Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 245, 14 October 1922 — Page 6
F AGE SIX,
STHE 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 Man Matter. WEWBER OK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tfce Associated Prss is exclusively entitled to the use tor .republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In tills paper, and also the local new pabllshed herein. AH rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
The Shaking Balkans
"The first results of the Turkish, threat to Southeastern Europe are appearing. The Turk,
single-handed, has broken down were to make, a fifth-rate power shove him far back into Asia," says pma PudLbc Ledger. The UkL
alarmed as they witness the ease with which
Kemal Pasha is destroying the decisions of Paris
"These treaties have been the charters and the mainstays of these little nations since 1919. Their new world that seemed so secure then is
beginning to tremble under them. . "If the Turk can come back and snap his fingers at pacts and
why not the German, the Hungarian and the
.Bulgar? That is' the question that is agitatin
Belgrade and Bucharest as well Athens. It is a threat to the new Jugo-Slavia as well as to Greece.
dered also by BucJapest and Sofia, by the re
vengeful Hungarian and the stubborn Bulgar.
"The new nations, strengthened
, of Paris and the broken pieces of nations shattered by it, are all watching and waiting. They j have seen the machine guns and muezzins of An
i Answers to Questions (Any 'reader can et the answer to any question by wrtlinff The Palladium I Information Bureau. Frederick J. HaskHn, director, Washington. D. C. This of- , for applies strictly to information. The ; bureau does not frlve advice on learal. medical and financial matters. It does r.ot attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to undertake exhaustive research on any subject. Write your question plainly and briefly. Give full name and address and enclose two cents In stamps for return postage. All replies are sent direct to the inquirer. Q. Will an accidental litter of pups of a pure blood female Alredalo havn any effect an subsequent litter sired by a pure blood male? M. F. M. A. Tba biological survey says that the siring of an Airedale female by a mongrel dog' will not affect the next litter of pups nor any that may follow. Q. What is a British consol? T. E. A. The term consol is an abbreviation of the word consolidated. Consols are the consolidated 2 per cent bonds of Great Britain and are similar to the United State3 government bonds. ', Q. What is meant by the "white flag of the Chinook"? M. E. S. A. It is a phenomenon that can be seen in the western states stretching from the crest of a mountain ridgJ when the Chinook wind is blowing over it. The upward deflection of th3 wind by the elope of the mountain causes the ascent of the air charged with water vapor, . Q. What distinguishes "present" from "introduce"? J. F. S. A. Introductions.' take place among equals, says Dr. F:nnk Vizetelly, a presentation takes r';?e by act of grace. Q. Where is Ro'-Poly Square? A. It is a square iu Lisbon. Portugal. so called from the peculiar undulating pattern of its pavement. Q. How many Indians served in ths World war? J. C. EL A. Th3 Office of Indian Affairs says that approximately 10,000 Indians serv. ed and there were about 200 deaths. Q. Has Michigan more lakes than Minnesota? C. G. A. There are 83 la&es in Michigan and 280 in Minnesota." Q. How did the Piggly Wiggly stores come to be called by that name? M. A. A. Piggly Wiggly is a coined word. Clarence Saunders, who is identified with the Piggly Wiggly- stores, originated the word. He was on a train going from Chicago to Memphis, and while thinking of an appropriate name fact that a pig goes through a turnstile, wriggles around and goes out again, since tumstues -were to b-? used in the stores, he coined the above words and applied them t the stores. Mi uisings ror ine evening DONT - Have you ever looked at a sbaseball - team, When photographed in a group, With all tho boys In their citizens' clothes And standing on some front stoop? Have you ever gazed at the husky crew. Without the uniform touch? You have never observed a bunch like that? Well, youvo not missed much. Conservative New York paper says thero i "a movement to take fingerprints of everybody on foot." I notice that men who carry their change In wallets generally have some to carry. I see the Greeks have been whipped by the Turks and I am having a terrible time trying to feel bad about it. I notice that "the other woman" In any case Is always the one that gets her picture in the paper. I always lov to see my stuff on the-screen credited to somebody else. I don't have much faith in the financial standing of a man who pulls out a roll of bills in public. If General Pershing really wants a quiet place in which to write his memoirs, he might try the store of some merchants who doesn't advertise. King Boris of Bulgaria will have to bolt his throne down a little tighter before he will get any American girl to take a chance on it , WEATHER CHANGES cAr?E sickness Kxtreme changes of weather during Fall cause manv colds and coughs. For nulck relief from throat, phost and ! bronchlcal trouble, coughs, colds and ; croup use Foley's Honey and Tar. Contains no opiates Insrredlents printed , on the wrapper. Largest selling rough (medicine In the world. "Foley's Honey land Tar Is the most pleasant and efficimt remedy for couwhs and colds that I t ever say," writes Wm. Jones, Kl Dara. j Illinois. A. G. Luken Drug- Co., 626-628 (Main. St Advertisement
gora rewrite the
treaty of Sevres. about to take back
alliance with Germany, and a great deal more besides. Asiatic prestige is higher today than in
centuries, with the Turk, Islam's spearhead, holding the Mediterranean's eastern gate.
Balkans should above the cross in
ans have numerous Mohammedans, some of them
hundreds of thousands. As the. echoes of Ke-
mal's triumphs reach them they are turning against the Christian rulers and calling upon
the treaties that Kemal to come
of again becoming a part of a great Moslem state in Europe stir these Mussulmans as they hear of
of him and the Philadel
Smyrna and Thrace.
- isaiKans are "These are
march back. They have set the Serbian king
dom of Jugo-Slavia watching the Bulgar and the
Bulgar to hoping
write some treaties. Uneasy Rumania is fearful of what may happen behind her while she
watches Russia's from nowhere
bia. The new states that Were hacked out of the
treaties, then Austro-Hungarian ous. ' T "So long.as as a despairing ment the allies Rumania and
move this nervousness, unease and threat. The simple faet that the Turk is back is enough to
It is being pon
throw the-wholepolitical structure of Southeast'
ern Europe, out of balance and keep it there until a new war makes its own decisions. The Turks have shown the other vanquished nations the road back to power. It is not likely that his example will remain entirely lost upon them."
by the peace
TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can." "Take It."
PLANS Half the fun of life lies in its planning. . When I talk to a boy who is all full of plans, I know that I ant talking to a future man wbdVwon't be out of a job and who will be a success. And more than this, he will take scores of others along with him in this success. It i3 good for a boy to say he will be this and that even though his future plans lead him far from those ideas. To wish to be happy gives one a taste of happiness right off! The plan must be a mental picture of what we want or see already accomplished. And how thrilling it is to see the plan unfold into the real! v I have a friend who long ago told me of the coming visit of his mother. And every day, it has seemed, that boy has been planning something new to give an expression of the love he has for that old mother. She comes to him, you see, many weeks ahead in his heart. And what a time of happiness they will have for all the planning. Plans lead. They put renewed vigor into our efforts and keep telling us we can do anything that we think we can. Today I walked through a city park and saw scores of men sitting on benches, some asleep and some merely "draped" across the benches, idle, greatly discouraged, no doubt but without plans! A little later in the day, I passed a great factory building with this sign in the window: "MEN WANTED." Plan for today. Plan for tomorrow. Plan for the rest of your life. For there is nothing that can inspire, you and give you confidence like feeling that you are going to get what you have planned to get. Plan and Prepare are very important words when their meanings are translated into action. The most satisfying day is the one you plan out just the minute you rise from your sleep of the night, and then follow through as nearly as possible as you have planned. '
Who's Who in the Day's News JOSEPH G. CANNON Eighty-two years ago a prairie schooner lumbered over the trail from Frederick, Md., westward. Just a famiiv rf Tvtnreers on their way to a new home in the wilderness. On the high swaying seat sat a grim faced man, driving, and beside him a little woman who hugged a four-year-old child to her breast. Weeks they spent on the road before they arrived at the Wabash near the present site of Terre Haute. J irjoi&r--;feal Now at the age j&j? S? CAMX? 0f 86 "Uncle Joe" Laiiuou, eei'a,u Illinois congressman, has just made the journey again over the same trail an improved road now but by high powered auto instead of rickety prairie schooner in a train of 10. Because of fatigue he was forced to abandon the auto at Indianapolis and complete the trip by train. Cannon received his higher education at Earlham college and at Cincin nati where he received his degree in law and shortly after went to Danville, 111., where he hung out his shingle and Where he has remained since except for the time spent in Washington, D. C lie has represented his Illinois district in the house for nearly 50 years but when the roll of the next house is called Joe Cannon's name will be .miss ing for the first time -in all those years and "Uncle Joe" will be back in Danville enjoying as he calls it, Tiis second childhood. Special low rate to Indianapolis, Oct 15th to 20th via Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern Trac. Co., account Indiana State Teachers Asso ciation Meeting. Advertisement. YOU CANNOT HIDE YOUR FAT Overfatness Is the one misfortune you cannot hide from yourself or from those around you. If too thin, your dress maker or tailor can supply the deficiencies, but the overfat carry a burden they can not conceal. ' There Is one sure way to reduce your weight surely and quickly. The harmless Marmola Prescription, which changes the fatty tissues and fat-producing foods to solid tlesh and energv. helps the general health and digestion, permits you to eat substantial food, and leaves tne mm clear and smooth. This famous prescription is now condensed into tablet form. Each tablet contains an exact dose of the same harmless Ingredients that made the original -prescription capable of reducing the overfat body steadilv and easilv without the slight est ill effects. Take but one tablet after each meal and at bedtime until the bodily health completely restored. As3 your drusrsist for Marmola Pre scription Tablets or send one dollar to the ilarraola Company, 4612 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mica., the price the world ovei, and you will receive enough to start you well on the road to slimness ana-happiness. Advertisement.
ft!,.,,,
iTHE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND
peace of Parte and tear up the They know that the Turk is all he lost by his blackguard
"It was inevitable that the Old and the New
seethe as the crescents mount the Near East. The Old Balk and liberate them. Old dreams the first fruits of the Turkish that, like the Turk, he may re Red patrols across in Bessara Empire are uneasy and nerv the Turk is to return, any agree may make with him will not re Up" After Dinner Stories George C. Gill, President of the Holyoke National Bank of Holyoke, Mass., tells Judge this story: A few years ago, the Holyoke National Bank of Holyoke, Mass., in one of its newspaper announcements, rath er interestingly called attention to its willingness to help farmers. The next day an old man, probably eighty years of age, from a town some fifteen miles away, appeared at the bank and told the president that his cow -had died and he wanted to borrow $40 enough to buy another. Though the bank officers had never seen or heard of the man before, they made the loan and charged the amount to "advertising." But when the note came due it was paid on the dot. The bank made the loan to "make good" its "advertising." The farmer bought the cow and "made good" his credit. Two golfers, finishing their first round, met under the showers in the clubroom. Both were enthusiastic over the game and were questioning each other on their respective scores. "How did it go for the first time? asked the first golfer."Fine," answered the second, "And what did you do it in?" "Two hours and a half," came back the unusual retort. - VON HINDENBURG MAY RUN FOR PRESIDENCY BERLIN, Oct. 14. Field Marsha! VonHindenburg has expressed his will Ingnes3 to offer himself as a candidate for election to the German presidency, the Vossische Zeitung states today. The field marshal's acceptance, it declares, was at the request of the German National People's party. A statue of the "Poilu Liberator" was recently erected in Metz, on the site of the statue of ex-Emperor William of Germany. It Never Fails To Bring The Babies Back to Health A ' Mother's Praise of Father John's Medicine for BodyBuilding. "Whenever my children have colds or are run down, I give them Father John's Medicine and it never fails to bring them right back to health. My little girl was all run down, but after taking Father John's Medicine for a little while, she became a strong, rugged, healthy girl. (Signed) Mrs. Arthur T. Hall, Hazel Street, Uxbridge, Mass. For over 67 years Father John's Medicine has been the standard medi cine for all the family. No alcohol or dangerous drugs. Try it today. Ad vertisement.
SUN - TELEGRAM, RICHMOND,
After Dinner Tricks No. 317 The Magnetic Disc i Cut a disc, slightly larger than a quarter, out of a piece of paper. Roll the paper Into a tube and hold this tube above the disc. In your left hand hold a quarter in between. (Fig. 1.) Ask some one to make the disc rifaS up to the coin. The spectator will try to do it by drawing his breath through the tube, "but will be unsuccessful. To do the trick, blow through the tube. The disc will then jump up and touch the coin. (Fig. 2.) , Copyright. J St I, By Pubiw L&oar Compam Memories of Old Days In This Pepep Ten Years Ago Today The New York Giants took a game from tie Boston Red Sox in a terrific batting bee at the Polo grounds by the score of 5 to 3. The Giants had won two games to date, while Boston had won three. Five runs in the first inning won the game for the Giants Marquard's pitching won for the Giants for the second time during the series. Rippling' Rhymes By Walt Mason NO SAFETY The spuds are white and mealy, I like them smoking hot; but if I eat them freely my doctor cries, "Great Scott! You weigh too much already, yet such things you will chew! Your gain in weight is steady, in spite of all I do! Your face is hot and hectic, your pulse hits up a gait; a spasm apoplectic will get you soon or late." The roast is large and stately, the gravy rich and brown, and I am longing greatly to pour such victuals down. But says the learned physician, "Cut out such grub as that, or soon the pale mortician will bear you from your flat I have to watch and guard you throughout the weary years, you blamed old bonehead bard, you, to save you from the bier." Such is the fate of fellows who do not toil or' spin, who ply no blacksmith's bellows, or make cars out of tin; in gilded ease reclining, their lot seems far from hard; but when it comes to dinner, all goodly things are barred. I watch the toiler plodding, as homeward he repairs, from ditching or from sodding, to eat five Belgian, hares. I think his lots daisy, no .doctors round him lurk; but I am too blamed lazy to go outdoors and work. Lessons in Correct English Don't Say: To make money was his oniy GOAL. He had no other INTENT. The MOTIVE of bis action was obvious. His INTENT was apparent from thbeginning. He was the TARGET of his playfellows. Say: To make money was his only AIMHe had no other MOTIVE. The IXTENT of hi3 action was obvious. His DESIGN was apparent from the beginning. He was the BUTT of his playfellows. HURLED 50 FEET, BUT ESCAPES UNINJURED HAMMOND, Ind.. Oct 14. After he was struck and hurled 50 feet, while driving an automobile near Furnessville yesterday, Roy McCartney of Lakeside, Mich., picked himself up and started to walk away. The auto was cut in two and, though the engine was knocked out of the car. it was still running when spectators arrived. McCartney was found nearby and was removed to the Michigan City hospital. ELEVATOR FALLS; 1 DIES ' ANDERSON. Ind., Oct. 14. When an elevator fell three stories at the Ward Stilson plant yesterday, John Hardeman, 35 years old, was almost instantly killed and Logan Williams, 30 years old, colored, was injured. PAINS SO BAD WOULD GO TO BED Two Women Tell How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Stopped Their Suffering Iron Mountain, Mich. "I had terrible paina every month and at times had to go to bed on account of them. I saw your advertisement and took Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound-with very good results. I can work all day long now at my sick time. You may use these facts aa a testimonial and I am recom mending the Vegetable Compound to my friends." Mrs. A. H. Garland, 218 E. Brown St,f Iron Mountain, Michigan. Xenia, Ohio. "Every month I had such pains in my back and lower part of my abdomen that I could not lie quietly in bed. I suffered for about five years that way and I was not regular either. I read an advertisement of what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound bad done for other women, so I decided to try it. It surely has helped me a lot, as I have no pains now and am regular and feeling fine. " Mrs. Mary Dale, Route 7, Xenia, Ohio. Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a medicine for women's ailments. It isespecially adapted to relieve women. If you sutler as did Mrs. Garland or Mrs. Dale, you should give this well-known medicine a thorough triaL aa ci'Usemen t
BLOVI HERE
lllj'j
IND., SATURDAY, OCT. U 1922.
Free Ports in America New Scheme Finds .Supporters and Opponents Among Economists and Business Men.
By FREDERICK J. HAS KIN WASHINGTON, D. C, Oct 14. After a year and a half of effort congress has just passed & new tariff act levying increased custdms duties on imports into the United States. This legislation has brought forward anew the question of the wisdom- of establishing free ports in America. A free port is a geographic exception to nation's tariff. It is a city or i specified zone in a city to which iorelgn goods may be brought, altered or manufactured, and re-exported without the payment of duty. The official definition given free por.ts by the United States tariff commission readJ as follows: "A free port or free zone is a place, limited in extent, that differs from ad jacent territory in being exempt from the customs laws as affecting goods destined for re-export; it means, sim ply, that as regards customs duties there is freedom, unless and until imported goods enter the domestic mar ket. A free zone may be defined as an Isolated, inclosed and policed area. without resident population, furnished with the necessary facilities for lading and unlading, for supplying fuel and ships' stores, for storing goods and for resmpping them, by land and water; an area within which goods may be lanuea, stored, mixed, blended, re packed, manufactured and reshipped without payment of duties and without tne intervention of customs officials It is subject, equally with adjacent re gions to all laws relating to public health, vessel inspection, postal service, labor conditions, immigration. ana, lnaeea everything except the customs," There have been two great narties in the Uited States practically since the foundatffn of the Republic. One has espoused the principle of free trade, that is the free import of goods without payment of customs duties; and the other has espoused the principle of protection of native industries through the medium of ajiigh tariff which will prevent foreign made goods frgm coming here and selling as cheaply as the home product may sell. Basically, the broad reasons for and against a tariff are the following: A thickly populated country producing its chief wealth by manfacturlng imported raw materials and selling them abroad benefits by free trade because It must get its materials with which to do business from outside. In such a case, a nation imposing a tariff would be taxing itself for the privilege of doing business. Second, a relatively sparsely settled country, the chief produce of which is raw materials, but which is seeking to establish industries for manufacture, can afford to impose a tariff because it does not require absolutely the goods of the outside world and to admit such gooda freely would retard the development of local manufactures. Examples of Free Trade and Protection. In modern times the two outstanding examples of such nations have been England, an island with more than 50,000,000 population, the chiet wealth of which arises from manufactured goods; and the United States, a territory of continental extent with only twice as many inhabitants, whose chief wealth consists in raw materials of agriculture and mines. England is a free trade country tra ditionally and the United States a high taritr land. But in recent years the tremendous advance of industry in the United States and the inflow of our manufac tured goods and those of other coun tries to England, have served to break down the old traditions. There have been strong leanings in this country toward freer opportunities to nianu facture and sell here or re-export foreign commodities and England has found it desirable to impose customs duties on some imports. England's duties apply chiefly to lux uries and to goods which compete with ner own manuiactures hut her new policy is chiefly espoused for the pur: pose of raising badly needed revenue. Her old free trade tradition has been Cuticura Talcum Soothes And Cools After a warm beta with Cuticura Soap there is nothing more refreshing for baby's tender skin than Cuticura Talcum. If his skin is red, rough or irritated, anoint with Cuticura Ointment to soothe and heaL They are ideal for all toilet uses. CanpltratbFrwtrVtfl. Address: "CctlMrcfcibrmtoriM, Dept. 3F, M14cn iS Msat " Sold every whpre; Soe.pa6c Oiivtmeat 3 ana 60c. Tsleam2oe. 5nrt CulicuTA Soep without eras. We Give 3 per Cent Interest and Personal Interest First National Bank Southwest Corner Ninth and Main rni-innriro4 HARTMAN WARDROBE TRUNKS 827 Main St. On
but slightly shakes and. if normal
times return, it is likely some her existing tariff levies may be removed or reduced. The United States really Is several countries under one government There are geopraphical divisions which present the snarpest contrasts. New England, for instance, is a region comparable to England itself from th-j viewpoint of congested manufactures and neglible agricultural and - other raw production. This is where the free port idea comes in. Under its operation, certain cities, parts of cities or even larg er sections could take all the advan tage of the British free trade policy for the purpose of obtaining duty-free commodities to fabricate and re-export while keeping the rest of the country protected against an inflow of free goods. Recently the Chamber of Commerce of the United States made a careful study of the whole question. A sum mary of the arguments for and against free ports may be stated as follows Arguments for Against Free Ports. Free ports would cut Customs red tape and attract cargoes to such ports for transshipment and forwarding whether or not they were to be manu factured. This would bring freight3 to American shipsNew markets for foreign goods would be established and American manufacturers would gain the advan tage of consignments from 'over the the world. By concentrating business in free ports, vastly incieased harbor and ter minal facilities could be provided economically. Free ports would simplify the syt tern of bonded warehouses.. Free ports would save the large sums wrucn must . be , employed as customs bonds under the present law. Now. when goods are brought into tho country, merely for re-export, they must put np a heavy bond to insure payment of duty, provided they re mainFree ports would simplify all cus toms procedure which now is lntri cate because of the bond and drawback provisions. Arguments opposed are: The United States is too isolated geographically to be a favorable seat iu ''cc yuns ana tney would not De so successful in attracting business aa ineir proponents assert. Such a policy is a dangerous step in the direction of free trade which, in the opinion of many, would ruin American industry. The present svstem of hnnAea irarA houses and drawback is adequate to iu me neea or rree ports. Thev would promote trade from which the United States would derive no revenue but wouia not promote manufacturing be yunu us present advancement. Confusion would arise from mixed cargoes, parts of which would hp i tined to free ports and parts to port3 of entry. This, and the whole system wuum promote smuggling. finally, it is claimed, the wholt scheme is unconstitutional because friction would arise among the ports and difficulties would be encountered in their selection. A choice would bcpractically impossible in view of the constitutional provision that "No pre ference shall be given by any regula tion of commerce or revenue to the ports of one state over those of an other." In spite of these strong objections Dr. Simpson's Vegetable Compound is the most effective "alterative" or blood purffier ever known. Cleanse your system thoroughly with thl3 great remedy, and feel the effects of renewed health and strength. Pure blood invariably means good health and wards off disease. Should disease exist, it is all the more necessary. Try it and be convinced of this fact in your case. For sale at all drug stores. Advertisement. - "Say It With Flow.r" 1093 We have several Second Hand Office Desks at Low Prices. BARTEL & R0HE 921 Main St 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. it If It's a Gravel Product, We Can Produce It" We deliver by truck in any quantity. Plant No. 2 The Richmond-Greenville Gravel Company Phones 4132-4032 Savings Yoo can ttart m. Ings account with
Phone
r mora ana same, can be withdrawn at any time, interest paid Jan. 1st and 1st. The People's Home and SaVin Ass'n. 29 North 8th St. Safet Boxes for Rent
LONDON IS PUTTING
UP OFFICE BUILDINGS OF MODERN DESIGN (By Associated Press) LONDON, Oct, 14. NearineT com pletion on the crest of Tower Hill, Its own tower rivalling in height the dome of St Paul's, is the most impressive, the most palatial, the best lighted and probably the most conveniently arranged group of business buildings ever erected in London. It is the new palace of the Port of London Authority, the future home of the administration and staff that con trol all the docks, the wharves, and the commercial life of the Thames. The buildings cost $10,000,000, and are acclaimed by architects as one of the structural treasures of London. in the English Renaissance style. and rich in sculptural reliefs. It Is a building of five stories. Each of the four sides faces directly a cardinal point of the compass. There is a frontal portico supported by corinthian, columns carried np through three sto nes. Surrounding the portico is a substan tial pyramidal tower in the front niche of which is a great figure of Father i names, and at the sides are emblematical figures of Commerce and Navi gation. - Perhaps the most striklnr internal: feature is a central rotunda 110 feet in diameter, with a glass dome. the free port idea has many ardent supporters. Former Secretary of Commenrce Redfield was much in favor of their establishment and leading of ' ficials of the United States tariff commission and the bureau of foreign and domestic - commerce inclined to thp !"" gitrai uaue una com mercial organizations have advocated the plan. The tarifr is a subject which Beems rather technical to the layman but in reality it has a bearing on everyday life. The whole question cornea down to whether a nation has a dense or a sparse population. In a dense popnla tion, labor is cheap and manufacture economical. Therefore such a country can undersell the new country. In a new country, people are at a premium, labor is high and manufactures aro scarce. Adam Smith, the eminent British economist, illustrates the principle by explaining that in England a man in poor or moderate circumstances would not marry a widow with several children because they would be a burden to support in a nation already over populated. In the American colonies, he says, the more children a widow has the more of a matrimonial catch she is because the man who marries her gains the assistance of ready made troop of labor, the most prized element of such a country. The same comparison which Adam Smith made between England and th-j colonies now can be applied with equal force to New York City or to New England in comparison with the broad and sparsely populated farm lands of the west. mm FREE TRIAI 1 1 u . ; jrvu uyb eczema, eruptions, roughness or any itchy skin trouble, write us today and we will send you a FREE SAMPLE of SANA-CUTIS to prove that it bids fair to be the World's Greatest SKIN Remedy. SANA-CUTIS CHEM. CO. Box 725 SEDALIA. MISSOURI. mil miuitniHUMfwiiHHUitf tmti 1 NEW NAVY BEANS I 2 lbs. for 17c I I At TRACY'S I tinrwrnmiuitnift PurePasteurized Milk and Cream Phone 1531 KRAMER BROS. DAIRY Fresh and Smoked Meats BUEHLER BROS. 715 Main Street PHONE 2766 Let Us Do Your Family Washing Home waHr Laundry Phone 2766 Quality and Service Still in the swim! Yes, 6tfll In the swim! We offer you good Lumber, Cedar and Composition Shingles, Wallboard and NeverLeak Cement at reasonable prices. GOAL that Burns Well and Gives Satisfaction Phophecy: Coldest winter of the 20th century, BELL in Beallview
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