawers

Lot of Men's Union Suits,

36, 38, 40, 42 only, $1.50 value

79c 29c 50c

69c

85c

HOSIERY SPECIALS

Crepe Gowns for Ladies Pink and white crepe with neat, small fig- oq ures, $1.75 value. V-Lmil Silk Camisoles, lace trim,

regular values $1.00,

special

Silk Camisoles, lace trim, $1.75 values, spe- Q- Off cial at tpXaO Soisette A big line of colors, all 32 inches IQrt wide 4fciL

Cotton Crepe, plain colors

and small figures, special

29c

29c

Ladies Lisle Hose in white, brown and black, CCQr seamless foot Oct

Children's Half Socks in

white with pink and

light blue tops

Children's Pongee Q?n Three-Quarter Hose. OOC Men's Silk Socks in dropstitch and clock (J-J AA styles. $1.50 val. tM.UU Men's brown, black and Gray Cotton Socks, np special idUt Ladies' White Silk Hose, pure thread silk, J- (f Teg. $1.25 value.. tPl.UU

Ladies' brown and black

pure thread SUk

Hose, $1.25 value

Ladies' Lisle Hose, regular $1.50 value, spe- QQ

$1.00

One lot boys' heavy ribbed Black Stockings, Kfl special OUC Ladies' Rollette Hose, glove silk, dropstitch style. Van Raalte make Qty pair I D Ladies' full fashioned Silk Hose in brown and black, VanRaalte make, &( HZ pair J Ladies' black glove silk Hose, dropstitch, (JJ QQ VanRaalte make. tpaO Ladies' black and brown

iiose, pure tnreaa suit, ex

tra good value; pair ;

Ladies' black and white pure thread Silk Hose, full

fashioned, ' full silk boot.

VanRaalte make,

pair

$1.75

ind white Hose, full silk hnm

' $2.25

CORSET DEPARTMENT

Stylish , Stout Brassieres, back fasteners, J-j AA values to $2 pi-vlU

Eizes,

Brassieres, regular

values to $1.00, ff special, 2 for pJLUU

Lot of Corsets, medium and low bust, flesh and white, regular values $2.00; choice

$1.00

Lee B. Nusbaum Co.

NUSBAUM BUILDINO

Dafler9! Circulation Thousands of Satli fied Customers.

Drug

Newslets

Our Motto The Public be Pleased.

Weather Forecast Always Fair at Darter's.

VALUES

WEDNESDAY. JUNE 28, 1922.

SERVICE

"Tune In" on Dafler' s when you want quick results in Drug Store necessities and note the rapidity with which they will "broadcast" you wants to you.

Miles' Nervine 89c Pinkham's Compound . . . 89c Garden Court Talc 25c Day Dream Talc .24c

FACE POWDERS Garden. Court 50c Melba 47c Satin Skin 23c Djer-Kiss ..50c

Special at the Cigar Stand CAMELS and LUCKY IPSTRIKE Cigarettes for JLuL WHITE OWL. CIGARS. 8c; IP two for J.OI EJj DALLO CIGARS, 8c; Op four for wSOt

FIREWORKS Everything that make an attractive display. NOISE-MAKERS ALSO

Packer's TAR SOAP, ideal

for shampoo, per bar..

l.25c

Get It Where They've Got It If It's Advertised, It's at Dafler's

Richmond's OnlyDowntown Exclusive Drug Store

We Thank You Call Again Main at Ninth Phone 1904

AT RCttlEY'S

This $50 Estate Gas Range to be GIVEN AWAY!

to the owner of the OLDEST GAS RANGE now in use in the city How many years have you had your gas range in continuous use? No matter what style or make it is no matter where you bought it we are anxious to know how nany years of service it has given you. To the owner of the oldest gas range, we will give in exchange this latest model Estate Gas Range, a cabinet-type range, with 16-inch bake oven, broiler, plate-warming compartment, extra large cooking top, enamel splasher, door paneis, burner tray and broiler pan. Number 19S2 Estate, with the famous Estate Fresh Air Bake Oven and other exclusive features of Estate construction. Come to the Store Today Thursday, Friday or Saturday and Register Your Name

This will in no way obligate you to spend a penny with us, but all registrations must be made In person. none received by mail or phone. To further repay you for your time and trouble in coming to the store, we have arranged a special demonstration by an expert from the Estate Stove factory. An opportunity to learn the latest time-saving, labor-saving methods of cookery. Six Angel-Food Cakes to be Given Away

!'.i,..ili..i...li.,.),..,iii!..l :

Every woman who comes to the store on these registration-demonstration days, whether she enters her gas range in the contest or not, will be given an opportunity to get one of these angel food cakes. So, you see, from any standpoint, you really cannot afford to stay away.

This 1922 Model Estate Gas Range and the Six Beautiful Angel Food Cakes will be awarded Saturday afternoon, July 1st, at 2 :30x o'clock. CONTESTANTS MUST BE PRESENT WHEN RANGE and CAKES ARE AWARDED!

We Extend You a Cordial Welcome

920-926 Main Street