Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 261, 2 November 1922 — Page 6
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PAGE SIX
THE KICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., THURSDAY, NOV. 2, 1922.
! THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
AND SDN-TELEGRAM
I Published Every Evening -Except Sunday by Palladium Printing Co. Palladrnm Building. North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as ; Second-Class Mail Matter.
of the vday would be prevented. Fear of quick and sure punishment is one way to check murder
ous assaults, even if that is not the constructive
manner of improving' morals.
MEMBER OB THB ASSOCIATED PRESS Tho Associated Press la exclusively entitled to tho uaa for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In tilts paper, and also the local j news published herein. All rights of republication of apeelal dispatches herein are also reserved. , . Crimes of Violence I Murders and attacks of violence following
each other. in. quick succession in the last few weeks display a shocking disregard for the value
; of human life. -Men-and women, with utter dis
ji regard of the law or the consequence of their actsV have taken the lives of others as if the mat-
ter were of little consequence.
The number of homicides in the United States
is an appalling list. Annually the number of
victims of murderous lust grows larger. No
diminution can be seen as one scans the list.
Most Americans believe that one of the best
ways to decrease the number would be if sure punishment were meted out to the murderers. I When- men and women are acquitted by juries in the face of strong evidence, it lessens the respect
1 of others for the consequence of murder. Persons with the thought of murder in their hearts
; are willing to take a chance. If the punishment fitted the crime, and were sure to follow, many of the sensational homicides
Outdoor Sports The growing appeal of outdoor eport3 on the
masses is being demonstrated again una iau when the demand of enthusiasts of football for
seats is much greater than the accommodations of the various field3.
The Chicago-Princeton game and the clash of
Wabash and Butler at Indianapolis drew crowds that could not be handled. At Indianapolis fans
jumped the fence by hundreds, and in Chicago every available vantage' site outside the playing field was jammed with devotees of the sport. Reports from other cities in the United States are
virtually the same, a3 far as attendance records
are concerned.
Interest in football is not the only attraction that brings thousands to the games. A general
feeling for sports and a desire to witness ath
letic contests explains the whole situation. The
American people are annually taking more Inter
est in out of door sports, whether participating
in them or watching others.
. This form of recreation meets with general
approval. To witness a contest of skill and en
durance in any sport is not only entertaining, but
it also develops an appreciation of fair play and
sportsmanship.
Answers to Questions Any reader can ret the answer to any question by wrltlngr The Palladium ; Information Bureau, Frederick J. HaskIn, director, Washington, D. C. This offer applies atrlctly to information. The bureau does not grlve advice on legal, medical and financial matters. It does not 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, Are Gretna Green marriages leg- , al? J. M. A. After the abolition of Fleet marriages In 1754, Gretna Green became notorious as the place of celebration of the marriages of runaway couples from Kns-land. In England Tmblica-
tinn nf banns nnd the nrespncft of a
priest at the ceremony were neces
sary, out to conclude a lawiui marriage In Scotland at that time it was
only necessary for an unmarried ' couple to go before witnesses and derlnrn thnmsplvps man and wife. Gre-
na Green ' marriages are now at an ; end; however, In consequence of a law which decrees that no irregular marriage contracted In Scotland shall be valid unless one of the parties resides in Scotland, or has done so for . 21 days next preceding such marriage. Q. Which city is larger, New York or London? t O. H. L. A. Statistics say it is almost impossible to compare the population nnil btpji of New York C!tv and Lon
don. We submit the f ollowing tig-!
ures, however, from xne oureau 01 census reports: 1920 Greater New York, 6,620,048, Metropolitan district of New York, 7,910,415; 1921 Registration London, 4,483,249, Grater London, 7,476,168: According to the Registration London, 4,483,249, Greater '. New York corresponds with regtstrawhile the metropolitan
district of New York corresponds with the -area of Greater London. ; Q. How did the expression scot free originate?- ; V. O. A. Scot means a tax, contribution or fine. Scot free is a natural combination of words conveying the idea -of i being free without . payment of fine. Q. Can the right of habeas corpus ' be denied in this country? F. A. A. A. The Constitution declares that
; the "privilege of the writ or naueas ; corpus shall not be suspended unless when in cases of rebellion or invas- ! ion, the public safety may require it." During the Civil War the presi- ' dent authorized General Scott to sus- : pend the privilege when in his judgs ment seemed necessary to do so, but : Chief Justice Taney, who had. Issued ; a writ which the General refused to I obey, uttered the opinion that the ; power of suspension rested solely in ; Congress. Judicial and professional . opinion appears . to concur In this view, but on March 3. 1S63, Congress authorized the president to suspend the writ, and this delegated power was exercised not only by Lincoln during the war, but by Grant during the re-construction period. Musings For The Evening MAYBE HE DIDN'T SAY IT ' I forget in what curious volume I read Of ancient Roman whose epitaph said He died aged eighty without being
1 wed, ?And wished that his father'd done : likewise. . . ; OUR OWN NOAH WEBSTER" ' Good Photographer Man who can make any woman look like Marion Da-
vies. - - - ' Scientlstr-Person who tells you that your ancestors threw cocoanuts at each other, and is surprised if you resent it. i Calendar Device -which should be used by some railroad instead of a timetable. Entomologist Man who can spend thirty years studying the left hind fopt of a mosquito and not end up In the State insane asylum. Optimist Man who, upon being stricken blind, says, Oh, well I guess I've seen about all there Is to see." James F. ZweighafL Consular report says the natives bf Zanzibar and IndOrChlna learn a great deal about the manners and customs of the American people from the motion picture plays. ' They must think we are a rare lot of .chumps. Movement has been started at Cleveland to prolong the life of the average American ' citiien twenty years. It would seem but polite to ask the average citizen's permission. 1
TRAVELER BELIEVES IN REINCARNATION By George Matthew Adams
I am neither a theologian nor a scientist Just a plain human being, even as yon who read this. But I must admit that I speculate a great deal about the many earthly manifestations that beat against this brain of mine. The other evening on a train, while traveling across the western Canadian plains, I got into conversation with a very delightful gentleman of rare Intelligence. The talk finally drifted to religion and the future of this present bodily life of ours. My new acquaintance frankly stated that he believed In reincarnation and that he was now the new life of Bome former beautiful tree! I have met few strangers whose beauty of character shone so unmistakably from their faces as did that of my companion. It seemed a most beautiful thought anyway once to have been a grand and majestic tree. And then this man went on to talk of many characters in history and to explain how they were undoubtedly, in his opinion, reincarnations of other great characters long tucked ,way Into the arms ot eternal silence. One thing is very sure, and that Is that nothing in nature or human life really dies. It isjust one continuous story of change, movement, or perhaps merely sleep! , . The comfort of the ages to the human soul is that nothing good can ever be lost.I look into the face of my dog. No eyes were ever more sincere than his, as he looks honestly into mine and wags his tail. He loves me and I love him. - All night h will move restlessly about the house if I close my bedroom door against him but the minute I open it, he will He peacefully down and sleep the whole night through. Dumb devotion, some would say of this dog of mine. But I would say that it is intelligent devotion. And maybe the faithfulness and love that have4come down through the ages from some glad and glorious soul in human frame! -, We know so little. And God Is so big!
Tedious Pastitme, Keeping a Hotel Appointment
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A FfW MINUTES
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Hunting With the Camera, Thousands Enter New Sport of Snapping "Wild Life in the Marshes and Woodlands.
Who's Who in the Day's News
DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE : The ninth Duke of Devonshire, well known on this side of the Atlantic as tho former governor general of Can--ven the portfolio of
the Colonies in Prenier Law's cabinet. Like many of the members of the cabinet he is a sreat land owner. His estates are even greater than Lord Salisbury's. They comprise iboutlS6,000 acres in Derbyshire. Devonshire was born in 1868, and from 1915 to 1916, he was Civil Lord if the admiralty
oa of aeicwsHft ind later governor
f.eiifiai oi Cd.c.via. Formerly he had been treasurer of his Majesty's Household under the late Lord Salisbury. From 1903-05 he was financial secretary of the treasury. The duke who is the head of the Cavendish family was married Id 1892 to Lady Evelyn Emily Mary Fitzmaurice, daughter of the fifth marquis of Landsdowne. The couple have two sons and live daughters.
Lessons in Correct English DON'T SAY: The lack of a signature COUNTERMANDED the agreement. The act was CANCELLED by a subsequent ruling. The charge was CANCELLED by the missing signature. To REPEAL poverty was his lifework. The agreement was ABOLISHED. SAY: The lack of a signature NTJLLIFTED the agreement. The act was ABROGATED by a subsequent ruling. The charge was INVALIDATED by the missing signature. To ABOLISH poverty was his life work. - , . The agreement was CANCELLED.
Ripplinq Rhymes By Walt Mason
After Dinner Stones Marjorie and Eddie had both been told that they must write letters of thanks for the outside Christmas gifts they had received. .Marjorie sat down and quickly wrote: "Thank you so much for the fountain pen. It's what I've always needed." Meanwhile Eddie was chewing the end of his penholder for inspiration. As his sister laid aside her first letter, he surreptitiously glanced at it. Then he wrote: v "Thank you so much for the hand
kerchiefs. They're what I've always
needed." Ladies Home Journal.
Little Sydney was allowed to elt
up to the tame witn nis iona mama on the occasion of a little luncheon
party. His manners were generally
very pretty, and mama was horniiea
when she caught the child stumng
his food into his mouth with his
knife.
"Sydney," she cried reprovingly
"Sydney, where's your fork? Yon
ought to use your fork!" "I know, mama," said Sydney plain
tively, 'but this one leaks awfully."
London Telegraph.
EXHUSTED FROM GRIPPE COIGH l,a. grippe cougrhs rack and tear the Bufferer to - a state of exhaustion. "Would ret completely exhausted from violent R-rlppe coiirhs," writes R. G. ColUns. Barnegut. N. J. "Tried Foley's Monev and Tar and the cough ceased -entirely" " Used by thre generations for coughs, colds and croup, throat chest i..i9t!nn Vnlev'a Honey
Unci ' 1 1 v 1 1 1. 1 1 i i . . - . , , , , - - and Tar has stood the test of time Con
tra no M IWt IBJlTttients wi iuku tie wrapper. Largest selling: cough rnedlclne In the world. A. G r.uken jSru Co., 628-62S Main. Advertisement.
ITCHING ECZEMA DRIED RIGHT UP
3VITHSULPHUR
Any breaking out of the skin, even fiery, itching eczema, can be quickly
overcome by applying a little Men-
tho-Sulphur, says a noted skin specialist. Because of its germ destroying properties. thi3 sulphur preparation
instantly brings ease from 6kin irritation, soothes and heals the eczema right up and leaves the skin clear
and smooth. It seldom fails to relieve the tor
ment and disfigurement. Sufferers
from skin trouble should get a little jar of MentfcjO-Sulphur from any good
druggist and use it like a cold cream.
Advertisement.
WITH DUSTERS The "Gentlemen with Dusters," they still enjoy a boom; wherever cobwebs cluster they ply the sawed
off broom. These moralists, all nameless, are writing hooks to prove that
everything is shameless where modern statesmen move. Our statesmen
and our rulers have neither hearts
or brains; they should be in the cool
ers and loaded down with chains
The gentlemen with dusters provide no helpful cure, they're rather poor adjusters of evil we endure. They point out Goths and Vandal3 who in
high places stand, they dig up musty
scandals to horrify the land; but they are masked while prodding the erring, sinful ones, and so it's only wadding emerging from their guns. Me-thinks the gent sarcastic who plies
a bitter pen, and heaps revilings dras
tic upon his fellowmen, should tell
just what his name is, when he com
pletes his task, and then, whate'er
his game is, he wears no piker's mask. Then, when his facts he musters, he's of a human size, but gentlemen with dusters are rabbits
in disguise.
THE OLD SERMON PROBLEM "That's what I call a finished ser
mon,' said a lady to her husband, as they wended their way home from church.
"Yes," was the reply; "but, do you know, I thought it never would be." From Everybody's Magazine.
By FREDERICK J. HASK1X j WASHINGTON. D. C, Nov. 1. The new sport of hunting with a camera instead of, with a gun is gaining thousands of recruits this season. This is distinctly noticeable all through our eastern marshes and woodlands, where field, glasses and cameras are now almost 'as much In evidence as guns. Evidently the younger generation of American sportsmen, being ex-members of outdoor study clubs or ex-Boy Scouts, are aware of a fact that well known naturalists have long since urged upon our . attention namely, that is much more exciting sport to photograph wild life than to kill it. As Dr. William Hornaday says, "any duffer with a good check book, a professional guide and a high power repeating rifle can kill big game, but it takes good woodcraft, skill and endurance of a high order to enable a man or woman to secure a really fine photo graph a fine wild animal in its unfeathered. haunts." This very difficulty, while frightening off the lazy and timid, is an additional incentive to the man who seeks in hunting not the spoils of an easy victory but the satisfaction of matching his skill and cunning against the superlative cunning of wild animals. Furthermore, a game bag filled with squirrels or reed birds represets but a temporary triumph, while a game bag filled with photographic plates represents a permanent achievement. Then there i3 a grat gratification of the creative impulse in hunt lng with a camera, which is now al most totally absent in killing game. Our ancestors used to kill with a
constructive purpose because they
needed meat or clothang for their families but since the necessity .motive
has been eliminated from hunting,
shooting expeditions have largely de
generated into little more than, cruel
orgies. . It was the Introduction of the light,
ever-ready, universal kodak about the beginning of the present century which first suggested the interesting possi-
zuities of photographing wild animals. By this time, according to Dr.
Hornaday, the long-continued slaught
er of American big game had begun to produce on the public mind certain
strong effects. People began to real
ize that the deadly efficiency of the
high-power repeating rifles and auto
matic shotguns was rapidly extermi
nating the game of America, great and
small. Consequently, thousands of
sportsmen became so disgusted with game slaughter that they hung up
their guns forever. "To this group,
says Hornaday, "the possibilities of
hunting with a camera intsantly ap pealed. Hundreds took to the cam era." Sport Originated In Colorado.
To Mr. A. G. Wallihan, or rather to
Mrs. A. G. Wallihan, belongs the credit
of furnishing the first impulse in
America to the photographing of wild
game on the hoof, free in its own
haunts. like most great pioneers, the
Wallihans chanced upon their discov
ery quite by accident One day, while Mrs. Wallihan was crouched in the
sage brush on the. outskirts of her
home town of Lay, Colorado she look
ed up to fmd herself closely surround
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verusement.
ed by a herd of mule deer. "What a
wonderful picture," she thought,, it
it were only possible to take it with a
camera." On the way back to the
house, ehe pondered the idea the idea
of photographing wild animals with
the aid of a blind, a fixed camera.
Mr. Wallihan, who was a profession
al photographer, at once recognized the value of his wife's suggestion. In a short time, the couple were in pur
suit of wild mule deer and prog-horned antelope and elk, armed with heavy
tripod cameras, which they carefully set up and tended along the trails. The camped, cooked, packed and trailed and fought wind and weather for ten adventurous years in order to secure the delightful pictures published in 1901 by Doubleday Page & Com
pany under the title, "Camera Shots
at Big Game."
This publication practically marked
the beginning of a new art, for the
pictures were hailed with respect not only by zoologists but by famous artists as well. Paintings of wild ani
mals, with few exceptions, have always
been something of a joke to zoologists,
as the artists studies have generally had to be made in zoos and museums, where the animals have quite a dif
ferent appearance from those in the
wild state. On the other hand, photographs of wild game have often provoked snorts ot. disgust from artists, because they have lacked composition and good 6hadow effects. It remained for the Wallihans to produce the first wild animal photographs, of genuine artistic merit at least in this country.
Since then, the list of art photo
graphers of wild animal life has- grown by leaps and bounds until today H would be imposible to give honorable mention to all of them in the space of
this article. As an ispiration for the
reader w:ho would lay down his Run
for a kodak, however, we recommend
the work of Dr. William Hornaday,
jonn m. Phillips, George Shiras (es
pecially his flashlight pictures) ; Carl
L. Akeley, Norman McClintock, Ed
win R. Sanborn, Kermit Roosevelt,
Ldmnnd Heller, W. Lyman Under
wood, and A. Radclyffe Dugmore, who was first to produce photographic
masterpieces of African game. Sporting Element Not Lacking. Those who doubt the eportlng opportunities of camera hunting as compared with gun hunting, should be impressed by the account of Mr. Dugmore's African expedition, given by Mr. James L. Clark, well known New
After Dinner Tricks I - V " . CHOSEN I . V CARD
rUNCjS AND Wfctro
CHOSEN CARD 32& INSERTED NEAR. CENTER.
Memories of Old Days v In This Pzper Ten Year ' Aflo Today
No. 328 Finding a Chosen Card A card is selected, at random from the pack. The pack is opened at the center and the card is inserted. The pack Is cut a number of times. Then, looking through the pack, the performei immediately picks out the chosen card. Before working the trick, gather th kings and queens' together and placji thtm in the center of the pack. Th curd ia chosen from somewhere near th top, but is plnced at the center when the pack is opened. It is then quit easy to find the card, even after th cards hare been cut, as the chosen card will be among the kings and queens. fnvriokt, lit. Xtu Public htiaer Compam
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It Troubled With Sour, Gassy Stomach
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York taxidermist, who accompanied
Dugmore and shared his thrilling haz
ards inobtaining photographs of lions, hippotamuses and rhinoceroses.
"As we topped a little knoll one
morning," relates Mr. Clark, "we saw about 100 yards ahead of us in the yellow grass,- the black outline of a rhinoceros back. We approached to about 80 yards where we had a good view of him, and from this point Dugmare took- a telephoto picture. Al though in plain sight, we moved slowly and cautiously toward him and at about 60 yards Dugmore took another picture. Being sure of two pictures, he then changed his lens to one with a ehorter focus while the rhinoceros showed no sign of knowing of our presence. ' We walked to a spot about 40 yards from him, where Dugmore focused the camera, while the rhinoceros deliberately lay down. This wa3 a sure eign that we had not been detected and we both gave a sigh a re
lief. Dugmore, however, whispered
The habit of placing his money under the pillow of his bed when he retired at nighf, cultivated in boyhood, probably was the cause of the loss of $115 by E. L. . Miller, of Dayton, Ohio. Miller was in Hagerstown and stayed at 'a hotel. When he retired that evening he placed his wallet containing $115 under the pillow ot tho
bed. When he arose in the morning, he forgot to take the money from under the pillow and when he did discover his mistake, he found the money was missing.
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The Bla- Fellows Who Do the Big Work Are Xo Stronger Than Their Stomachs. one or two Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets and tackle the next meal without fear. The average person needs a lot of good food to supply his bulk with sufficient nourishment. And if the food sours from indigestion give the stomach the alkaline effect it needs and you then keep up your strength. The big sturdy fellows who tackle the big jobs of life are no stronger than their stomachs, hence Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are really Invaluable to anyone inclined to indigestion. Eat what you like, pie, cheese, sausage, pickles, fried eggs or baked beans and let these tablets keep your stomach sweet and comfortable. You can g-et a 60 cent boxof Suart's Dyspepsia Tablets of any druggist. Advertisement.
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'Splendid!' Now we can walk np very close without his seeing us.' "This was no place for an argument, so as he started forward I followed, my finger on the trigger of the gun. A3 each cautious step brought us closer and closer and my breath grew shortter and shorter I wondered if Dugmore were ever going to stop! At a little over 20 yards from the big rocklike mass he hesitated and began to focus his camera, while the rhinoceros's ears twitched nervously. My guni which seemed to weigh many pound, came slowly to my shoulder. The next moment there was a snort, a cloud o? dust and a big rhinoceros was cpming straight for us. I set my teeth, held the gun and listened for the click of the camera. Dugmore let him get
well on his feet and under way when a 'click' and a 'bang' in quick succession decided the battle in our favor. At 15 yards distance the rhinoceroa bit the dust, scrambled to his feet, wheeled and made off." J. M. Phillips i3 another photographer who has run the mo6t appalling risks in order to secure photographic studies of such difficult animals as mountain goats. Dr. Hornaday tells of one case in which Pihllips cornered a big male white mountain goat on a high, knife edge of rock and kept him there until he was thoroughly photographed.
Mrs. Lillian Nye
L;i . "HA J. AT r .. . : -
... -:
1
FOR WOMEN ONLY Heed This Mother' Advice South Bend, Ind. "Dr. Pierce's Fav-. orite Prescription is the only medicine ' for women that I can recommend. I found it very helpful during expectancy. I took the 'Favorite Prescrlp-" tion' twice and it was of great benefit to me each time; it gave me strength and kept me in perfect health. I would advise all prospective mothers to give it a trial." Mrs. Lillian Nye, 514 E. Monroe St. , Health is most important to you. Do ndt neglect it. Obtain this Prescription of Dr. Pierce's now, in tablets o rliquid, from your druggist, or send 10c for trial pkg. ot Tablets to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel In Buffalo, N. Y or write for free medical advice. Advertisement.
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