Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 93, Number 1, 1 January 1923 — Page 6
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every Evening Except Sunday by Palladium Printing Company. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Second-Clasp Mall Matter
... MEMBER OP TIIH ASSOCIATED PRESS Th Associated Press is exclusively entitled tr the use for. republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this piper, and also the local TT" Published herein. All rlgrhts of republication of special dispatches herein are a".so reserved.
' . ' Football and Education
The growing; appeal of "football a3 the premier sport of collegiate life is best attested by the large number of spectators that watchecl
'the contests last season, as well as by the gi- ' gantic stadiums erected at many universities to accommodate the eager enthusiasts of the sport. Football easily has become the ranking sport of college life, not only in the interest . which students show in it, but also from a financial 'Standpoint.'""-. '- Operations, of football management go high into the thousands. The popularity of the game s permits the college authorities to set a high admission price, which, however, is gladly paid by : those lucky enough to get tickets. The press -for seats at major games is so great that many ; hundreds are turned away, even the extra -bleachers proving inadequate" for the crowd. The stellar position of football has focused ; considerable attention on the sport, from the 'college faculties. Few professors are staid
THE FALLEN LEAVES TEACH LESSONS. By George- Matthew Adams
Our lives are like the , seasons." Sprouting .and leaving in the early springtime, budding and blooming in the later spring and summertime, ripening and growing into color and fruitage during the days of autumn, falling beautifully and peacefully with the leaves of the late fall, and nestling with the snows of winter near to the warm heart of Mother Nature But to rise again into newer life with the springtime calls of unborn years! The schema of God is that of life. Change, transitions, Journeying but life forever and forever. Dying leaves, dying years, dying bodies but living souls, born anew into billions of minutes and strung into the rosaries of endless centuries. And so I shall not think sadly of these crumpled leaves through which I walk, as I meditate upon the days of singing birds and mild, . mellow winds warmed by the summer sun. Nor shall I regret those days - of mine that have fallen with the leaves, to intermingle with the stories :. of the past. For this the the season or joy Christmas others giving love being warmed into new meanines and new interpretations. Birth a Savior and then a glad New Year! What more inspiring than this symbol of the fallen leaves, God giving re-births to people, telling them new stories about beauty and how it can be applied to make this a better world. I loved the fragrance of the green leaves, my soul thrilled at their chance to browns and golds but as they lay upon the ground and watch them blown by the winds of the north and west, I think of the time when they will rise again more wonderfully gorgeous thanever.
5 Answers io Questions ,. (Any rrader can grt the answer to anv- question bywritinK Tit I'allMclimn Information Kureau. Frederick J. Maskin. director, Washington. I . C. 'This offer Hppli's strictly to information. The lnjreau does not give advice on lesral. medical and financial matters. It does not attempt to settle domestic troubles, iinr to undertake exhaustive research .on any subjeet. Write your - question pi-.iinly and briefly. Give full name and .tddi ss and enclose two cents in stamps for return- postage... All replies are sent direct to the incjulrer. ; ; ;
Q Please give a recipe for date surkc. F. J.' B. .: : v-.. . A Beat three eggs thoroughly' add one sup of sugar; one sup of flour, which contains one teaspoonful of vanilla, one cupful .of broken nut meats .:ml one cupful of date meats which havp been cut in small pieces.' Bake .in thin strips on buttered pans in hot -oven. Cut in strips while warm -and, ;roll in powdered sugar, , , , Q. If a person is born on Thanksgiving day, ; when .would his birthdaj come a?ain on Thanksgiving? Would it be the same number of years apart each time? B. B. B. A. Thanksgiving day will fall on -the thirtieth of November again in 'l ::.!. Owing to the intercalary day, it 'does not fall on the same day every -seven years. ' Q. What is an. animal? J. W. '. A An animal is any member of the group of living beings typically en- , dowed with sensation and voluntary motion, as distinguished from a plant. o. ""is cowpox like smallpox? a b i). - A. The dPDartment of agriculture hts that cowpox i3 infectious and analogous to smallpox in human be- ' hiss, t hough not so dangerous. q. Were many people killed dur ing the earthquake n the Mississippi 'valley about 1J0 years ago? J. T. I..; A. A series of earthquake shocks was filt in that vicinity in 1311-12-13. 'the confieuralion of the territory was greatly changed, and several lakes and islands were created. There are : records of a few deaths since the country at. that time was very sparsely populated. ' q. What is : carrying trade? W. AX.' - - A. Carrying trade is a phrase used -in poliiicel economy and also in commercial transactions. It usually refers to.- - the commerce of different ' co'ntrte with each other. Q What colors would 1 haye to use to make a terra cotta paint ? J. ""' " , . . A. Terra cfotta, as a designanon for a color. la rather indefinite but a " shade which would be designated by that title can be produced by mixing together white, Indian red, and yel low ochre. ' The proportions, of course, will depend upon the shade desired. Q. Where do the courts get the authority or right to declare an act of congress uu constitutional? H. P. N. A. This is a power as unique as it is important. In no other country ' in the world do the courts perform this function. Moreover, it is not a power which the constitution or any of the early state constitutions conferred upon the courts. It was exercised in, a few isolated cases just 'after the revolution, but it may be said to find its firm foundation as a ' princinle of American constitutional law in the opion of Justice Marshall, in 1S03. in the famous case of Marbury vs. Madison. This holds in ef- ' fect,that the constitution is supreme, that congress" itself cannot violate it. Have You Piles? : rr. Lr.onhardfs IIEM-KOIp will rei, frm of Piles auick action in ;ven old stubborn cases. No cutting to erreasy salves a harmless tablet ,tat removes the cause. Money back if fj!ot (satisfied. A. O. Luken Drug Co. f.Advtrtlsenent. (
THE
enough to oppose it as a branch of college ath-! leticc, but many of them believe that players and students become so thoroughly engrossed with it during the season that their studies suffer as a result. These men are asking for its curtailment on the ground of interference with the real purpose for which students attend college, namely,, to acquire an education. Some of them also point out that the danger of professionalism is always more acute when a sport becomes the most absorbing passion of student pastime., They say that stars on some teams receive support from alumni iu ways not quite compatible with the highest sense of honor
and sportsmanship, and that if this were withdrawn a number of brilliant players probably would not be on a college roster. This accusation, which has been made against good players for many years past, may only be a figment of the fancy, and until it is substantiated by proof cannot be adduced as "a reason why football should not be encouraged.
A medium-course probably would be a safe policy for any institution to follow. President
Edwards of Earlham college recently said the policy of that institution is to so operate athletics and physical education as. to make them of the greatest utility in affecting a high academic standing among the students. To accomplish this, he said, it is the purpose, to lessen the emphasis, on intercollegiate sports and increase it on inter-mural activities. . '
Who's Who in the Day's News COL. WILLIAM N. HASKELL Col. William N. Haskell, the man delegated by Herbert Hoover , to han dle the difficult task of administering America's contribution to the faminestricken hordes of Russia, recently returned from that country.. This is his second trip to the United States since he undertook the work in Russia. He made a hasty trip in July to confer with Secretaray Hoover on the future of the re lief administra-j tion's work.' Col. Haskell reports that there have been no deaths in the Volga valley district since April. Haskell, who for the past 20 years has been sort of a "handy man" when America has bad a difficult job to be done, is described by his associates as "a typical American." He is the kind of red-blooded soldier General Pershing ivems to have the faculty of drawing around him. Pershing has called upon him in several emergencies and it is thought that he had something to do with this latest appointment. Born in Albany in 1878. Haskell was called upon just after his graduation from West Point, in 1901, to help organize the Twenty-ninth infantry, U. S. A., authorized for the Philippine war. He served six years in the islands and has been active ever since. His connection with the old Sixtyninth regiment, N. G., N. Y., helped make him famous. It was he who i commanded it on the Mexican border and who took it to France in the "Rainbow" division as colonel of the 165th. Although only a colonel by army system, Haskell has served in such high capacities as chief of staff of the Second army, A. E. F., and high commissioner to Armenia by order of the allied supreme council, where he disbursed more than $20,000,000 in relief supplies aud funds at theend of the war. ' and that the courts, when they take oath to support the constitution, assume an obligation to see that congress does nothing in contravention to it. Evidently it is assumed that the judicial opinion as to what is constitutonal is superior to the legislature. Q. What is the easiest way to cause heat from friction? F. E. A. Probably the easiest way is to use two pieces of hard dry wood. This method was employed by primitive people to kindle Fire. Q. What material is the Statue of Libeity made of? A. M. C. A. It is made of bronze. Few peari divers are able to follow the vocation more than five years. More Men Than Women Have Appendicitis Medical reports show more are more subject to appendicitis, although many sudden cases occur among" women. It can be guarded against by preventing intestinal infection. The Intestinal antiseptic Adler-i-ka, acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel, removing all foul, decaying matter which might cause infection. It brings out matter you never thought was in your system and which may have been poisoning you for months. Adler-ika is EXCELLENT for gas on the stomach. At all leading druggists. Advertisement,
RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND
After Dinner Tricks FI& Z NO. 398. THE ACCORDIAN PACK The performer holds a pack of cards in his hand. Suddenly the pack opens and closes like an accordion, in a very mystifying manner (see fig. 1.) After the trick has been repeated several times, the pack- is laid aside, but no one else can do the trick successfully. The pack is previously arranged by bending half of the cards Inwards., and the other half outwards. They are then stacked on one another, alternately, as shown in fisr. 2. When the pack Is held firmly In the right hand, with the card pressed together, its appearance is normal. When the fingers are relaied, (fig. 2) the pack opens. If the pack is riffled several times after performing the trick the bends will be eliminated. CotvrieM, lift, by Public Ledger Compan After Dinner Stories Mistress Mary, yjat a kitchen! Every pot, pan and dish is soiled; the table looks like the day after a cyclone! What have you been doing? Mary Well, ma'am, blessed if it be my fauit. The young ladies has juc.t been showing me how they bile a pe:-.-tater at. their cooking school. Pearson's Weekly. "There is some discussion," said, thi; young wife, "of the most beautiful shoulders in the worid. I'm not greatly interested in that, but. the mon useful shoulder in the world to me is the one 1 cry on." Birmingham Ag-J-Herald. The story has just leaked out of a local colored fellow who paid a dollar during the Elk carrival to have his fortune told. The lady told him that he loved chicken, that he had won some money on craps and that he had been in jail. The fellow gasped and said, "Mah goodness lady; you hns told me my inmost thoughts." Pratt (Kan.) Republican.
Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON
NEW YEAR PLEDGES Last year I made some pledges, and said of them, "Dod-gast! They can't be split with wedges; I've built these vows to last; I've cut out basement brewing, and smoking pipes and chewing: no more I'll be pursuing the habits of the past." 1 went around relating to all the friends I know how I was busy crating the sins of long ago; on highways and by hedges I showed my dainty pledges, with gold around the edges, -as I went to and fro. "Oh, virtue ie delicious," I paid, to one and all; I've dumped the habits dotty that made my record spotty, I've shaken all things naughty, I'm free from error's pall." -My friends, who once were legion, full soon were hard to find, and round me was a region devoid of humankind,; they hid behind the hedges, they climbed up dizzy .ledges, grown weary of my pledges, which seemed to strike them blind. WTien they beheld me coming, an anguished shriek they gave, and I could hear the drumming of feet upon the pave; they cantered, helter-skelter, to find some nook of , shelter where no old moral neltpr could talk them to the grave. "My friends," I said, "are rabbits; my tale they will not hear; so I'll take on the habits I cast aside New Year; with virtue I have flirted, its snowy walls I've skirted, but when a man's deserted, life is too cold and drear." ASTHMA r No cure for it; but welcome, relief is often brought by VapoRub Over 17 Million Jon Used Yearly RICHMOND GASOLINE More Miles per Gallon Richmond Oil Co. ' 6th SL and Ft. Wayne Ave. For More Pep, Use Palladium Want Ads Pay.
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SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND,
Refugees Knock at Our Doors Great National Flights Mark Sudden Changes of Power -in Countries of Asia Minor.
Br FREDERICK J. II SKIN WASHINGTON. D. C. Jan. 1. The White House and the deparfment of state are being besieged by Americans and others earnestly urging that thousands of Armenian refugees from the Smyrna district be admitted to the United States. " Thret bills are nendj ing in Congress to authorize the ad mission of these unfortunate persons, such legislation being necessary in view of the fact that the existing immigration law provides only for certain fixed quotas. The quota for tins year has been exhausted and, therefore, to admit more Armenians, whether refugees or others, is not possible without legislative relief. Whatever decision is reached by the president or whatever action is taken by congress, so tar as the United States is concerned, it is certain that most of the Armenian refugees will leave their country, as arrangements are being sought whereby some of them may go to South American countries. The point of supreme interest is that history, defying all modern development, persists in repeating itself and bringing about great national migrations and flights. The movement of whole peoples, as the result of military or economic emergencies, semed up until the war to have been a phenomenon of earlier times unlikely to affect modern nations. Ironically, this century has turned back to the most ancient of national exigencies the migration. The Bible tells of important migrations of whole peoples; one in particular of special importance to students of religious history the migration in search of the land of Canaan. In later centuries migrations were not infrequent. Rome was conquered merely by the weight of vast migrations of barbarians. In the first place these were merely raiding tribes seeking fresher pastures, but the later tremendous inundations resulted from the stem necessities of war. The Chinese in the Far East defeated the Huns and the Vandals and in flight they came T ocenne in Prkwo'f FnrrKeU yvcovuo in luiiguju DON'T SAY What WILL we talk about? The man WHO you are speaking to is gone. He is AMONGST the crowd. They were walking AMONG the trees. He is the finest man WHO I ever met. SAY What SHALL we talk about? - The man WHOM you were speaking to is gone. He is AMONG the crowd. They were walking AMONGST the trees. He is the finest man WHOM I ever met. Everything About Cuticura Soar) Suggests Efficiency . ..ww.(U,p,A .,Mtnilltl COAL POCAHONTAS RED COMET CRYSTAL BLOCK Klehfoth-Niewoehner Co. "If Service and Quality Coun'i, Try Us" Phone 2194 N. 2nd & A
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streaming down into the Roman territories. They were more numerous than the Armenians and they did not step to ask any government's permission as the Armenians are doing. But it is certain that if the Armenians were more numerous, they would not stop for permission or passports, but would overrun neighboring countries and even come to the United States if they could get ships to transport them. Nearly every principal migration has been the result of just such an averw helming defeat and massacre as that inflicted on the Armenians at Smyrna. The defeated people, fleeing from homes from which they have been routed, turn by necessity into conquorers, displacing somebody else or crowding into a country along with the occupying inhabitants. The Moors migrated into Spain under military pressure and in turn the Spanish finally created enough pressure to drive the Moors out again. World War Migrations , The end of the European war brought some astonishing migrations. They have not been quite so much en masse as some of the earlier movements, nor even so much so as the proposed migration of Armenians. However, as Eoon as the armistice let down the bars to free movement, thousands of Atstrians and Germans fled from their native lands and sought new homes. American immigration laws were more lax than they are row, just after the armistice. The pres ent restrictive law was passed in order to keep out the Europeans who were coming at the rate of a million a year to our shores. While there was no immediate military compulsion before which they fled, there was an economic pressure, which often is just as strong. The peoples of the former enemy empires foresaw that the post-war years would bring a period of high taxes and hard living. Such a condition was what they fled from. Not only did they come to the United States, but to South American countries. It is an interesting fact that the millions who left the war-stricken countrips oftfr the ormistirp flad Tint in nth. er countries in Europe, but to the. new worli T1 Bought ey sought new fields in which to find homes just as the early barbarians did. They sought a new land of Canaan. - The new immigration laws of the United States checked the inrush here. Until that statute was passed the only check wa sthe capacity of the transAtlantic steamships. The flight has not been stopped; it merely has been checked. It is officially reported that the Italian authorities have on file OYSTERS Fresh New York Counts and Standards Phone 1188 BOYS' SUITS All Wool, 2 Pairs Pants $9.50 up . You Make the Terms HIRSCHS 718 Main St
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some 300,000 applications for embarkation to the United States, The Italian quota for the year has been exhausted. These applications are awaiting the begining of a new year. It is a waiting list. In earlier times, before the passport laws became possible of enforcement and when alfpersons were more warlike than they are now, these 300,000 would all be armed and would come whether anyone said they could or not Another apposite case of migration under economic pressure is that the African slaves following the American Civil war. The slaves were under what amounted to a military enslavement comparable to 1he slavery imposed by such conquerors as Alexander the Great and other early princes on the peoples they defeated. When the issue of war made good the emancipation proclamation of President Lincoln, the restraint was removed and a substantial migration of negroes back to Africa resulted. The Republic of Liberia on the west coast of Africa was founded by this migration. Occasional v a small followup migration of these same people takes place. Every few years a group of American negroes will join together, charter a ship and effect a wholesale removal to Liberia. Strong representations have been made to President Harding and members of congress to admit the Armen ians of whom approximately 376,000 were evacuated from Smyrna by the Turkish conquerors on short notice. Armenians who owned much property When in Need of MoneySee Us PRUDENTIAL LOAN & INVESTMENT COMPANY 20 S. 8th t. Phone 1727 Start the New Year With "When" Clothes Dignified Charge Accounts WHEN STORE, 712 Main
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RICHMOND
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
New Universities Dictionary 1 . m
22 DICTIONARIES IN ONE AQ Dictionaries published previous to this one are out of date
Musings for the Evening One senator says Europe ,4a about to get what iscoming to her. She already has what is coming o uB, - New York hotel chefs say U Js too bad that more American boys ar not going In for the culinary art. And they might add that it is still worse that no American girls at all are going in for it. V Napoleon's bureau has just been sold for $200,000, but most people know where you can buy a whole bedroom suit for less than tkat, even on installments. In the terms of Coue, It seems as though those dissatisfied European nations are every day and in every way getting bitter and bitter.
I were divested overnight of their pos sessions and ordered to get out. The President recently was told of a case I of a Smyrna merchant conservatively i estimated to be worth $20,000,000, who, within a few days of the evacuation, j was dressed in rags, begging bis'bread j in the streets. ' The observations of the Secretary of the Treasury Mellon on the immigra- ; tion problem have a distinct bearing on the decision as to whether or not iihese Armenians shall be admitted. ; The secretary has said that the country needs workers and that more forjeigners should be admited to fill the ; ranks of unskilled labor. He objects, ! however, to the admission of traders, i Dealers and traders, he says, are not j producers. They do not make anything j but merely deal In goods other have made. Mr. Mellon said this distinction applied particularly to southern : Europeans and thoe of the Near East, i His remarks were not aimed at the : Armenians, but it Is a familiar fact that the Armenians are almost entire- ; ly traders rather than producers and have been from the earliest times. 1 is the view of such students of affairs; as Mr. Mellon that a. numerous migration of Armenians would resemble in some ways the earlier migrations which resulted in conquests of the countries visited. They would, by entering trade, climb to $he unpopular j position of middlemen, which is alj ready considered overcrowded. Comj mercially they might effect an imporjtant conquest. To Cure a Cold snOneMay Take 4 tablets f$ Be sure you get fJTi I ml i Price 30c. Order from Your Grocer ZWISSLER'S Raisin Bread On Sale Each Wednesday COAL CO. How to Get It For the Mere Nominal Cost oi Manufacture and Distribution 3 Coupons - and 98c secure this NEW authentic Dictionary, bound in black seal grain, illustrated with full pages in color. ( Present or mail to this paper three Coupons with ninety-eight cents to cover cost of handling, packing, clerk hire, etc Add for Postage: MAIL Up to 130 miles .07 ORDERS Up to 300 miles .10 WILL For greater disBE tances, aslc PostFILLED master rate for Z pounds. '
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