Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 281, 25 November 1922 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., SATURDAY, NOV. 25, 1922.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday by Palladium Printing Co. FaUadhun Bunding. North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, aa Second-Class Mail Mattes. IfmmUR OF THE ASSOCIATED PPKSi TTr Associated Prss 1 exclusively entitled to fh ue for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or net otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local ne-iva published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Rnles of Conduct "Since the beginning of jurisprudence, those who interpret the law and dispense justice have been held in highest esteem by the people in whose name they assumed to function," says the Gncmnati Enquirer. "The just judge, in theory at least, represents the best there 13 in human character, morals and ability. He is not affected by extraneous influences. He is dispassionate. He balances evenly the scales of justice. To him there are neither rich nor poor. He executes the law as the law is. He does not make the law. "In harmony with his high calling the judge must shape his personal and private life. . No stain must attach to the dignity of hi3 position. "But for the most part, the rules of conduct which have guided the lives and acts of judges have been unwritten rules. Now it is suggested that these rules be given concrete form, be crystallized as canons for the guidance of the judiciary. A committee of the American Bar asso
ciation, of which Chief Justice William Howard Taft of the supreme court of the United States is chairman, has begun the work of formulating these traditional canons, to the. end that the public may be informed as to what standards of conduct they have a right to expect of thetr judiciary, and that the judges also may more fuDy realize that there is a code from which they may not safely depart in the performance of their duties. "We have our canons of moral and business ethics, of legal ethics, as adopted by the association years ago for the guidance of practicing lawyers, hence it is well that this supplementary code should be established in permanent form, and so made known to all men.
"Men are men, and it is not always that a
Daniel sits in judgment. There have been corrupt judges, unjust judges, freak judges, politi
cal judges; but, in the main, the bench has been honored by those called upon to interpret the
laws. A fixed code, however, should serve to
emphasize the dignities and virtues of the judicial office and to increase the public esteem with reference to its functioning. " 'Above suspicion and above reproach' has been the motto of the bench from time immemorial. The canons to be incorporated in the new code should give to this exalted guiding principle a new significance in these days when insidious influences are attacking the integrity of courts and judges' x'
IN THE GARDEN OF LOVE AND USEFULNESS By George Matthew Adams
I like to think of life as a garden. Pull of flowers and growing things. . And with workers all about, weeding, planting, watering. Then such a garden! Typifying love and usefulness. Men earniag from the use of their heads and hands, growing strong and keeping fit from the sweat of their brows and from the results of their labor, spreading love about. There is no tragedy quite like that of the one who sits still waiting and wasting his precious stuff. Is there nothing to stir his soul? Even the birds at his feet are busy with their nest building or the care -of their young or in gaining an honest livelihood. On the other hand, what an Inspiration that chap who is seen moving here and there, always on Borne Job, finishing this and entering upon that, challenging failure with an open countenance and meeting success as tho he had an appointment with it. ' - . ' There he goes now, with a package under his arm delivering the goods! You learn all about love by giving it away, exchanging yours for some one's else, and in following out the finest tradition of mankind to serve. And when you are happy, you are useful. That means there is spirit, moving and working within you, stimulating and urging you on, and all the time preparing you better to love and appreciate every new thing of beauty. I like to think of "Pippa" in Browning's poem, who went about her little town singing songs of simple beauty and believing that all the world was good and kind. The world aches for simple comradeship, free from boast.
After Dinnef Tricks x x . x x
Answers to Questions (Any reader can (ret the answer to any question by writing The Palladium Information Bureau, Frederick J. HasK- , In. director, Washington, D. C. This offer applies strictly to Information. The
bureau does not grlve aovice on leigai, medical and financial matters. It does not attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to undertake exhaustive research on any subject Write your questio plainly and briefly. Give full name and address and enclose two cents In stamps for return postage. AU replies are sent direct to the Inquirer.
Who's Who in the Day's News
No. 845 The Two Square Twenty-four matches are laid, at shown in- the drawing, so that they form nine squares. The trick i to re-U-ove eight matches, without disturbing any of the others, and leave two licifect squares. "The spectator will try a treat numbe"r it ways, tut it is rarely that thy will succeed. The trick is done b emovinr.tho eight matches marked X In the drawing. Thus two- perfect squares re left. One of them la the large square formed with twelve matches, while, the other Is a normal, four-match square. The spectators will always try to leave two small squares, which Is impossi
ble. , Copyright, Ittf, ky PvMia Ltderr Companu
Innocently Abroad Changing Dollars to Pounds and Sniffings v
f 5e svs it's two Twoo Poo aj OSVt err v f what DoesjtfTS see-Two HowMJCHtiTHT I Dollars awuI a Poojd amo by s 'I voortm about a v I IN OUR MOMEr ? J lOMETHlMG A.pDCR FlFTr To V t-' LITTLE LE5S TrPt i-! h- iL . - Ll WneTie's That 1 fJf Coms S-.. . -AnP jn T.e n.6mt 7 of paper That Tetxs T Tf I ome OTHefj u a Douar Look hers if roof F.Fry AND HtUJ6 ARE I J V I " '7 J?.fT IVXEAI-I A POUND WOULDtfT I ' ' - ' , w-
Danger of Commercializing Golf Unduly Large Purses for Professionals Regarded as Menace to Popular Outdoor Pastime.
Q. How many embassies In Wash ington are owned by the nations occupying them? C. S. A. Argentine, Belgium, Germany, Great Britain., Italy and Mexico own their embassies. Russia also haB a
fine building in Washington which was the home of the Russian Embassy.
Several legations are housed in mag
nificent buildings owned by tneir governments.
Q. How much of Asia Is controlled
bv outside countries? F. G. W.
A. Asia's area Is about 17.000.000 square miles. Of this, approximately 10,000,000 square miles are under the control of Russia, Great Britain, Holland, France, and the United States. Q. Is there any benefit in draining and filling with fresh water the system of a hot water heating plant? C. B. N. A. The bureau of mines says that It ta hest not to drain the hot water
system as new water put In contains free oxygen which is the active agent corroding the boiler and pipes. After this free oxygen has been absorbed, corrosion stops.' Q. How long have there been mercantile agencies in this country? H. K. A. The business originated In the United States in 1837, following a financial panic, U being recognized that it was necessary tor business houses to obtain better information in the giving of credits. Lewis Tappan was the founder of the first mercantile agency in New York -City.
Q. When playing winter rules at srolf can a player use a rubber tee
through the fairway? G. S. W.
.- A. As a general proposition winter rules give the player the option of im
proving his lie, but do not contemplate
the use of an artificial tee anywhere save on the teeing ground. Clubs may have local rules, however, at variance
with this customary Interpretation of
what Is meant by winter rules.
Q. How long has oil been used to Improve the surface and get rid of
the dust nuisance on roads? D. M. A. The use of oil with a sprinkler to make a water tight highway and lay dust was first proposed in 1S9S by Montgomery Meigs, a civil engineer who was a native of Michigan.
JONATHAN M. DAVIS
Jonathan M. Davis, newly elected.
governor of Kansas, emphasized
throughout his campaign that he is a "dirt fanner." Although at one time
he had an interest
In a bank, and again In a store, he is primarily a farmer and ultimately disposed of his other interests. Davis is of the belief that the working man and
the salaries they claim to get they could pay off the national debt in
three weeks. i
A searchlight has been invented
which will throw a light five miles in the air, but there isn't anything to
see up there when they do.
J... 3w$
not the politicians
put him in office, and he says his legislative program is just a "good.
honest program of
tax reductions"
vonatham oav.s Politically Davis
has been aligned with the Democratic party for many years. He was first elected to public office in 1898, to the
lower house of the state legislature
He served in the house two terms, from 1909-11, and in the state senate for the 1913 and 1915 sessions. This period
covered the administration of Gov. W.
R. Stubbs, four years, and also two
years. 1913-ls, or tnat or tiov. ueorge
H. Hodges, who was the last Demo
cratic governor before Davis.
A man who recently came back to
his old home town, says the Hartford
uourant," said one of tne tnnngs ne
noticed was that Bomeof the dreams
that used to disturb his sleep now
weigh around 200 pounds.
English government will not allow
Siki to fight Joe Beckett. Joe is all they have got in that line and they
want to keep him as long as possible,
Another of the benefits of our mod
ern scheme is to have our July weath
er in November.
Musings For The Evening
They are already beginniag to adver
tise Thrift week, which comes along
in a couple of months. Probably the
Idea is to give everybody time to save up two or three dollars to put In the
bank at that time.
OUR OWN DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE.
The first patent potato peeler was invented in 1811, and by 1907 they
had succeeded in inventing one that
would peel potatoes.
If all the amateur Tetrazzlnls In
apartment houses were bunched they
couldn t sing as well as Tetrazzini.
If a train of 400 freight cars should
run off a bridge and plunge into the
Mississippi River it would be quite wreck. -
Pittsburgh was named in honor of
Sir William Pitt, who was said to be
a great smoker.
If the Rocky Mountains were rolled out flat this country would be much
larger than it is now, but we don' know how much larger.
If all the actors in this country go
"Lessons in Correct English DONT SAY: The negro was once a VASSAL. Let us VAMOOSE! The office has been declared EMPTY. Let's buy this EMPTY lot He baa an EMPTY mind. SAY: The nesTO was once a SLAVE. Let US GO. The office has been declared VACANT, ' Let's buy this VACANT lot. He has a VACANT mind.
CUT THIS OCT IT IS WORTH MOSEY
Cut ou this sup, enclose wun ae anc mail It to Foley &. Co. 2S35 Sheffield A.TC. Chicago, 111., writing your name and address clearly. -You will receive In return a trial package containing Folev'a Honey and Tar Compound for coushs, colds and croup; Foley Kidney PIUs for pains in sides and back: rheumatism, backache, kidrey and Madder ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly cleanslns cathartic for constipation, biliousness, headaches, and slussisth bowels. A. O. Luken Drug Co.. 626-628 Mala. Advertisement. ,
Eat and
Get Thin
This Is turning an old phrase face about, but modern methods of reducing fat have made this revision possible. If vou are overfat and also averse to phvsical exertion; If you still want to reduce vour excess flesh several pounds.
do this: Go to vour drueslst (or write
the Marmoia Company, 4612 Woodward
Mich.) ana
gnve For
him
thl
Avenue. Detroit.
(or send them) one dollar,
modest amount of money the druirgis
will out vou in the way oi saustym
vour ambition for a nice, trim, slim flfture. He will hand you a case of
Marmoia Prescription laoiets, Kcom
onnried in accordance with the famou
Marmoia Prescription), one of which
ytu must take after each meal ana
bedtime until you begin to lose your
fat stearlilv and easily. Then continu
the treatment until your weight is what
vou desire. Marmala Prescription lab
lets are not onlv harmless but really
beneficial to the general health. You
don't need starvation diet or weakenin
exercises. Just bto on eatinsr what yo
like, leave exercising to the athletes.
but take vour little tablet faithfull
and without a doubt that flabby fles
will .ulrlfW fair nntn itself winT9.
leaving behind It your natural self, neatly clothed In firm flesh and trim
muscles. Ad vertiseaent.
Ripplins Rhymes By Walt Mason
ETERNAL VIGILANCE
For years my rusty car I've driven
through dingle, dell and dale, and no
disaster have I given to female or to
male, and undertakers have not thriv
en by following my trail. Since the!
beginning I've been schooling myself to sleepless care; and "Safety First"
is still the ruling that guides me every
where; an instant's lapse, a moment's
fooling, and grief will be my share.
I want to hear no Idle spieling from
people in my wain; I wont be bothered while I'm wheeling along the rustic lane, I watch the highway andxl'm feeling that I am safe and sane. The
railway crossing finds me stopping my
large ancestral dray, and from the
front seat I go hopping to scan the right of way, and if no locomotive's
noDDinz. I drive on. blithe and gay
"Oh, let her go," my friends 'beseecn me, "hit up a decent gait!" From seats behind their railings reach me but have no force or weight; I read the death lists, and they teach me
that speed is charged with fate. Thus far I've sidestepped woe and sorrow my record's truly good; the habit vain some drivers borrow I have sr
far withstood; but who knows what
may chance tomorrow? And so 1 knock on wood.
By FREDERICK J. HASKIIf WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. 25. Is there danger that the game of golf will be commercialized?
The United States Golf association
seems to think that there is, and
through Its executive committee has issued a warning to that effect. The
men who rule affairs in this great outdoor sport want a halt called on the
practice of putting up unduly large purses for professionals to contend
for in tournaments ,and in special matches. Unless this is done the committeemen fear that the money in
terest soon will predominate in the
game, with altogether unwholesome
and demoralizing results.'
In a formal statement issued as a
bulletin from the association the com
mittee predicts that if golf like other
sports is allowed to be commercialized
by the professionals, popular interest In the pastime, which has attained phe
nomenal proportions,' will be null tied to a great extent.
Those who have followed golf developed1 In the United States within the past two or three seasons have
seen the game blossom into a garden
of rare pickings for the men who make
& business of it. Salaries have doubled, trebled and quadrupled, and the money rewards of the winners of the big
championships have increased in even
greater proportion.
Gene Sarazen, who won this year's
national open championship is said
to be taking the money in with both
hands. Wealthy clubs are bidding for
his services as a professional until
he can almost name his own figure,
while he can pick up a thousand dollars or so for an exhibition match any
time he wants it. Not so bad for a
youth who was a caddy boy but a few
easons back!
Walter Hagen, Jim Barnes, Jock
Hutchinson, Joe Kirkwood, and others of the top-notchers are finding golf
a veritable money tree and the large earnings of these leaders have had
a decided tendency to increase tne emoluments of all professionals. A craze for special matches in which at
least one of the stars will display his
skill and prowess to the wonder and
awe of the average club members has spread all over the country, and as the demand for this sort of thing has grown naturally the cash prizes that mus be offered to attract the best of the talent have skyrocketed. Started By English Invasion. 1 An English invasion is held largely responsible for this craze for exhibition contests. All the English professionals are not Scotch, but they are all canny and when they saw the
chance for rich pickings in the United States they were not slow to take advantage of it. Harry Vardon and Ted Ray were about the first, if not the first, team to come over from England to play a series of matches throughout the United States. These eminent
exponents of the ancient and honor able game were managed and routed
like vaudeville stars and in all played some eighty or ninety matches. They received not less than four or five hun
dred dollars for each of these exhibit
ions, It is understood, and the bankroll
they took back to the old country with
them was something to make a pro
fessional there decide that he would
come over here to get a bit of the
easy money if he had to swim tne
blomin Atlantic. .
Duncan and Mitchell and others
soon followed and then the profession
als here found that they, too, could
cut in on the exhibition game and
the process of commercializing golf
was well under way. Wealthy men intent on getting the best of the talent
entered In tournaments that were little more than exhibition affairs began offering larger and still larger prizes, until the climax was reached recently in a tentative proposal to put up $5,000 for; such an affair near Washington. That is something different from the days, not so long ago, when $500 was all that the man got who won the open championship of the United States and the reward for carrying off the English open was approximately the 8a me. And it is that sortj of thing that led the executive committee of the U. S. G. A. to declare that it had watched with misgivings the practice
of offering unusually large purses indulged in by member clubs and. sectional associations for the purpose of of inducing golf professionals to compete in open tournament and exihihitions. Interest In Game
Responsible. The committee says that it Is aware of the keen desire of the ordinary golfer throughout the country to witness the performance of the leading professionals, and assumes that the growing Interest in the game is partly responsible for the money inducements let
tered in the open competitions. This practice cannot be continued without
a- protest from those who have the best interests of the game at hart. "It is therefore earnestly requested," concludes he committee's statement, "that member clubs and sectional associations give this matter their earn-
After Dinner Stories
The Graphio says a little Kinsley
girl was told that polite people did not talk about the'ir ailments In company, or outsMe the family. So when
a visitor asked her if she was well, she Bald, "Well, in the family, I have the stomach ache, but In company I am quite well, thank you." Kansas Notes, Kansas City Star.
Safety First Maxims
An alibi was sprung by ex-Senator
Jonathan Bourne of Oregon in a game at the Waverley course in Portland,
Ore., some years ago. He waa partnered in a four-ball match with the late Wirt Minor, well-known and beloved
by all Pacific Northwest golfers. The Senator, after executing a rotten iron shot which lost his ball in the deep woods, turned impatiently to Wirt and rasped out, "Writie, old man, how many times have I told you where to stand when I play." Minor replied, "Why, Jonathan, I stood squarely behind your back; neither I nor my caddy moved or spoke, and I kept my eyes on the back of your head. Anything the matter with that?" But the Senator was versed in political argument and came back at
once with "All right for the drive, old man, but not for the approach." Judge.
If the road, out toward Grandma's Should lead over trolley tracks Take a. lot of care, Lest you get It there, Where the gobbler gets the ax fWve and let live" is a motto that we imagine many turkeys would be in favor of. Every holy ought to be thankful fo eyes to see, ears to hear and sense enough to ptop for the cars. . The parents that teaches their children the value of a dollar and how to
save it, are giving them one of tht best safety lessons to be found outside of text books. Maybe honesty Is the best policy; but it isn't much better than sensible
driving.
est consideration and in the future when contemplating the staging of such tournaments, that the question of moderate prize money awards be carefully "considered, bearing In mind that if this pastime is allowed to be commercialized by the professionals, as in other sports, the phenomenal Interest now taken by the ordinary golfer in the game will be nullified to a great extent." Dr. Walter S. Harban, dean of Washgolfers and a former U. S. G. A. of
ficial, feels very keenly on this subject. He sees in the commercializing tendency a real menace to golf. "It is a bad thing for the game,'said Drl Harban when the U. S. G. A bulletin was received in this city, "and in the long run it will prove to be a bad thing for the professionals them sieves. Anyone can understand why the big money prizes appeal to the men who make a business of golf. Naturally they want to make all the money they can legitimately, and playing for cash prizes Is one of the legitimate phases of their business. "However, that should never be permitted to become their chief source
or hope of income. Golf needs teach
ing professionals rather than playing professionals, and when the money
rewards for competitions become un
duly large it is inevitable that the professionals will neglect their chief tunc
tion, which is to instruct and assist
CURED HIS RHEUMATISM "I am eighty-three years old and I
doctored for rheumatism ever since 1 came out ot- the army, over 50 year ago. Like many others, X spent monej
freely for so-called 'cures' and I have
read about Uric Acid' until I could almost taste it.. I could not sleep
nights or walk without pain; my. hands
were so sore ana stirr I could not hold & pen. But now I am again In active business and can walk with ease or write all day with comfort. Friends are surprised at the change." You mieht just as well attempt to put out a fire with oil as try to get rid of your rheumatism, neuritis and like complaints bv taking treatment supposed to drive Uric Acid out of your Mood and body. It took Mr. Ashelman fifty years to find
out the truth, tie learn
rid of the true cause
other disorders. an strength from "The I
now oemg aistrmutea tree by an authority who devoted over twenty years to the scientific study of this trouble. If any-reader of "The Palladium" wishes "The Inner Mysteries of Rheumatims" containing facts overlooked by doctors and scientists for centuries past, simply send a post card or letter to H. P. Clearwater. No. 384-E Street. Hallowell. Maine. Send now, lest you forget! If not a sufferer, cut out this notice and hand this good news and opportunity to some afflicted friend. All who enhwill receive It by return mail without any charge whatever. Adver- , trsement.
ALWAYS TIRED NO AMBITION Nervous and Dizzy, Everything Seemed to Worry Me. How I Got WeH
Larwill, Indiana. "My back was so bad I could not do my washing. I waaal-
I ways tired out and
had no ambition, was nervous and dixzy and . everything eeeme d to worry me and I had awful pains in my right side. I felt badly about four years and could not do my work as it should have been done. I saw Lydia EL Pinkharn's Vege- : table Compound ad- I
vertised so much and it did so many peo- ' fie good that I began to take it myself. am feeling fine now and everyone tells ; me they never saw me looking so well. I j live on a farm, do all my work, and have 1
three little girls to take care of. Iam
kimiiiifTTTTTTTmTnil
IM
ALL OVER
CH
BODY
In Pimples. Could Not Work. Cuticura Heals. "I had eczema on my left arm and it spread all over my body. It broke
out in little, red pimples and itched and burned, and I would scratch until the skin would break and scales formed. I could not do my work, and I was in torture day and night.
My mother saw as adrertiaemem for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. I bought more and I used four boxes of Cuticura Ointment, with the Cuticura Soap, when I was healed." (Signed) Mrs. A. W. Crawford, Nebo, 111. Use Cuticura for all toilet purposes. Tli mArrmTa. A "e.ilMi.T,.i nt1M. Btvt. a Mla U, Ku,' Sold mry wW, Soap . OiaaMBtmaadttcTalciaBlk. IMFXaticara Smp skavw witfcovt mtmg.
those who maintain our golf clubs, and devote themselves primarily to barn storming the country. T know of Instances of professionals who won big championships and went into the tournament and exhibition playing to such an extent that they were not at their home clubs more than two or three weeks out of the year. That sort of thing is not fair to the members ot those clubs who have tho right to expect to get instruction whenever. they want it from the professional to whom they are paying a big salary. Moreover, in a short time such professionals lose their proficiency aa instructors." Another side of the problem of commercializing golf ia seen in the charging for admission to the big tournaments and exhibitions. jThis was done in several Instances during the season Just closing, and it has resulted in much crticism. Primarily the object in charging an admission fee was not to make
money, hut to nmit tne gallery tnai inevitably overruns a course whenever and wherever a big contest is on.' However, as" It has worked out it has created funds not needed for the maintainance of the sport, and it has not restricted the number of spectators. Golfing authorities,' accordingly, are coming to the conclusion that thie practice is fundamentally wrong, and that the thing to do is to limit attend ance at (tournaments to the members of the clubs where they are held and to the fortunate few who can secure guest cards from the members. Golf Is a sport, it is insisted, that it should develop players rather than spectators and encourage amateurs rather than professionals.
On account tf the standstill of the flax industry in Ireland, an Investigation is being made with a view to growing flax in Canada.
On Savings
You can start sot. Ingt account with payments of 2So
per week r mora and same can be withdrawn at,
mjnj umo uiwnn paiu wan. ll ana iuiy 1 Sw The People's Home and Savings Ass'nJ 29 North 8th St. Safety Boxes lor Rent
ed how to get recommending this medicine rto nv
of his rheumatism. rortAa rH Vnnm it rill koln s
d recover his rr , j i, V, nner MviKri.. they use it like I do. Mrs. Heebeht
Long, R- R. 3, Box 7, Larwill, Indiana. Many women keep about their work when it is a great effort. They are always tired out and have no ambition. When you are in this condition give it prompt attention. Take Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound, for it is especially adapted to correct such troubles, as it did fox Mrs. Long. Advertisement
BOYS' SUITS All Wool, 2 Pairs Pants S9.50 op You Make the Terms HIRSCH'S 718 Main St.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
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22 DICTIONARIES AH Dictionaries published previous to
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IrlON
ONE
are ooUaf date
