Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 165, 13 July 1922 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1922.
PAGE THREE
SIX CANDIDATES SEEK it OHIO SENATOR'S SEAT IN PRIMARIES AUG. 8
(By Associated Press) COLUMBUS, Ohio. July 13. Six candidates, including Senator Pomerene himself, want to become United States senators from Ohio at the conclusion of Senator Atlee Pomerene's term next March. Four Republicans and two Democrats ave entered for the nomination at the Ohio state-wide primaries on August 8. Senator Pomerene's lone opponent is former Congressman John J. Lentz. of Columbus, president of the American Insurance Union,
who was defeated for the nomination by Senator Pomerene six years ago. Pomerene's friends have said they are not taking the Lentz candidacy seriously, and that they expect the senior Ohio senator to be renominated by a large vote. In the Republican camp, the main contest, politicians say, appears to be between Congressman Simeon D. Fess, of Yellow Springs, who is chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee and Charles Dick, of Akron, formerly United States senator from Ohio and author of the Dick National Guard law. Fess Is considered a stronger advocate of national prohibition and a supporter of the Harding administration. Dick was defeated for renomination six years ago and his entry Into the present campaign caused some surprise In political circles. Furnishing Opposition Opposed to Fess and Dick are John W. Arnold of Columbus, former lieutenant governor, and David W. Wood, a Civil war veteran and an inmate of the Ohio Soldiers Home at Sandusky. Although chief interest In the primary appears to be centering in the contest for the Republican nomination for governor, the Democratic gubernatorial fight is attracting considerable attention. Dispite the claims of friends that he should have had no opposition because he was the defeated candidate two vears ago. former State Auditor,
A. Vic Donahey. of New Philadel
phia, is opposed by three other con testants.
Those opposing him for the nomination are James G. Johnson of Springfield, a justice of the Ohio supreme court; Thomas J. Duffy of East Liverpool, head of the ctate industrial
commission, and A. P. Sandies or uitawa, for several years secretary of the state board of agriculture. However, Sandle's name may not get on the ballot because of an alleged technicality. While hi3 petition filed with the secretary of state bore his name, investigation disclosed that the petition was signed by his secretary while he was out of the state on a speaking tour. His name has been ruled out by the secretary of state, but his friends are urging him to appeal to the courts. Donahey, a former member of the legislature and a delegate to the Ohio constitutional convention in 1912, won the Democratic nomination for governor two years ago, but was defeated for election by Harry L. Davis of Cleveland in the Republican landslide of that year. Both he and Duffy claim strong labor support Friends of Judge Johnson claim that he will have much of the organization support over the state.
SENATORS DESERT WASHINGTON FOR GOLD FIELDS
of attendants he stepped toward hertracted the most attention because of
their spectacular nature, he is by no means the only prominent champion
and said
"Why do you not walk? I am certain, a hsnllltAl v rortain fhat rnit r
walk. Try it. Madam, and sen if I am ! of auto-suggestion. Gradually, the en
not right" tire medical ' prof ession seems to be The woman was lowered ecntlv to espousing the idea in one form or an-
the floor; she made a tremendous ef- other. ODthalmoloeists tell us. for in-
fort. exerting all her will power, and.
while the onlookers held their breath, she walked. After taking a few steps
she sat down, then rose and walked again. "Gracious," ehe exclaimed, "this man is a god." But Prof. Coue modestly denies the allegation. He declares that he Is merely a professor of optimism and that the patients themselves are their own miracle-workers. "The explanation is very simple," he
says. "Thore are two beings in us, the conscious being who is the master I of our will and the unconscious one j who rules our imagination. Well, there is an antagonism between these two forces, and it is always imagination which prevails. "If you place a plank 10 yards long
ana tnrce inches wide on the floor you will easily walk along it. Imagine that thi3 plank be placed above an abyss and you would find it impossible
to walk on thig bridge, because your
Mining gold within ten miles of Washington. D. C in the Virginia hills.
stance, that defective eyesight is caused by defective imagination; the new school or personal hygienists declare that pessimism is the greatest enemy to health, while the Freudians trace all our modern complexes to disorders of the juvenile imagination. All
advocate auto-suggestion as a cure. ! Worry, which is a form of negative j auto-suggestion, can be cured only by positive suggestion, they say. "Mor-j bid fears and doubts about common '
happenings grow immensely by a pro
cess of suggestion and auto-sugges- j tion," declares one medical authority, J "until they tend to obsess the whole; personality. For worry of this kind j nothing less than a systematic course j of mental training of some kind, aided by self-suggestion, will effect a radical I cure. Of course, when persons afflict-1 ed by the worry habit get run down, they get all the more tnvolved in the : tangle of their doubting thoughts." i
Thus, Pollyana has received the un-;
UNIDENTIFIED BOYS KILLED ORLEANS, Ind., July 13. Two unidentified boy about 18 years old fere Instantly killed four and one-hall miles east of here by a Monon train. Both wore khaki trousers. It is' believed they went to sleep on the track. Nothing was found on either to identify them.
imagination would oppose itself to!qUalified endarsement of science. All
Party leaders in Washington, D. C, may have to crack the old whip over the senate continuously to keep the dignified senators
from forsaking the legislative halls for a gold rush to Virginia. Gold, real honest to goodness gold of the glittering kind, is be
ing mined in the Virginia hills within ten miles of Washington. It is said that Senator King of Utah is interested in the project.
the "Keep smiling" propaganda which
has raged furiously throughout the land in recent yeats has had a pathological significance. AU tbe popular demand for guilded romance and glad books as opposed to bitter realism must have been based upon the public's unconscious desire to keep its imagination cheerful and free from contamination.
Health Through Optimism By FREDERIC J. HASKIN
ble, close your eyes and isolate yourself in thought, pass your hands lightly over the seat or the pain, or on the forehead if the suffering be mental, and say as quickly as possible It's going as long as the suffering remains.
These exercises must be made without
effort."
If von will pentlv hnr firmiv correct i P'ece of string with 20 knots tied in it' Prof. Coue does not claim that auto-
NEW YORK CITY. July 13 Are you ill? Nonsense! You imagine it.
Health is simply a matter of belief
viction, the more rapid and certain will be the results. "It is well to be provided with a
your will. You would wish to, but you
would not be able to. One always speaks of educating the will, but it seems more important to me to know how to guide our Imagination." Imagination Alone Suffers. To the patients who come to his clinic at Nancy from all parts of Europe, the professor gives the following advice:
l aaw. oaj Luai uu ui t; Buiitrjug.
it is not true. You imagine that you a good thing to know
are suffering. But in realitv von are! Foley Cathartic Tablets are a gent" , reality, you aie ulnely wholesome physic an ideal lax-
7l SU"C"US' J-t is your imagination ative. They keep the system fit and alone that suffers. Close the eyes and fine, purged of poisons and ready to re-rtlZlV-U VA1 theTStrenfh mTt iBP.ft,bIu.erpi:6wrStteed.l or tne Will. I am better I am bet- -I cannot praise Foley Cathartic Tabter I am better.' And presently you lets to highly for what they have will see that VOU are reallv fPPlinsr ??ne.,for me" Jhe5' b,anlsh biliousness.
ana other uis caused Dy indigestion. Make fat people feel lighter and freer.
A. G. Luken Drug Co., 626-62S Main. Advertisement.
better. Believe in vour health and -rn
will be half cured." While Prof. Coue's cures have at-
Palais lanai
APPAREL OF FASHION Many new arrivals in Dresses being expressed daily by our buyer now in New York.
'Appoint Mrs. Kinsey
Township Chairwoman GREEN'S FORK. Ind., July 13. Ap pointment of Mrs. Lewis Kinsey as township chairman to supervise arrangements for the county farmers picnic on Aug. 9, was the most important action of the regular meeting of Clay township farmer's association, held in Greensfork Wednesday night. Plans for poultry culling and other extension activities also were discussed, but definite arrangements were left until a later meeting. PETER COOPER HEWITT'S WIDOW BRIDE OF BARON
PARIS, July 13. Mrs. Peter Cooper Hewitt, formerly Marion Andrews D,o.oiro widow of the late inventor,
TrarViPd vesterdav to Baron Rob-
rvt-rianppr at St. Roch's Church
The ceremony was performed by Abbe Magnin, secretary to Cardinal Dubois. The bridegroom belongs to the English family of Slidell D'Erlacger. CHANGE PLANS FOR TUBERCULAR HOSPITAL WASHINGTON. July 13. Decision to erect a 500-bed, $1,500,000 hospital for tubercular ex-service patients at Tupper Lake, N. Y.. instead of tbe proposed 250 bed institution at Liberty, N. Y., was announced by acting Director Rogers o fthe veterans' bureau. All field artillery schools of the United States army are to be concentrated at Ft. Sill, Okla.
your misguided imagination by putting it through a regular course of discipline, you will soon discover that really there is nothing at all the matter with you. At least, so say the exponents of the new psychoterapeutic method which is now proving popular in Europe. It is known by the old, familiar
term of auto-suggestion and also by the new term, Coueism, after Emile
Coue, a French psychotherapist of Nancy, who has lately gained renown for his sensational cures. Here are the directions. Every morning before you are fully awake, and every night just as you are on the verge of sleep, close your eyes and murmur 20 times in succession the following rhythmic and reassuring sentence: "Day by day in every way I am getting better and better." That Is all there is to it no medicine, no exertion of any kind, and no doctor's bills. No wonder, then, that the new method is popular. The idea seems to be that the human imagination is a silly, impressionable thing, incredibly susceptible to suggestion, but nevertheless capable of wielding a powerful influence over the body. Against its uncanny, primitive strength, the reasoning faculties of the brain are apparently helpless. Careful reasoning may assure you, for instance, that your head is congested and the mucous membranes of your nostrils are inflamed as a result of a cold contracted while sitting in a
draught yesterday, but if you are able to convince your imagination that you haven't a cold and never could have taken cold from sitting in a draught, all the annoying symptoms are likely to disappear. In order to do this, how
ever, it is necessary to meet your imagination on its own childish level with complete simplicity. V "Let the auto-suggestion be made with confidence, with faith," continue the directions. "The greater the con-
so that the counting can be mechani- suggestion will cure all complaints,
cal. In other words, the conscious ; however malignant, but says it has part of your brain must not be sudden- been known to cure a wide variety of
ly aroused to action by a sudden
quandary as to whether you have said the sentence 15 or only 14 times. In addition to the large doses of optimism forced upon the imagination every morning and night it is necessary to keep it strictly in hand at all other times. Whenever physical or
moral surtenng is experienced, say the directions, affirm instantly to yourself that you will not consciously encourage its existence and that you will make it disappear. "Then, if possi-
ailments ranging from insomnia to paralysis. One of these remarkable cures recently took place before a large assembly of spectators when Coue was the honored guest of the Institute of Auto-suggestion of London, which has its offices in Grosvenor Gardens. A woman patient, paralyzed in one leg, who brought in a carriage and carried to the office of Prof. Coue. As she came in the door in the arms
ASPIRIN Say "Bayer" and Insist!
CHEVROLET TouSl $200.00 Down Balance $35.50 per month E. W. Steinhart Co. 10th & Sailor Sts. Phone 2955
Colds Toothache Earache Neuralgia
FAT THAT SHOWS SOON DISAPPEARS
Prominent fat that comes and stays where it is not needed is a burden, a hindrance to activity, a curb upon pleasure. You can take off the fat where it shows by taking after each meal and at bedtime, one Marmola Prescription Tablet. These little tablets are as effective and harmless as the famous prescription from which they take their name. Buy and try a case today. All druggists the world over sell them at one dollar for a case or vou can order them direct from the Marmola Co., 4612 Woodward Av., Detroit Mich. You can thus say g-ood-bve to dieting, exercise and fat. Ad-
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CHAIR CUSHIONS $1.50 BARTEL & R0HE 921 Main St.
Do You Chafe? Peterson's Ointment To the multitude of friends who have used Peterson's ointment for eczema, itching skin and scalp, piles, ul
cers and old sores of long standing, I
Peterson says, "Tell your friends that Peterson's ointment will stop chafing in two minutes." 35c, 60c, $1.00, $2.50, $5.00. Advertisement.
Unless you see the name "Bayer"' on package or on tablets you are not; getting the genuine Bayer product! prescribed by physicians over twenty-; two years and proved safe by millions; for I
Headache Lumbago
Rheumatism : Pain, Pain j
Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions. Handy, boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents, j Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and; 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of; Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticaci-; dester of Salicylicacid Advertise-! ment.
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On Your 1 VACATION I Take a Kodak f with you i
nn ana Main
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Another July Special One special lot Fumed Oak LIBRARY TABLES with magazine racks, complete, at
RADIO HEADQUARTERS Richmond Electric Company 1026 Main St. Phone 2823
TWO MORE DAYSDRESS SHIRTS 33 1-3 OFF
Most fiKwwc M cm and.
803 Main 8treet
UOYS.
$25
MATTING RUGS Beautiful Stenciled 9x12 Rugs, priced at
$50
4
HOLTHOUSE
530 Main St.
IN
j I
Phone 2121 q 1
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mrniUminniMUMItBNUHmiliniHimniiiiRniHiniminniHiwiniHniiiniiinii
Stop That Leak With j Marvelseal Liquid Roof Cement Hackman, Klehfoth & Co.
I
ft I
TO RIDE
THE REAR SEAT of a Marmon over the roughest roads is like riding on a boulevard in the average car. The Marmon type of suspension cushions the jars. You can tour all day in a roomy, smoothriding Marmon without the slightest fatigue.
MARMON
CKenoweth Electric Service Co.
1115 Main
NORDYKE & MARMON COMPANY
WHl
iLAN
mmelh
Pu.tliekd
37-33 Phone 1679
7
"72. e Feed Man"
VOL II.
Registered
RICHMOND, INDIANA. JULY 13, 1922
No. 14
Poisoned Bait Successful Measure Against Cutworm Cutworms can readily be controlled by the use of poisoned bait, the United States department of agriculture has demonstrated. This is the way to prepare and apply the poison: To one bushel of dry bran add one pound of white arsenic or Paris green and mix thoroughly into a mash with four gallons of water, in which has been stirred one-half gallon of sorghum or other cheap molasses. This amount will be sufficient to treat four or five acres of cultivated crops. After the mash has stood for several hours scatter it in lumps about the size of a marble over the fields where the injury is beginning to appear. Put it about the bases of the plants which have been set out. Apply the mash late in the day, so as to have the poison in place around the
plants before night, when the cut
worms are active. Apply a second time if necessary.
Cutworms destroy hundreds of
thousands, even millions of dollars' worth of crops every year throughout the United States. They especiallyattack tomatoes, cabbage, lettuce and other vegetables that have been started under glass and transplanted. Cutworms sometimes appear in great numbers in the spring and early summer, and frequentlydo severe injury before their ravages are noticed.
NOTICE
We receive daily at 10:30 a. m. the Western Union wire live stock markets. Anyone wishing this information may have same by calling Phona 1679. "
Feeding Ducks A good mash for young ducks is bran, middlings, ground oats, corn meal, and about 10 percent of meat scrap. This should be moistened, so as to make a crumbly mash, and fed three or four times a day. If the ducklings are fed on free range it will not be necessary to add green feed to the mash.
Cleaning Pasture of Iron Weed
Orchard and Garden
On big lawns, a spray of iron sulfate will wipe out dandelions. On smaller tracts, dig them out, cutting deep, and put a few drops of gasoline on the spot to kill the roots. Better begin thinking about swatting the rooster. A pamphlet of Fertilizers for Tobacco, our June 1, will be sent free to anyone requesting it of the extension editors, Ohio State University, Columbus. Only about one acre in 10 of Ohio's farm land is in legums today, but things get a little better every year.
GRAIN BAGS FOR SALE 20c 25c 30c OMER G. WH ELAN
The best way we know for freeing a pasture of iron weeds is to let a flock of sheep do it. If they are in the pasture most of the summer and there is not an overabundance of grass, they will nip off the young iron weeds so that little development can take place. In a few seasons the pasture will be free of the weed. Iaw farmers who keep sheep are troubled by iron weeds in their pastures. In case keeping sheep is out of the question, the best method is to mow off the weeds as close to the ground as possible when they are in bloom. Readers who have had experience with this method say that with proper precautions, it works satisfactorily. The iron weed is not usually found a very dificult weed to control when the right attention is given to its eradication.
CLOVER SEED All Varieties English. Little Red, Alsike, Crimson, Alfalfa, White or Yellow Blossom Sweet Clover at WH ELAN'S
The Farm Journal Peach growers should send to de
partment of agriculture. Washing-J
ton, D. C, for a copy of new Farm- j ers' Bulletin, "Preparation ofi Peaches for Market." Also, fori
copy of peach-grading regulations
Turnips A Good Late Crop. Turnips make a good late-sown crop and can be sown as late as the middle of. July, last of July or first of August, Turnips do well on new land, but will grow in any soil rich enough for grain or corn. One or two pounds of seed to the acre is enough if sown broadcast. If the turnips are put in with drills the rows should be from 24 to 30 inches apart. This will call for a half pound of seed to the acre if they are carefully sown. Turnips need very little cultivation. They can
be stored for winter use. Spray Orchards. Apple orchards in the Ohio river counties are now receiving the final spray of the season, the summer spray, applied between 9 and 10 weeks after the petals fall, and aimed particularly at control of the codling moth. This spray usually comes in the southern counties about July 1; toward the middle of July for central counties; and as late as July 20 in the north of the state. The recommended formula is Bordeaux mixture 3-5-50, plus arsenate of lead, a pound of powder or two pounds of paste to 50 gallons of spray. Besides the codling moth, it takes care of black rot,.- bitter rot, and blotch.
IT'S TIME TO RETIRE We Sell FISK Red Top TIRES and TUBES
OMER G. 31-33 S. 6th St.
WHELAN Phone 1679
BUGS? Not if you use BUG FINISH! 5c lb., 6 lbs., 25c i Omer G. Whelan 31-33 S. 6th SL Phone 1679
PRATT'S Tar Disinfectants Cattle and Sheep Dip Poultry Louse Killer Fly and Mosquito Chaser Do the work. Get a can. OMER G. WHELAN Distributor
GROWING FEEDS ' Our line of growing and developing feeds for chicks can't be beaten. If you want husky, lively stock come into our store and let our poultry experts tell you exactly what to' feed your chicks and fowls ot all ages for best results. i OMER G. WHELAN The Feed Man 31-33 S. 6th St. Phone 1679
Whelan's Wonder Feed The Real Summer Feed Make cows give more milk, keep them in good flesh and condition. Develops calves quickly; fattens horses Grows and fattens young chickens. Make hens lay Cost less. BUY A SACK BUY A TON
lniiiinnuiniiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiMi""'M'I"M"l,l,,,l,,nl,"lm''l,,,MII"ll,'11 WE SELL i I COAL I 1 that Burns Well 1 Ph. 2476, Bell in Beallviewf liiiiiimitmiwitiiimiHUBiitniitniiiiuimiiiiiiiiiuwMiiitiHiiiHiHiiiniHuiii
Established 1851 n INDIANAPOLIS OMER G. WHELAN Full line of Insecticides at WHELAN'S THE FEED MAN 31 and 33 S. 6th St Phone 1679
