Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 170, 19 July 1922 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND
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 Office at Richmond, Indiana, as . Second-Claas Mall Matter.
TV MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS fr A'folated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use r,A V Publication of ail news dispatches credited to It or n....Llrn'!" credited In this paper, and also the local riii V"1 h"rin- All rights of republication of spe cial dispatches herein are also reserved.
: City Planning ; The appointment of a city planning commis- : sion is the first organized step toward bringing .about changes in the physical condition of the city that will benefit every taxpayer. The value of a comprehensive plan, adopted after painstaking investigation, and readily accessible to the city authorities when improvements are under discussion, is inestimable in ; saving money for the taxpayers and also in sys- : tematically bringing about betterments. Most American cities, like Topsy, have been i permitted to grow up as they would, without any : definite purpose or recognition of the needs of ; the community. ; Little business centers have encroached upon purely residential sections, diminishing values and marring beautiful streets, without any effort ; to curb them or direct them to localities that would serve their purpose ideally. Industries and shops often have been placed
in districts that are ideal for residential purposes, and conversely, many homes have been erected in sections that, owing to railroad facil
ities and other advantages, should have been reserved for factory sites, thus working a hardship on both the man who takes pride in his home and
its surroundings and the man who seeks a location for his shop or factory.
The development of many cities has been so
rapid that no thought has been given to the reservation of open places for parks and recreation centers. Streets have been laid out without attention to width to accommodate future traffic and street car facilities. The relation of sewage disposal to existing conditions often has been lost sight of. Scores of other vital factors in city development have been overlooked and ignored, not wilfully and purposely, but because there was no organized body to call attention to these facts, to weigh them carefully, and to map out and plan for the future. A city planning commission seeks to obviate these costly mistakes by anticipating the conditions that will develop under certain conditions. It seeks to capitalize on the natural advantages of a community, to prevent costly mistakes, to incorporate all the various elements of a city's life into a comprehensive plan, which will give due recognition to every factor and promote the general welfare of all the citizens.
; Answers to Questions ; (Any reader c.in tret the answer to . flny question by writing The Palladium Information Bureau, Frederick J. Ilaskdirector, "Wash'.nfcton. D. C. This of-ff-r applies strictly- to Information. The hurrau does not give advice on legal, medical and financial matters. It does ; not attempt to settle domestic troubles, ; nor to undertake exhaustive research i on any Fubject. Write your ouestlon . plainly and briefly. Give full name and ; fiddress and enclose two cents In stamps for return postage. All replies are sent direct to the inquirer. Q. Who wrote "Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep?" H. J. H. A. Bartlett does not ascribe 'this prayer to any author, merely saying J that a version of it wa3 included in X the New England Frimer. A reprint . of the primer made in 1784 contained !:,the words as we know them today, i The prayer hymn, however, of which ; the prayer is the first stanza, waa published by the Rev. M. W. Stryker '.In 1884. ) Q. Is a dolphin an animal or a fish? ; R. A. G. A. In ancient times the dolphin was 'considered a fish. It is in reality an J animal and does not have scales. The I skin is tanned and used as a leather. Q. Was "Rasputin" the real name of the Russian monk who attracted so much attention a few years ago? L. E. B. A. Rasputin is from the Russian word rasputny, meaning dissolute,
profligate, libertine, licentious; and was an opprobrious nickname conferred upon the notorious Russian monk whose real name was Gregor .Xovikh. Q. How much money did Andrew Carnegie devote to library endow- . ment? J. C. W. ' A. Carnegie endowed 2.811 libraries with a total of $60,364,808. Q. What Is meant by a "saving wace?" S. K. P. A. Secretary of Labor Davis in re- . cent wage discussions has distinguished a "saving wage" from a "living wage" by stating that it is a wage 'which assures the worker a margin over and above the amount required for his and his family's subsistence in -health and reasonable comfort. Q. Dees the superintendent of a poor farm have a right to open the mail of inmates? D. A. . A. The postotfice department saya 'that thp sealed mail of persons living ,in a county home is as fully protected from unlawful opening as the mail of any other citizens.- The mere fact that the inmates are so unfortunate as . t l - n J - , . .
i i;vb uetu comptineu to seeK snei"ter in an institution maintained for 'the indigent gives the superintendent no license to interfere with their letters.
: Facts About Indiana : The late Winthrop Ellsworth Stone Ferved as president of Purdue University for thirty-two years, death in a : mountain climbing accident ending his -career.
State institutions under jurisdiction of the board of state charities cared for 18.4S8 different persons during the 'last fiscal year.
There are nineteen state charitable institutions in Indiana.1 There are 15-pipe tIine companies in tbo state.
; The percentage of parole violators "ntnong prisoners released undei the .Indeterminate sentence law, that is. prisoners who have served at least their full minimum term and are released by the parole board at the instlintion where, they are confined, has ;for years averaged 26 per cent, in Indiana.
: Fire caused a loss of $4,403,466 in .the first eight months of 1921. ; At times, the state highway comynission employs as many as fivo thousand laborers.
TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can," "Take It." "Up" LEAVE SOMETHING Most of the joys of this life come from things that someone else has left behind. The painted masterpiece, the great book, the written song, the carved stone or molded bronze, the long rows of trees in our cities and parks, treasures of art hundreds of years old. j The rug under my feet, the stand beside me, the typewriter on which these words are typed, the bookcases and other pieces about me, everything with which we come in contact, human hands have touched and fashioned them all. Each represents something left behind by a worker or thinker who put his heart into his work. A dozen men are building a wall about my yard. I have been watching them a great deal. One man in particular has attracted me. He works so intelligently and neglects nothing. He takes great pride m his work. Soon he will be gone. But the wall will live for hundreds of years. That workman will leave something behind and I shall often think of him as I look Into the beauty of the stones he placed so carefully and well. Every moment you are performing or you are not. Every time you do perform, and put love and Interest into your work, you put yourself into something that is going to live how long, no one knows. But it is not for us to worry about the length of time our works shall live, but how well we can do them so that they shall live Work to leave something worth while behind you each day I was showing a friend through the home of Edwin Booth the great actor, the other day. It is now the home of The Players Club in New York City. All about the rooms and walls are records and pictures and books and costumes and mementoes of days long gone As I looked at the costumes that Booth once wore, I Imagined great crowds applauding and all the admiration that high are deserves Booth left these things, but more than these he left a wonderful character. Leave something behind each day!
SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND.. WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1922. . Movie of a Thin Man and One of His Troubles
waist Band o"
K new Trousers
loo VrflDE
Beer socKLeo Tb LAST NOTCH PAILS To HOLD 'EM OP
Look 5 at otD TAlR WITH VIEW To
Who's Who in the Day's News
JAMES H. WILKERSON James H. Wllkerson, who shared the limelight with Judge Landis when he imposed his famous $29,000,000 fine on
the Standard Oil company, succeeds to
the federal bench in Chicago vacated by Landis. Wilkerson prosecuted the Standard Oil case in which Landis imposed his famous fine. He was named to the bench by President Harding to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Landis to become the su-
."V?" preme atuuer ui
. Mh . ...
j. t- wo. tf6sc DaseDaii. Wilkerson, a former federal district attorney for the Chicago district, is a member of the Brundage-Deneen-Crowe faction of Illinois Republicans. His appointment was made over the objections, of the Small-Thompson Republicans. He was the chief special prosecutor in the trial of Governor Len Small recently for the alleged misuse of state funds. The trial resulted in Small's acquittal. The new judge has held a number of public offices. He was Cook county state's attorney, member of the Illinois legislature, and assistant to Attorney General Brundage of Illinois. Wilkerson was born at Savannah, Mo., Dec. 11. 1869, was graduated from DePauw university and has practiced law in Chicago since that time.
4 A
town anywhere like Marion, and maybe that is the exact Incontrovertible truth. He probably could get a lot of outsiders to agree with him.
Then Warren ate a couple of cherry
pies made by his step-mother, which was in itself an examDln of cnnfiiieiif..
and trnt In fVirt 1 rl T, n -, .
i n mo un iiuiub luiKa mat has seldom been paralleled: borrowed
a cnew or tobacco from the old fore
man or his print shop, and then what did he do? You get one guess. One Is enough. The gentleman in the brown derby the husbandmen are bringing corn and grabbed the train and beat it back to Washington. Brooklyn beggar was searched and found to have $2,000 in his clothes. He had enough to live In a good hotel for a whole week.
M
usinas tor
for the E
After Dinner Stories The "absolutely reliable" bootlegger had been taken with the flu and sent for his physician. "Doc," he said, "slip me a prescription." "Why. I understand rnn ti. i4
of stuff, Dan," protested the physi-
"Yes, but T sell that." said the patient. "I don't drink it." "I've Just heard of a new charm to tell whether anyone loves you; and if so. who It is," whispered Elsie. "What is it?" queried Sophie, absently fingering a new diamond ring "Well, you take four or five chestnuts, name them each after some man you know, and then put them on the stove, and the first one that pops is the one that loves you." "H'm!" said Sophie. "I know a better way than that." "Do you?" "Yes, indeed. By my plan you take
: VUHAT To DOi , WHAT ToT)p!
LOOKS tvj CLOSET.
HAS, INSPIRATION!. "
n r
spenders!" . 2oOX3 OLD S'PENDERS
Tries TGrJiNJG em (;P BUT, HErvy SHOVAJS
LA I ALA.
GOOD OLD S PENt)EW.
3
A Free Booklet On Bread Making
fAfter Dinner Trick
Almost every cook can prepare I white bread, but do you know how to ' make raisin bread, nut bread, potato !
bread, rice bread or corn meal bread? All of these are delicious and nutritious foods and lend a variety to the diet.
Directions for makinsr nracticallv
every kind of bread and nfttrv r
Kivn m a iree DOOKiet issued by thei
uepanmeni or Agriculture which con
tains 93 tested recipes.
This is a free Government publication and our Information Riiroan uriii
secure a copy for any of our readers who fills out and mails the coupon below, enclosing two cents in stamps for return postage. Be sure to write
your name ana aaaress clearly on the lines of the coupon. (Do not end th coupon to Th Pa5. Udium. Mall it direct to Washington, D. C) ... Washington, D. C. ; ' Frederic J. Haskin. Director, : I The Richmond Palladium : I Information Bureau, : I I enclose herewith two cents i j in stamps for return postage on I a free copy of the Baking Book- : let. :
J Name Street
: City , : State
254
No. 254 The Three Balls Three wooden beads or balls with holes drilled through them are threaded on two cords. The ends of the cord are held by spectators. The performer covers the balls with a handkerchief and immediately removes thein from the cords. The secret lies in the fact that toe strings do not pass through the balls. Lach string is doubled back, as shown In the explanatory diagram, but as both loops meet in the center of the middle bail, it appears as though the cords passed through. Two spectators v actl givta two opposite ends. All that the performer has to do is to pull the balls off the string and tell the spectators to pull tight on the cords and the tnck is done. Copvrioht. list, by PvbHo Ledger Compamm
Rippling Rhymes By Walt Mason
one particular man, place him on the
sofa in the parlor, sit close to him with the light a little low and look into his eyes. And then, if he doesn't pop, you'll know it's time to change the man on the sofa."
"That Monday feeling," which most office workers suffer from, is now eaid to be due to office windows being closed over Sunday, thus making the air stale.
BARDS AND FARMERS To the bard, serenely singing, I remarked, "You're loafing there, while
sloshes tinhorn music from his lyre.
turnips to the fair. Oh. the farmers raise their squashes, build the barn and crib and byre, while the poet only And the farmers feed the masses, and And the farmers feed the masses, and
Cuticura Soap Imparts The Velvet Touch
"-ii.umii.inm zoc.everTwnere. r oraazntMet ddrw: CaUcartUtarttwHi.Iyt.X. IUldem,lLu
Harry B. Smith has held the office cf adjutant' general of Indiana since Jan. 9, 1917. -
Lessons in Correct English ; DON'T SAY: - The helmets GLEAMED in the sun. A light GLITTERED in the. shed. ; The moonlight GLIMMERED on the lake. Her GLIMMERING jewels attracted attention. : SAY: ; The helmets GLITTERED in the iun. ; A light GLIMMERED in the shed. ; The moonlight GLEAMED on the lake. Her GLITTERING jewels attracted attention.
BUY COAL NOW We have the right coal at the right price. Jellico & Pocahontas Lump. ANDERSON & SONS N. W. 3rd & Chestnut Phone 3121
e evening
Having tried everything else, perhaps Europe in the near future will decide to go to work. Perhaps it would have been a good thing for the outside world if all the bootleg whisky had been made in prison.
THE OLD HOME STUFF The other day Wsrren went back to dear old Marion. Ohio, and he had a heart-to-heart talk with the home folks about how it is to be president, and he sort of knocked the presidential game just a little. He talked for about an hour and told how glad he would be to be back sitting on the front porch in his stocking feet in the
evening witn no cares of state and nobody to worry about except Laddia Boy. It was a good old home talk, darn good. Then he said there wasn't any
IliitiiiMtmHiiiiHiiiuHriMiMiitttHiiMiunHntHiMiiiitiuiiiitiitniimiiiminiMtiitt.. (Men's Gabardine and Silk I j Mohair Suits 1 530 , values $12.50 to $19.50 I I WHEN STORE, 712 Main I IliwiiimiHiHuiiiHiinMiiMnii.iiMimiiHiwnHiHiiiiimMiiitiiiiimiiuiiiiiiiMiiiiMi
umuuumtitwuiiHiniimiuiiiiiniuiitiiunmtHiiiniiniiimiittiiiuimiuiiiniaiL I ASK FOR i
f Abel's Velvet Ice Cream ! IT'S DIFFERENT I Retail Phone 1901 Wholesale Phone 1439 1 jranmimiitinninimMiiMniMiniimmiTOmiiiniuiiiminiuiiiniinHuimrmirn
Herbs Used in Medicines
A Manchester, England, paper urges the renewed cultivation of old-fashioned medicinal herbs in England gardens In the United States they have also gone out of fashion as a feature of the small garden, although they are imported In large quantities from Turkey India. and China, where they are grown purely for commercial Durooses at m-X ITS Cinal vaU,is rogniled bv Efn!S 1Kadins Physicians. Tons of Med -L?hs aT.e USPd annuallv in the egPetabVe0nroLyia E" PinkhanTs ful m2dlAn omPl,nd- a most successful medicine for woman's ills. It contarns no narcotics or harmful "ruA ahourdmrvniatmined T,ith s"ch llmnu snouiq try it. Advertisement. yno..iHim.ninmH.1H1n .nimnmmiuiBMinmTi
I ALiLi SUMMER CLOTHING I at Greatly Reduced Prices 1 (UNION STORE, 830 Main I
UiliKllliniiniiiiiiiiiillniniliiiiiilliuiuiinniiiimitiHiirK'iiiiiinuuiiiiiiniHjnii x
Just Arrived Another shipment I of Ladies' Porch Aprons I $1.98 and $2.98RAPP'S CUT PRICE CO. I
529 Main St. HiiiitiiuiiiiiiiiitnitiiiMiiiitHiiiiiiiittiiiiuiitniiiiiiiittiiiintiimiiutiuitiiiiiiiiuiiu
Buy a FORD and Spend the
Difference WEBB-COLEMAN CO. Opp. Postoffico Phones 1616-1694
HOME DRESSED MEATS We Deliver Nungesser Meat Market 337 South 12th Phone 2350
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DR. J. F. WILSON DENTIST Formerly came here on Thursdays from Indianapolis. Office Over Starr Piano Store
QUALITY FOOTWEAR for Men, Women and Children
SNOB
STORE
0 UJfj
FOOTWEAR "Better for Less" FIVEL'S SHOE STORE 633 Main
FOR
CONSTIPATION BILIOUSNESS Headache INDIGESTION Stomach Trouble -SOLD EVERYWHERE.
Order From Your Grocer Today
. Creamery Butter
Richmond Produce Co, Dlst.
HOtt-
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Are your heels too high? Ask for i
Grey Wood Baby Louis Heels. DUSTY SHOE REBUILDERS 1 11 N. 9th 504 N. 8th 300 S. 6th niiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiriiiiiHiinniinHiiHiiiriiiiiiiiimimiiniiiiHiiiiil
RICHMOND GASOLINE More Miles per Gallon Richmond Oil Co. 6th St. and Ft. Wayne Ave. For More Pep, Use
TAYLOR & THOMPSON COAL CO. KLEAN COAL Phone 1042
The Bank for ALL the People 2nd National Bank
You'll Like Trading at
they make the world go round, but the poet, as he passes, merely deals in empty sound." Said the bard. "The busy granger, as he toils from day to day, as he fills the yawning manger with the home grown brands of hay, quotes the message of the singers, quotes the poets' cheer-up dope, thinking that the bards are dingers, giving courage, pep and hope. 'Let us then be up and doing,' quotes the farmer, as he plows; 'still achieving, still pursuing,' feeding hogs and milking cows. And the poets' words inspire him as he
Mother Saved Her Baby From Skin Suffering by use of Sykes Comfort Powder Ashaway, R. I. "With a large family of children and 17 grand
children I have had a wide experience
and I want to tell
.mothers that I
'have never found any powder that would keep a child's skin so free
from chafing, itching, scalding, rashes and all irritations and soreness as Sykes Comfort Powder. There is nothing like it to heal the skin-" Mrs. Charles A. Brown, Ashaway, I The reason Sykes Comfort Powder is so successful in such cases is because it contains six healing, antiseptic ingredients not found in ordinary talcums. For twenty years ithas been used and endorsed by physicians and mothers, and nurses call it"A Healing Wonder."
labors all day long, and I fear you'd only tire him if you robbed him of his song. Oh, we work in divers manners, as the bright days come and go; some are' born to carry banners, some are born to shovel snow; and no man should view his neighbors with a sneering sort of mirth, saying, "Useless are your labors why not tumble off the earth?"
SPECIAL to WOMEN The most Economical, Cleansing,
neaung Antiseptic ia
A pure white, harmless powder to b dissolved in water as needed. There is nothing like it for treating inflammation.
ulceration, pelvic or nasal catarrh, sore throat, inflamed eyes or to whiten the teeth. Men say "it is worth its weight in gold to purify the breath after emokins." At Dmrrrnsti
. v. oo
The Comfort Powder Co., Boston. Mass.
1 A mild, vegetable lasmtiva to I ill relievo Constipation and Bili- ; 1 outness and keep the digestive) ami : 1 eli mi nativefu actions normal. V I ),. jtJ!sed for over Chips ofTffieWBloelf TW pE JUNIORS ALn?L v I m l LafrV On-third ths rsgu- 1 I osjflj aV4 dose. Mads of f W $w same Ingredients, f I s -aav lnen candy coated. 3 1 Por children and adults. f
TMstlethwan.es Drug Stores
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Motor Cars
Brower Auto Sales Co. f . Phone 6019 I 21-23 South 7th Street I -iniiHiiuniiiiiiiMiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiitiioniiMiiaiiiiiiiiiiHmiiiiiiiiiHtMmmii,i
SI
tucco
offers an attractive, lasting and economical surface for your home. Let us figure with you. Klehfoth-Niewoehner Co. Phone 2194 North 2nd and A "If Service and Quality Count, Try Us."
iwiuiiminiiiiiiii:i,iiiiiiiiiniiimiiMiiniiMiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiniraim I Ever Try TRACY'S COFFEE 1 It Satisfies l TiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitmiiiiitiiiiniiHiiiBiiiiminnTiHiiiiniiiHnnHniwiiiiiiiMnmiiiM
You'll Enjoy Zwissler's POTATO BREAD
with . its distinctive nut flavor' Sold by All Groceries
ZWISSLER'S
Bakery Phone '1654
Restaurant Phone 1658
i - r
RED
LETTER B&DLSm
COUPON Richmond Palladium 2 COUPONS $j Qg SECURES t Present to this paper three coupons lflra tbia on together with price. MAIL ORDERS Add pastas aa foDowsi Up to ISO miles . .07 Up to 600 raOaa JS Up to 100 miles . .10 Up to 1000 miles . .20 fee tnstei oMsaes ask postBsatat sua kt 3 lbs. DoviT-kf inn 8P1"1'T bound to genuine xcacnpcion Un,p OYerlapping Covers, red edges, round corners, gold lettered back, family record and many useful helps. EVERY WORD JESUS SPOKE PRINTED IN RED
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1
QQ7 AfALY
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