Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 181, 1 August 1922 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, AUG. 1, 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 Office at Richmond, Indiana, aa - Second-Class Mail Matter. MEMKR OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication, of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
The Cure of Tuberculosis in Indiana "Get well in Indiana," is the message which Dr. Eric A. Crull, president of the Indiana Anti-
Tuberculosis league and president of the Irene Byron Tuberculosis hospital of Fort Wayne, brought back after a six weeks' post-graduate course in tuberculosis work at Saranac, N. Y.. .where is situated one of the important sanatoriums of the country. His opinion is worthy of careful consideration by the citizens and officials of Wayne county, for he has spent 25 years in tubercular work and was sponsor of the movement which culminated in the Allen county tuberculosis hospital. "More than ever," he caid, "am I convinced that the place for Indiana people to get cured of tuberculosis is in Indiana. Saranac has nothing in climate that Indiana hasn't. Indeed, Indiana has much in climate advantages that Saranac hasn't. ' x "Saranac has nothing in equipment and method of treatment that Indiana hasn't, for there isn't a piece of equipment and phase of treatment in practice at Saranac that is not in use at our own Irene Byron sanatorium. "The old theory that climate is the preeminent consideration in combating tuberculosis has been proved untenable, for it is now generally conceded that one can be cured of tuberculosis as easily in" Indiana as in Denver or Asheville or Saranac. Indeed, Indiana has a better climate for tuberculosis than Saranac or most other places in the country." In an interview in a Fort Wayne newspaper,
Dr. Crull repeatedly stressed the fallacy of leav
ing -Indiana for eastern or western sanitoriums.
The climatic conditions in this state are equal to
those found elsewhere, he asserts. He cited 18 days of rain out of the first 21 spent at Saranac, j the low winter temperature, and the presence of heavy fogs as some of the deterrents of Saranac, and said that this kind of .weather is unknown in Indiana. He is quoted as saying: "Dr. Crull's extensive study and observation have firmly convinced him that the matter of climate does not enter into the cure of tuberculosis, and that with few exceptions tuberculosis can be just as successfully combated in one locality of the United States as in another.
"Particularly for the benefit of people of limited means, Dr. Crull emphasizes the fallacy of journeying away in the hope of gaining a cure from tuberculosis. He points out that many people who can ill afford the big expense of a health pilgrimage to a distant sanatorium would have a better chance for speedy recovery from the malady at the local institution and a tremendously lesser expense."
These observations of an eminent authority
on tuberculosis should receive the careful consideration of the county commissioners, with whom rests the responsibility primarily for the development of a tuberculosis hospital here or the rejection of the gift which Mr., and Mrs. David Esteb made in 1917. Climatic conditions in Indiana are favorable
to the cure of the disease, and what is of still
more vital importance, in the opinion of Dr. Crull, local hospitals enable the man of limited means to receive attention and care which he cannot afford to buy elsewhere. The heavy cost of travel and of maintenance usually exhaust the financial resources of a patient. If he had a hospital close at hand, he would be able to provide himself with the care and attention which is essentially necessary in staying the ravages of the disease and building up the constitution to a normal status. A county hospital here would answer these purposes. It would be a boon to the men and women who are afflicted with the disease and are financially unable to pay traveling expenses
to a western sanatorium and the cost of their treatment in the institution.
How To Start the Day Wrong
rOW MARlGAPEtM TrlAlEc.Te,TlRSTORe " GT RADr! I COME NICE. ArHD COOV- I fAKCS M6 Rec LK WlTH an APPETITE LIKE This morning J . A coopla horsbs! aptsr That y fgEg3J ' fy&h FE-E-e YowJ Thunder J tatma ff That ThUODer. 1 j STonr. o lOa TYA- 4,A iliv SToRni ujas. v'3&J I5NT ITf s-JMftL&ffl UJORTV A ZX ' SImG To HAVE ("SOM BHRR.es V , JUST jjATORALiy UPSST -i.-r Vc! ;to;5t The Cream Aoec-s f Dor eRe fr , , BSPAKFAS t cD aB IS SOUR. OY A WORK, mo cmT-&V.Ty-"il ' ACCOUNT Jsiq COFFEE- ( AMD I COMC OF" C3coT M3L ' -r THAr H9 BREAKFAST.') r, y7)JfjHw I thunder l y and youain'tgota AjfVll J s , -I H-3 RKiX-T- TO TALK LIKE J.-" HI V s y & Tha-t in Thf -pResekjca
C (fcba Crri Hlt ll YTrifaM. - -.-'--s--
After Dinner Tricks'
57
Answers to Questions (Any reader can pet the answer to rv question bv writing The Palladium Information Bureau. Frederick J HaskIn. director. Washington. D. C. This offer applies strictly to information. The bureau .does not fdve advice, on lea!, medical and financial matters. It does not attempt to settie domestic troubles, por to undertake exhaustive research on any subiec.t. Write your question plainly and briefly. Give full name an.1 address and enclose two cents in stamps for return postage. All replies are sent direct to the Inquirer. Q. Why haven't railroad rates been reduced to offset tha decrease in wages of railway workers? A. N. Y. A. Under the law, wages of railway workers are not fixed on the basis ot the railroads' rates or revenues and the board which deals with wages is entirely separate from the Interstate Commerce Commission which fixes rates. As a matter of fact, however, there have been rate reductions, effective July 1. last, which amount to
some $400,000,000 annually, according:
to the estimates of experts. Q. In playing golf can the ball be dropped out of casual water anywhers on the course with penalty? C. J. PA. A ball may be lifted from casua" water through the fairway or on the green without penalty, but casual water in a bunker becomes a water hazard and must be played as such, with the loss of one stroke for lifting or dropping out Q. Should canned tongue be coolea before using? E. A. A. The Grocer's Encyclopedia says
that dealers should never sell a can of tongue, or of any meat or fish during! warm weather without reminding the buyer that it should be cooled thor- j cughly before opening. . j Q. When was the word sweetheart , coined? E. B. P. j A. The term sweetheart was criginallv written in the form of two vords.
It is found in literature as early as 1290-. though there is no record showing by whom it was first used. Q. When were the first banks established?.!. A. W. A. Activities similar to banking ot the present day were known to the ancients. In Athens and Rome, several hundred years before Christ, there were men who would now be
called bankers. The rise of moderti j banking really dates from the estal-j
Venice, 15S7. Q. Where was cotton first raised? J. W. F. A. The country in which cotton was first used or produced has not been definitely determined. It was known in India before the conquest of that country by Alexander, was used by the early Greeks and Romans, and Columbus found it in use by tee natives of the New World.
TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can," "Take It." "Up" THESE' These are the things out of which bubble the Issues of life love, happiness, beauty, art, music, literature, service success. A meadow with larks flitting here and there, and the smell of the hay fresh from the cutter's knives. A quiet nook beneath some great tree with a rippling stream singing its song, to some unpretentious fisherman, or a child perhaps who has walked away from the noise of things, here to rest or play. A spring, cool, clean and so happy, trinkling throughout all weathers with its gift of waters to the birds, animals, and tired passersby. , A tree glorified by October into blues, browns and golds, under pome western sky at sunset. A little bird on a branch, vibrating its tiny throat in song. A boy, barefoot and even dirty faced whistling his way to the village shop "fer eggs." A winding road through some thick woods, where you can walk over the dead leaves of many a yesteryear and feel the crackle of -fallen sticks under your feet and the msllow air of the shade cooling your very heart as the sun pours its hot rays upon the leaves far above you during some August day. A flower alone on some mountain side, far from the possibility of human feet, "born to blush unseen," sending its beauty in fragrance to melt into the distant air and hum of the city. A fireplace on a cold night with contented toes about its fender. A mother with a baby in her arms glad that she was born. A child making mud pies, or dressing up Dolly. A worker with pick or shovel, in the mine or in the field, with honest sweat pouring down his cheeks, thinking of the "brood" he is to meet at sun-fall. A cot at night-time, "while God, who never sleeps or wearies, is watching overhead."
Remedy Sought for Labor Strife By FREDERIC 4. HASKIN
Who's Who in the Day's News
After Dinner Stories A teacher in one of the primary grades of the public school had noticed a striking platonic friendship that existed between Tommy and little Joan, two of her pupils. Tommy was a bright enough youngster, but he wasn't disposed to follow his studies with much energy, and his teacher said that unless he stirred himself before the end of the year he wouldn't be moved up to a new class. "You must study harder." she told him, "or you won't pass. How would you like to stay back in this class another year and have little Joan go ahead of you?" "Oh," said Tommy, "1 guess there'll be other little Joans."
ENVER PASHA A new war lord is rising in the near east to further complicate a political situation that alreday is decidedly pre
carious. He is Enver Pasha, former j
Turkish minister of j war. j According to re-' ports, Enver will ! become emir of a' strong Mohamme-'
dan state which he is buildic up from the former terri
tory of the Soviets across the Ural
mountains in i urisestan. The soviet3 originally aided Enver to establish his power, but now that he seems as
sured of his sue-
No. 237 A Feat of Strength imefhdraWer f a match is set Nation 38 6h0Wn in the box and the cover with a downward blow of the edge of the hand! a Tafk which seems ndlcnlouely simple. w looks The box and cover, instead of breaking, have a tendency to flr apart and jump in the air. In fact it is well to clear away all .pecuton when the attempt is about to be made vith a little practice the performer can generally do the trick after The spectators have failed. Do not strike llS"dTr to hrd, but Lit them squarely. The spectators, in their funle efforts, will weaken 'the wood. 80 that a sharp, clean blow by the performer will accomSish the feat. The box. t tae beginning shou:d be in firstclass condition. Copvrtoht. iiSt, bj Public Ledger Company
WASHINGTON, Aug. 1. There axe signs that the average citizen of the United States has grown more than a bit weary of the continual conflict between capital and labor and wants something done about It. Like the fictional colonel from the far West, the average citizen "can be pushed just so far" and it would seem that his limit has been reached. Here are a few of the high spots In industrial developments of the last fiye or six months that are arousing him to the necessity for action: A coal strike that jeapordizes the interests and welfare of every man, woman and child in the -country; a railroad strike that threatens to tie up or cripple the transportation industry that is as vital to the nation as the circulatory system is to the human body; in New England, almost total paralysis of the textile industry; in West Virginia, scores of men have
been on trial or under indictment for
treason and murder as a result of the civil war that was the fruition of a conflict between union miners and anti-union operators a conflict no
nearer settlement now than It was when it w-as begun; in Chicago, hundreds of union officials and other labor leaders have been arrested for inciting or complicity in riotous and anarchistic demonstrations growing out of a controversy in the building
(trades; in various states and Federal j circuits the courts are cluttered up with injunction suits and actions for iHamsws ernn-in? niit nf labor Contro-
OSTENTATION i versies of one kind or another; in I load my aunts with precious stones, ; Washington, the Supreme Court has I hang rich furs upon their bones, andeaM fnr a S(5-or,ri tim that a law of
Rippling Rhymes By Walt Mason
M6f? rtQSH
cess he has defied them
The Bolsheviks expected Enver to unite the Mohammedans of the region against the British in India. Instead he is now in open revolt against the Soviets. The new leader likewise Js hostile to Mustapha Kemal's Angora govern-
ineoi. He has warned both the government of Moscow and Angora to adopt a "hands off" policy toward the new state which he intends to build up from the Mohammedan provinces of China, Turkestan and the Caucasus. European statesmen, already troubled by the Angora government, have adopted a policy of watchful waiting toward the Turkestan dictator who to date has done nothing to arouse the antagonism of any but Kemal and the Soviets.
lost ner pet ana caaiea on ine pouce to find it. Th next day one of the force came with the dog very wet and dirty. The lady was overjoyed and asked a number of silly questions, one being: "Where did you find my darling?" "Why. ma'am," said the officer, "a fellow had him on a pole and was washing windows with him!"
Rouge, used to a certain limit to add to a girl'6 appearance, meets with the approval of one prominent New . york clergyman.
Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Yeara Ago Today
Musings for the Evening LAMENT OF A PORTLY GUY I'm caught in the numerous turnstyles, Imprisonment is complete. I use a shoehorn to get into The average theatre seat. From telephone booths they must pry me, The bathtubs all fit me too tight. The bathing house down at the sea
shore ; Puts me in a terrible plight I can't turn around when once in it. The bathing suits are much too small. I'm afraid they will bust any minute Disgracing me once and for all. The ready-made clothing prolucers ! Think men are alll built like bean poles. The stylish cuts are for the thin guys.With bags, fat men torture their souls. The train berths are built for the sylphlike. The bus seats are narrow and slim. Oh. what of the passenger portly, Does nobody ere think of him? 'Tis well for the Lloyds and the Chaplains Who strip at a hundred and ten, But when you are two hundred and thirty, Say, what are you going to do then? The whole -world was built for the skinnys.
When tense summer heat is in style, I'm panting and waiting for winter, And then, scrawny gents, I will smile, Trotzky says he has been misjudged but he hasn't been judged at all yet. Japanese Prince Regent's wedding will cost the government $2,500,000. It costs a lot of money to finance a new war. The 20-cent eggs which started in our direction early in April have not yet arrived.
send them through the town; "The fact that I am heeled," I say, "with coin enough to load a dray, must have a wide renown. I represent the newly rich, and having clambered from the ditch up to a high estate, I want the whole blamed world to know that I
said for a second time that a law of
the Congress aimed at the evil of child labor is unconstitutional and the President and his advisers have fully twothirds of their time taken up with var
ious phases of the problem of how to
restore industrial peace; and, througn-
i"ndTri together' ere are heard CaUShe3 ana crate. aij nouse is like a4. ,ri:,t -a wt nicms nm nnnc
a in C U . rJ ..u " mutterings and sinister threats
eled tools I swat the flies and all is done to advertise the fact that I've a wad. My socks are brought from faroff France, and London tailors make my pance, my neckties come from Rome; and yet, with splendor all around, I heave a sort of doleful sound, as I sit in my home. For all my efforts don't impress my mossback neighbors, I confess, and hence my weary sigh; those neighbors watch my trail of smoke and seem to size me as a joke, and smile when I go by. Old guns who sit in shabby nooks and paw the leaves of ancient books look on me with disdain, and residents whose only pride is that their dads for freedom died, observe me with a pain. With such a bank account as mine, with all around me sleek and fine, my life should be a song; I am the man who cuts the ice, I am the one who has the price, and yet I don't belong.
Lessons in Correct English Don't Say: If I WAS you, I would leave today. If the door WERE broken, why didn't you mention it? If I WAS in the wrong, I should ask your pardon. ,LtiSiJ Say: If I WERE you, I would leave today. If the jjoor WAS broken, why didn't you mention it? If I WERE in the wrong, I should ask your pardon.
John A. Lapp, librarian of the Legislative Reference department of the!
Indiana btate Library, lectured before the Library school at Earlham college on the municipal reference work of a small public library. Mr. Lapp urged efficient and practical use correctly internretPd fnr n
practical library, and pointed out the!
many leatures or a good library.
LUMBER POSTS ROOFING BUILDING MATERIALS of All Kinds Right Prices Prompt Delivery MATHER BROS. Company
Develop the Habit of Thrift Open a Savings Account First National Bank Southwest Corner Ninth and Main
Evidently there is something fun
damentally wrong in the relations between capital and labor. Just what that something is may be debatable, but there is a substantial unanimity of
opinion to tne enect mat ine oniy remedy lies in the assertion of governmental authority in the public interest. This means regulation, which will be resisted both by labor leaders and by most representatives of capital in the employing relation. Anti-Strike Law Proposed There are those who urge that the
initial step in this direction should be an anti-strike law one "with teeth in it." The objection to such law is that it cannot be enforced. As long as labor is free, men cannot be compelled to work against their will. If they are determined, jail holds no terrors for them. If they are sufficient in numbers there would not be enough jails in the country to hold them and an army of World War size would be required to round them up and herd them in stockades or detention camps. An anti-strike law, to be effective, must be enforceable in the improbable but possible situation where all the
workers In every community and in all industries had gone on strike. In any event, what kind of service is to be expected from men compelled to work against their will, if there could be such compulsion? Labor to be efficient and productive must be free of coercion in any form, and the wise employer recognizes this and would not have workers in his plant who were not there of their own volition. To the suggestion that the antistrike law be made applicable only to
public utilities and basic industries and to employees in the public service the reply is made that such legislation would be class legislation of an especially objectionable kind. Inevitably it would tend to create either a favored class or an oppressed class of workers, and would drive workers either toward or away from such employments. Executives who grow grey over the problem of labor tu over and workers who are always looking for a "better job" will get the force of this objection. But if strikes and lockouts are not to be made unlawful can they be made
unnecessary and undesirable? Industrial experts answer this question in the affirmative. They say it is only essential to create conditions undsr which both factors in the industrial equation are assured of a square deal and a fair deal, and the adjustment
which they cannot settle by and for
themselves.
These experts advocate the estab
lishment of an industrial code which defines the fundamental principles governing all relations In all industry.
Every community, every industry, and
every plant, presents problems in em
ployment that are peculiar to itself, but there are certain phases of the
relations between employer and em
ployed that are universal and basic and with respect to which there should be rules or principles that are basic
and universally accepted and applied
Workers either should or should not have the right to organize in trade-
unions, the right of collective bargain
ing, the right to a living wage, and the right to an eight-hour day or some
restriction upon the hours of labor
Women in industry should or should
J not have the right to the same pay as
men for the same or equivalent service. Employment of children under
a certain age in mines and miUs should not be permitted. The public should or should not be protected
against interruptions in industry grow
ing out of controversies between cap
ital and labor. Organic Law of Industry
Whatever is ethically, socially and
economically just and wise with re
spect to each of these questions
should be clearly defined and promul
gated as the organic law of industrial
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relations, and thi3 organic law or code should be accepted and enforced as the basic of all employment and the adjustment of all differences between capital and labor. If unions are useful and lawful, say the experts, then that fact should be established and universally recognized. There should be no detail or abridgement of that right. A situation such as has prevailed in West Virginia, for example, is regarded aa preposterous. There in certain coal fields the miners have had absolute freedom to join their union, while in. other fields they are not only denied employment if they are union members but they dare not hold meetings to consider the organization of a local or even discuss the union question, one with another. Surely whatever rights in this respect are enjoyed by one of these groups of miners should not be denied the other. Furthermore, the fact that dissension over this question led to civil war in West Vir
ginia is cited as proof that it would be for the best interest of everybody
concerned to have this question of the
right to organize settled, one way or the other, beyond all question and for
all time to come. Similarly the case may be made for all the fundamentals in industrial relations. -
Without such an industrial code, it is pointed out, arbitrations of labor disputes- become mere tradition affairs In which the better trader triumphs. It is all very well to say
that arbitration means a settlement on the basis' of what Is sound anl
just, but what is the rule or yardstick with which to measure what Is sound and just? Different arbitrators will have different ideas, if the determination is solely a matter of opinion. Confidence in courts is not based upon confidence in the Integrity and wisdom of the judges but rather upon the fact that the judges are governed by an organic law, by precedents and by a procedure that is universal in its application. Such in substance is the case that is being made for the establishment of an industrial code in these trying days of almost constant strife between capital and labor. President Hardin? himself has advocated such a code and there are evidences of a growing popular belief that strikes and lockouts can be made unnecessary and undesirable when both labor and capital: have the assurance that their differ-: ences will be adjusted by a tribunal1 in which they have confidence, on thai basis of certain rules or principles that they know to be fair and thati are applicable to all workers and to all employers.
A SEASON OF TORTIRE FOR SOME Hay fever carries untold misery to thousands. Foley's Honey and Tar soothes that Taw rasping- feeling- in th throat, relieves hoarseness and wheezinp. makes breathing1 easier, permits refreshing slumber. Mrs. O. Stapf, 735 Clinton Ave. Plainfi-ld X. J. says: "Foley's Honey and Tar is a med!-lnv that bears recommending. I keep It in the house constantly." Contains no opiates. Refuse substitutes. A. G. Luken Drug: Co., 626-628 Main St. Advertisement.
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