Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 222, 18 September 1922 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE; RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, 1ND., MONDAY, SEPT. 18, 1922.

THI$ RICHMOND PALLADIUM

AND SUN-TELEGRAM

(Published Every Evening Except Sunday by Palladium Printing Co. jPaTIadlu t Bunding, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, aa Second-Class Mail Matter.

. MEMBER OP" TOR ASSOCIATED PUESS i . The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the us I xor republication of all newa dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local ' n.ewB Published herein. All rights of republication of speI cial dispatches herein are also reserved.

European Entanglements

We may have an opportunity very soon to

test the wisdom of not being a member of the i league of nations. Great Britain, France and : Italy are alarmed over the attempt of Mustapha

Kemal Pasha to move his forces against Constan

tinople. The British cabinet has instructed the Brit

iish fleet not to let Turkish troops cross from

Asia Minor to the European shore.. Co-operat-

,ing with France, Great Britain has established

neutral zones.

If the United States had accepted the Armenian mandate and become affiliated with the

league, our own country would now be wonderling how soon American troops would have to be ;Bent to European trouble zones,, in conformity

'with a decision of the league.

Happily for us, we are not directly concerned with the issues that are giving worry to the

chancellories of the European powers today.

The present war between Greece and Turkey

! recalls the alignment of nations at the time the

treaty of Versailles was in the making. Great i Britain and Greece were feared by France and

Italy, with respect to curtailing Turkish power. Both parties feared the other would reap the ! benefit of the settlement finally agreed upon. '. Today it seems as if all of them will have to pay jthe price for the selfishness in the final agreement that was made. (

The Free Fair 1 The free flair last week demonstrated the

eagerness of i3ie people of Wayne county to at

tend an agricialtural display. No one cau escape this conclusicai, for the thousands who poured

into Glen MiDer park every afternoon and evening came because of their own desire for recreation and amusement. There was no other incentive. Thousartds-of people, as was demonstrated in the Fourth of July demonstration and the free fair last week, are willing to amuse themselves if the opportunity is given. All that i3 required to make an enjoyable holiday for thousands is to provide the opportunity. The public will amuse itself. This sentiment has been crystallized into a movement for a permanent .fair organization, which will provide ample space for agricultural

and live stock displays, and at the same time give to the public an opportunity for wholesome

amusement and recreation One reason for the success of the fair un

doubtedly can be- found in the excellent features that were obtained. The committee did right in

bringing the very best that could be obtained,

and the public reciprocated by pouring into the

park by the thousands.

The display of agricultural wealth was a dis

tinct surprise to many who consider themselves

pretty well informed on farming affairs. They were astounded to learn that tne county has live

stock and horses of the quality shown at the fair, Their praise of the exhibition was unstinted.

No complaints of any kind were heard. Every

one was pleased with the initiative and enter

prise shown to arrange an exhibit in quick time,

on a scale so great, and with such excellent re suits.

'Answers ,to Questions fAnv reader ran eet the answer to

jnny question by writing The Palladium

Jnrormation Bureau, Krederjcic J. nasnIn, director, Washington. D. C. This offer applies strictly to Information. The bureau does not irlve advice on lesal, medical and financial matters. It does not attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to undertake exhaustive rese.-.reh on any subject. 'Write your nuestion plainly and briefly. Give full name and address and enclose two cents in stamps fnr return postage. All replies are sent direct to the Inquirer.

Q. What is thrown pottery? F. O. B. A. Thrown pottery is shaped on a rapidly revolving disk. The prepar- ; ation of the clay 13 a scientific pro- ' cess. The Ingredients ball clay, flint ; powder, feldspar and kaolin are carefully selected and weighed in certain proportions so that they will fuse properly and become sufficiently hard when shaped and fired. The mixture is left to stand until thoroughly soaked - and then is lawned through fine linen and dumped into a plaster box which absorbs the water and leaves the clay in condition to be beaten. All the air

bubbles must be driven out of the ball of clay before it is placed on the throwing wheel. Workers in pottery delight in the touch of the plastic clay as it spins upon the disk. The thumbs make the inside of the object while the extended fingers shape the walls. After the work of art is properly shaped it is put into a plaster box to become "leather hard" and is then finished or turned. The plain objects finally are ornamented and placed in ' the fire oven, and a still later baking process puts on the desired glaze. Q. What kind of parrot learns to . talk most readily? T. T. A. The biographical survey says . that the grey parrot of Western Africa is best adapted to training as a talker. Q. How many people have savings a counts? E. P. B. A. There some 11,500,000 depositors in savings banks with a total savings ; account of $6,600,000,000. This is exclusive of savings departments in other banks. Such accounts would probably raise the totals to 12,000,000 depositors and $7,000,000,000. Q. Did Robert Ingersoll ever recant?. E. T.

A. Robert Ingersoll. so far as we

can ascertain, did not change his views

on the mortality of the soul before

his death. He believed that death end

ed the spiritual, as well as the physical

life of man.

Q. Can matting and window shades

bo given a coat of paint? R. J. S.

A. Both matting and window shades can be painted to renew them. .The secret of success in this work is to apply two or three very thin coats of paint rather than a single heavy coat.

TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can," "Take If "Up" KEEP MULTIPLYING YOUR WANTS 2 Through selfish satisfaction are men lowered into the evils of ennui. The less we want and the more easily are we satisfied, the lower in the scale of progress are we placed. Only through much dissatisfaction and a multiplying of our wants are we spurred to action and a useful existence. Better fail in a thousand attempts, and present to the world a scarred and vigorous frame, than weakly to try for but a single goal and attain it. There are those who sneer at the one who is always trying to change conditions to upset what looks like a contented existence. But this world needs its Wendell Phillipses, its John the Baptists, its Savonarolas, and its Luthers. . And you who feel deeply in your bones that you want many things, here's -a handclasp to you and may you attain many of them! If everybody kept multiplying their wants and at the same time kept multiplying their efforts to attain them it wouldn't be long before this old world would be baptised into a new birth of progress. The more you have to do, the more you will do. Keep multiplying your wants! Restless energy is far more valuable than energy nailed tightly in a box and relegated to the attic of your brain. The main thing is not to let your wants run over you. This will never happen if you keep bigger than any one of your wants--and if you keep every one of these wants of yours well fed. A friend of mine tells me that he has what John D. Rockefeller hasn't a whole multitude of wants! Let me say that he is poor, indeed, who has no wants.

When a Feller Needs a Friend

M JdPP?"' ' i"TTSfe fi X JUNGLE. CLUB WKS-J 1 " . -V MftRCH or CIVILIZATIONS ' S X L BROUGHT IT GUT. INTO TVtG COLD AMD ' - (C ? Pitiless GLftuer-or Pusuciv.Y. " , ' 4.L.H.

De-Inking Old Newspapers Government Tries to Find Method of Using Old Papers fo: Print Purposes.

Who's Who in the Day's News

LIEUT. JAMES H. DOOLITTLE The recent feat of Lieut. James IL Dooiittle of the Ninth Aero squadron United States army, in making a onestop flight across the United States in

21 hours and 19 minutes, was not his first bid for fame in aviation history now being written at rapid speed. Dooiittle attracted attnetion and drew the commendation of brother officers when he captained a team of live trick military flyers during the formation

flight of 212 planes

over San Diego on

Musings For The Evening THE WONDERS OF SCIENCE Nobody has ever yet invented a satisfactory brick steamboat. Brazil nuts grow on trees and are not carved out of mahogany, as many people have suspected. In England they have a new lighthouse that weighs 1,000 tons, which is the heaviest lighthouse on the coast. To remove the cover of a fruit jar (glass), bang it vigorously on the edge of the kitchen table, or use a hammer ' if necessary. , A talking box has been invented to attach to lawn mowers. It announces the owners name every time the

wheel3 make a revolution, and this is supposed to discourage lawn mower borrowers throughout the United States. A western genius is at work on a new telephone. It Is guaranteed that on his instrument a person may get the right number inside of forty-five minutes. Francis Jammes, French poet, has refused the Legion of Honor. Why give a poet a decoration? He can't Icat that. Mexico Is taking up the ice cream soda habit. But they won't be able i to start any revolutions on that stuff. If prohibition wins in Germany, there must be something to it, after . all. That is the acid test, we would eay. The first electric lights were put ; in buildings just forty years ago. We fhave one of those first ones over our typewriter.

Nov. 26. 1918. The flight was a tribute to allied fliers who lost their lives in the world war. Dooiittle and his four comrades, in separate planes, performed everv evolution used in battle while

the planes were going through maneuv

ers.

Dooiittle is rated as one of the most proficient fliers in the service. He is a modest chap, despite the fame he has won. When asked what his greatest daneer was during the flight he replied "Drowsiness." And those who expected a stirring account of frequent close calls with air pockets or mountain ranges were disappointed.

After Dinner Stories

Rastus, high private in the rear rank, was distinctly unlucky. For various petty misdemeanors he had been in the hoosegow for several weeks, and tomorrow his regiment went overseas. With some difficulty he prevailed upon his company officer to grant him a midnight pass for the last night. Armed with his pass, and arrayed in all his martial glory he approached the white sentry who guarded the camp gates. "Pass?" asked the sentry. "Yussuh, here 'tis, suh." "Countersign?" "Countersign! Don't know nuthin 'bout no countersign." "Well, j'ou can't leave camp without the countersign." Rastus thought it over and his grievances mounted high within him. The time had come for action. With a swift motion he produced a razor from his puttee and flourished it open under the sentry's nose: "Lissen, Mistuh Sentry, Ah don' want to staht no

trouble, but Ah got a mother in heav

By FREDERICK J. n.VSKIV WASHINGTON, Sept. 18. Savins old newspapers that they may be used again in the manufacture of newsprint may seem far removed from the problems of forest conservation, buz as a matter of fact, it is directly connected with the work in which the forest service of the United States department of agriculture is interested. This branch of the government's many activities has recently been conducting a series of experiments in deinking processes, and now announces that it has been perfected and is practicable. About 2,500 tons of old newspapers can be gathered daily in the larger cities, it is estimated, and turned into newsprint by this process. In terms of forest acreage this means roughly the saving of the cut each year on

about 275,000 acres. This acreage

carries a crop not produced in a .year, but a spruce forest requiring 100 years or longer to grow. That is regarded as an important saving, in view- of the fact that the daily consumption of newsprint in the United States is approximately 7,000 tons. In its modern development, the pro-

Rippling Rhymes By Walt Mason

THE QUACK With us he deftly mingles, and asks to save our lives; he has his cures for shingles, for bunions and the hives. From evils that attack us he'll promptly set us free; he'll stop the pains that rack us, however fierce they be. When we are well and hearty we laugh at all his claims; he is a brazen smarty, and low down are his games. He learned to cure diseases away in Yucatan, or where the arctic freezes the whiskers off a man. Some desert chieftain taught him his wondrous healing scheme, or maybe angels brought him his knowledge in a dream. We call him a deceiver, when we are

feelins fine when we've no burniner

en, and father in hell, and gal in this fever, or kinks along the spine. And yeah town, and Ah'm shuah swine to then at last we're ailiner. and trettinsr

see one oi aem lomgnt!

Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today

A Richmond school graduate. Miss Anna Reynolds, daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. R. N. Reynolds, former residents of this city, later removing to Indianapolis, was one of the three young Indianapolis women who had entered the Fort Wayne Bible Training schooi to prepare herself for mission work. Miss lone Reynolds, an older sister, had completed the mission course, but had not accepted a mission charge.

DELEGATE TO ENCAMPMENT CONNERSVILLE, Ind., Sept. 18. Mrs. L. V. Hegwood of his city was elected at the sixth district annual convention of the Women's Relief Corps, at Liberty, as delegate to the national encampment, which will be held this month in Des Moines, la. Miss Mary

Little of. this city was elected alter

nate.

Order From Your Grocer Today

Creamery Butter

Richmond Produce Co, Dist.

Lessons in Correct English Don't Say: An OPIATE deadened his pain. The music acted as an ANAESTHETIC. A NARCOTIC quieted him. An OPIATE was administered. An ANODYNE calmed her nerves. Say: A NARCOTIC deadened his pain. The music acted as a sedative. An ANODYNE quieted him. An ANAESTHETIC was administered. An OPIATE calmed her nerves.

Over 1400 inventions to prevent train wrecks have been eiveu trial

without satifactory results, in tht last

len years.

ITCHINGS

6

0

See your doctor. Vlcks, however, will allay the irritation.

V A o Run

Over IT Million Jan U& Yemrly

TAYLOR & THOMPSON COAL CO. KLEAN COAL Phone 1042

mauniii!iiraiimmtmiori!iiiiiiiimiiinmiiMmiiiiUTiumiiriiMKiiimimiim.

I You can buv a FORD TOURING CAR

$122 Down, Balance in 12 Monthly

i 'ayments 1 WEBB-COLEMAN CO.

OfJ. PostofJice Phone 1615-1694

liiuiiuiiiiiiiiiiiitmcuiunimHtjuHituuiinuiiniiuuiiiiiiHiiuiHiiioiuttuiui

worse each day, and pink pills, unavailing, seem made to throw away. Our doc, Whangdoodle Baxter, can't help

us much, it seems; then we would have the quackster, with all his hop joint dreams. His tales of Injun wiz

ards who taught him how to cure, when

we have aching gizzards, don't seem

so wild or poor. His yarns of Chinese scholars who showed him how to heal

will likely get our dollars when colic

makes us squeal. The marvelous al

lures us when pains within us buzz, and so the faker cures us, or makes

us think he does

duction of newsprint depends upon' the forest for its raw material. The present supply, coming largely from mills in the northeast and lake states, is derived from forests in the United States now seriously depleted, or from less accessible forests in Canada. The latter now furnish 65 per cent of the raw pulp used by mills in this country. Many of these mills, representing immense investments, no longer have a supply of raw material of their own, but are dependent either on a foreign supply of pulp, or on pulpwood that must be hauled long distances in the United States. Some of these mills have their own supply for only 10 or 20 years in advance, and but one mill is known that has a supply, strictly its own, that is good for more than half a century. The increasing distances to the fast receding forests

mean added freight costs and a higher

priced product, while hanging over

mills operating on imported pulp is

the ever-present possibility of embargo

even now far from a theoretical men

ace. Thus the incentive to the development of a de-inking process is

apparent. Has Been Tried For Centuries.

The use of old paper stock for the manufacture of paper is very old and

we find mention of a process in Den

mark as early as 1695. Seventy years

later German chemists were experimenting in that direction, and in 1794, during the French Revolution, Citizen

Mason, a woman, conducted an establishment for the conversion of old papers into new. In 1801 Matthias Koops established the Neckinger Mill at Bermondsy, England, to de-ink printed papers and make new paper therefrom, and in 1849 Henry E. Rogers, in a mill near Hartford, Connecticut, made the first use in the United States of old papers in the manufacture of paper. It is only in recent years, however, that it has been realized that it would not only be good buisness to uitilize the enormous waste represented in printed paper, but was an absolute necessity if the consumption of newsprint continued to grow and the supply of spruce timber to diminish. Early in 1921 the forest products laboratory of the department cf agriculture undertook a series of comparative tests to determine the efficiency of a process using bentonite to accomplish

Cause of Piles

Dr. Leonhardt found the cause of Piles to be internal. That's why salves

and operations fail to give lasting re lief. His harmless prescription. HEM

ROID, removes the cause. Money back

ir it rails, a. u. LUKen .Drug Co. Advertisement.

the heretofore almost impossible task of washing all the carbon black out of the macerated pulp after it has

been loosened by alkalies. S. D. Wells, the engineer in charge of the expert ments, now reports that they are suc

cessful.

"In de-inking- printed paper and es pecially newspaper." says Mr. Wells

it is comparatively easy to loosen

the carbon black by dissolving the var

nish of the printing ink by use of al-

Kanes. Such treatment will not in

jure ground wood pulp and if the car-

Don black could be completely washed

out after liberation a satisfactory ma

terial would be obtained. Unfortun

ately the fibres of the paper stock

serve as a very effective filter in en

meshing the particles of carbon and

mere are no means of washing in

common use tnat wm permit their com plete removal without excessive loss

es of pulp or expenditures of time, wat

er ana power that are prohibitive.

in fact a point seems to be reached beyond which it is impossible to re

move tne remain mg traces of ink

With bentonite, however, we have

a substance that will pass through ordinary filters and with its enormous

surface, on account the extreme fine

ness or us particles, will carry all the

caroon DiacK along with it."

urm-uuiw ia ueiinea Dy tne geo

graphical survey as " a traneportedy stratified, volcanic asb that has been;

filtered shortly after deposition." i

la very fine grained and has the prorH

erty of ewelling in contact with water

iu several uuies h uusmoi tuih.Like- any natural product different de-i posits vary considerably and Mr. Wellsj

says that the beet supply tnat nas come to his notice Is found la Wyoming.

"Tho possibilities of a process for '

recovery of old newspaper stock ara apparent to anyone familiar ith tho

paper industry," says Mr- Wells. "When the price paid for old paper

stimulated collection is it reported

that about 25,000 tons per month were collected in Chicago, of which 40 per

cent was news. During the eame period Cleveland is reported to have handled 350 tons per day of which 150 tons were news. In our large

metropolitan centers probably 2,600 tons per day were collected which

would furnish a very considerable por

tion of our daily consumption of ".ooo tons of newsprint. The source of this raw material is furthermore at the place of consumption and the saving in freight is a very, important item.

The color requirements of the pub

lishers at the present time are rery severe and any process that does not

thoroughly remove ink cannot be successful. While considerable difficulty was encountered in meeting these re

quirements, in our trials the results

obtained as the process has been finally worked out seem to justify our be

lief that they can be met." " The logical location for de-inking plants, according to the experts, will be in a number of the large urban centers where the supply of raw material old newspapers is great and most readily obtained with a mini mum of handling and hauling charges, ' and where, in turn, the demand for newsprint is greatest. The utilization of the de-inking process therefore will . not benefit materially existing paper mills which, are in most instances located near

in eomewhat isolated and small communities. However, from a raw material standpoint, especially in its forest depletion phase, the wide application of the de-inking of old newspapers has potentially a very important bearing on the forestry problem in America today. In the experiments conducted by Mr. Yvells it was found that there wa only a loss of from 9 to 10 percent in bulk. That is to say, 100 tons of old newspapers would produce at least 90 tons of pulp with which to manufacture new paper. Newspapers, cave for the few that are preserved in files, are all waste after they are a day or so old, and accordingly if all of the 7,000 tons of newsprint used dally could be made available for re-manufacturing purposes it is obvious that the inroads which the paper industry makes on spruce forests might be reduced until under reforestation work the supply would easily keep pace with the demand.

Ten thousand species are In the grass family, and of these 1,300 are indigenous to the United States.

ASPIRIN Insist on Bayer Package

Not a Pleasant Word

in Seven Years

A certain Richmond man says that his wife has been cross and irritable for seven years, and that he had tried

patent memcines and other remedie

without success; said that he felt like getting a divorce, until ore night he attended the free health lectures that Redwood Is giving at Sheridan anH

State streets, he bought a bottle of Redwood's Tepe Herb Tonic for his wife, this man says that after the fourth day he got his- first pleasant word in seven years. He also says that he considers Tepee Tonic worth many times what it cost, as it not only removes that nervous, irritable condition, but regulates the stomach and bowels also. This man's name

withheld for the sake of his family. Redwood's medicines are sold at the Quigley drug stores. Redwood gives his free talks and free vaudeville show every night at 7:30, come and bring the family, Sheridan and State streets, take Fairview street car. Advertisement.

UI

ra

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Yonr Beasiiy Doctor Soap.Ointmf ,Trrim.25c.evf--wTier. Fnrsainnles aaUres9:Cati-araLbortcriij,Dept.Xl Madden.

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Farmers' Nat'L Grain Assn. (Inc.) Dealers In High Grr.de Coal PHONE 2549 Office Room 302 K. of P. Bldg.

Special Sale on Underwear GEORGE E. KLUTE CO. 925 Main Street

BUY COAL NOW

We have the right coal at the right price. Jellico & Pocahontas Lump. ANDERSON & SONS N. W. 3rd & Chestnut Phone 3121

HOME DRESSED MEATS We Deliver ' Nungesser Bleat Market 337 South 12th Phone 2350

See Our Line of Heating Stoves

MM 6 B M 3 M h sZ-i

17 South 7th St.

LUMBER POSTS ROOFING BUILDING MATERIALS of All Kinds Right Prices Prompt Delivery MATHER BROS. Company

NO BLUE MONDAYS

Call 2765

Home wfSr Laundry 1516 E. Main

Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer product

two years and proved cafe by millions for Colds Headache 'j' Toothache Lumbago Earache Rheumatism, Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin Is the trade mark of

Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid Advertisement,

THIRSTY? 1 B Then try X S our Fountain Drinks m g and Ice Cream Dishes. I I You can't beat 'em.

Weekly Payment Terms At Cash Store Prices This friendly Family Clothing Store solves your clothes problem for It offers you ace-high styles, ace-high quality, new low level prices and a generous CREDIT arrangement that is absolutely without equaL HIRSCH'S 718 Main St.

MAGNESITE STUCCO 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."

BETSY ROSS BREAD

A Delightful Food Give the Kiddies Their Fill

ZWISSLER'S 23 S. 5th St.