Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 93, Number 5, 5 January 1923 — Page 6

i

PAGE SIX

THE, RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND,. FRIDAY, JAN. 5, lazu.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM P16 created fcy means of a reflection of his ac-

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, a3 Second-Class Mail Matter .

MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It o' not otherwise credited in this papr, and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.

The Roosevelt Memorial Saturday is the fourth anniversary of the death of Theodore Roosevelt. His rugged and

Iitical life, which has been surpassed only by that of Washimrton and Lincoln.

The nation has not forgotten his contributions to our "development. Many memorials attest to his popularity and to the gratitude of the

worth. Shortly after his death a group of women formed a national association to purchase the

Cite UX IllO uu iiijUiM-c xii itrr xuir jr. xiii structure has been acquired by the association, and the following objects have been set out as

: those to which the House should be dedicated:

(1) To visualize the childhood environment

- oi xneouore xiouseveii,, ms nome, anu uie in

fluences which played their part in the formation of his character, and in the creation of his tastes

and asprations.

(2) To represent the personality of Theodore Roosevelt, the man, by means of the objects which surrounded him, the books which he liked and those which he wrote, the documents which

tivities upon his country, and his time.

(3) To interpret Theodore Roosevelt, the

child and man, for the benefit of the youth of America, in order .that they shall become impregnated with the essentials of his character, and so develop a higher type of citizenship than

has ever been known. The Roosevelt shrine will be more than a depository for objects which will recall his memory. From it will be reiterated the principles of citizenship and nationalism which he believed to be the very bulwark of our national existence. From it are to Radiate influences that will impress upon old and young the everlasting value of our institutions to uplift and improve mankind. The association will direct an appeal to the youth especially, realizing that the boys and girls are the citizens of tomorrow and upon them de

volves the duty of transmitting the ideals of

American citizenship. A statement of the association says:

. "The plans for its work are of such nature

that it believed the existence of Roosevelt House cannot but have a decisive effect in forming the character of the coming generation. The value to our country of such an achievement is beyond the power of calculation. An influence, working,

as will this, to stimulate in the youth the will to be self-respecting, to be honest, to-be morally

clean, to be helpful, to be industrious, and to serve community and country without selfish purpose, such an influence cannot fail to make

of our children better men and women, and of

our. people a greater nation. Than this, Theo

dore Roosevelt could hardly have wished a more

useful and fitting memorial.'

HOW WE GROW STRONG By George Matthew Adams

Burke once wrote this very pungent sentence: "Our antagonist is our helper. This amicable conflict with difficulty obliges us to an intimate acquaintance with our pbject, and compels us to consider it in all its Relations. It will not suffer us to be superficial." The great general never minimizes his foe. As we are called upon to defend ourselves, we are made to study every intimate value within us. We are taught to eliminate neglect. Just the minute that we begin to boast in our hearts of our strength, we shake hands with failure and court weakness. ' We grow strong by arming ourselves against all difficulties. Strife, misfortune, disappointment, even failure, sharpen every faculty within us and teach us life's lessons anew. And we have to keep going to school all the time. We really never grow up in this little life. There isn't time! So we should be economical with our opportunities using those for development that seem to tell us of the most good to the largest number, in the quickest time. ' When you feel that your strength has not been wasted, there Is a new urge at once born within you. Shun ease as you would a dreaded foe. Welcome the building force that hardship creates!

Answers to Questions' (Anv reader can pet the answer to mv question bv writing The Palladium Information Bureau, Frederick. J. Haskln. director, Washington. P. C. This offer applies strictly to information. The bureau does not give advice on letral. medical and financial matters. It does not attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to undertake exhaustive research on anv subiect. Write your question plainlv and brieflv. Give full name and address and enclose two cents In stamps for return postage. All replies are sent direct to the inquirer. Q. How many immigrants have come to this country and when was immigration largest? P. A. A. No trustworthy immigration records were kept in the early history of the republic. From 1783 it is estimated that the number of immigrants to this country was about 4,000 a year until 1794 when the number was increased to 10,000. Then it dropped to about 6,000 until 1806, when it was re

duced to practically nothing for the succeeding 10 years. In 1816 it was about 8,000 and the next year, 22,240. From Oct. 1,1819, a record has been kept, but up until 1856 it included all "alien passengers arrived" and did not

Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON

distinguish between immigrants andJ jbey want to .cleave us with an ax col

MEDICAL HELP There are so many kinds of docs, I scarce know what to do, when fell disease my system rocks, the rheumatiz or flu, the measles or the chickenpox, and I am sad and blue. One doctor feeds us hefty pills that have a mothball taste, and liquid medicine he spills inside one's bulging waist; his potion either cures or kills, and does the trick in haste. Another laughs at

pills and dope in loud and strident tones; he says when sick our only

hope is kneading of the bones; he is

a man of breadth and scope, and viselike hands he owns. One doctor is a crank on air, fresh air, he says, will heal; for spavined limbs or, falling hair, fresh air and linseed meal; for any ailment, anywhere, ozone's his endless spiel. "Suggestion," says another doc, "will sound disease's knell;

if you have cylinders that knock, come see me where I dwell; I'll spring suggestions in a flock, and they will make you well." Some doctors keep within their shacks sword, cleaver, saw and lance and when we've spasms in our backs, and to their wigwams prance,

inner

Tricks

After D

t f M FIG. 1 R-q i 4- 1 I I FIG. 2-

So. SCO The Sixteen Match Trick Here la one of the cleverest of match problems. Sixteen matches are laid as shown In figure 1, so that they form five squares. The trick Is to move three matches and reduce the number of squares to four. Figure 2 shew which matches are moved (indicated by the dotted linen), nd Illustrates the final formation of the four squares.

vpnmo

Movie of a Woman Beautifying Her Face

AvPLIES A CLAYiSH Substance To The FAce SAltS TO REMAIN ON '

FACe.FOJ HALF. HOP ft

face covered with the Greenish claY... observes Self; inIgla-ss. Dubiously.

1 1

a.fter. ten minutes face feels -some-; Thimg uke.this

. I cti. no, n. t. thu -

IN TvaJEkTCY MINUTES it Doesn't feel like or look like a face - S MiGHTV 3.AO OF PRWACV" ..... .

FANS FACE IN ORDER To DRY CLAY.... FACE.BECINS To PUCKER,;

s. :v

tfsj 25 MlisJUTES face FCELS LIKE A JWiET CURRAMT WOULDN'T VJftWT CHILDREN OR Hus e a n d jo s eeH e r .

A

I 1 I

BUT- WHEN The- HALF HOUR 13 UP AMD IT IS, ALL WASHED OFF---J OH Hl B AO Y j

I) A j

W Til M T .13

lj I i re

Skyscraper Jails Planned President of Prison Association Believes New Style Has Many Advantages Over Old One.

passenger, nor ma it ineiuae immigration overland from Canada and Mexico. This record, which is inaccurate as explained, shows a total of 33,630,104 from the year ending Sept. 30, 1820, to the year ending June 30, 1920. The .large.-" immigration in any one year

was 1.285,349 for the fiscal year 1907. (

Q. What is the title of the ruler ot Danzig? H. E. N. A. This is known as a Free City and the ruler is the High Commissioner. Q. "What is the origin of the printer's abbreviation stet? R. C. A. This is not an abbreviation. It is the third person, singular, subjunctive of the Latin .verb stare, and i3 translated literally let it stand. . Q. What state has. the most and largest ranches? R. F. A. The bureau of census says that the states having the greatest number of farms of 500 acres or over are: Texas, which has 23,977 of such size;

North Dakota, 22.38R; Montana, 17,064; South Dakota, 16,667; and Kansas, 16,301. Q. Whv is pig iron given this name? K. T. L. A. Pig iron ia so called because the molten metal is run into a long mass with shorter pieces attached to it at right angles. The long pieces are called the sow, and the ehorter are called the pigs. ' Q. How did the English possessive ease originate? H. P. A. The Grammar of English Grammars says that the English possessive case unquestionably originated in that form of the Saxon genitive which terminates in es, examples of which may be found in almost any specimen of the Saxon tongue: as, ' "On II erodes daguni," "In Herod's day;" "Of Aarones dohtrum," "Of Aaron's daughters," "Saint Luke, 1, 5. This ending was sometimes the same as that of the plural; and both were changed to is or ys before they became

what we now find them. Thi3 termination added a syllable to the word. The apostrophe was probably introduced to

shorten it.

lecting in advance.- The doctors have so many schools, I scarce know which to choose, when fever heats or ague cools my weary bones and thews; so many pills, so many tools, so many curlycues!

Memories of OH Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today

Musings for the E

The wheel of fashion has swung

around in Paris again to the waistline modes of the Victorian era. Whalebone corsets are again the vogue and the pinched ladies are again very much in evidence. While a corset is merely a matter of form, as some one has said, it is believed sensible women who value their health and the impression they make upon the male mind will give this corset idea the gate. A lady with the outlines of an antique Sevres vase encased in an inflexible cast will not make much headway in the strenuous business world toward which so many are turning, and as for the modern dancing the corset would put a crimp in that forever.

That the farmers of Wayne county were doing charity work in Richmond in many case, was the statement, of Township Trustee James Howarth. "The farmers are always bringing aid to the poor families," said Howarth. "Some of the families who apply for aid here have informed me that they were supplied with potatoes and other vegetables by farmers."

MEDIUM BROWN HAIR looks best

of all after a Golden Glint Shampoo. Advertisement.

Pile Sufferers Don't become despondent try Dr. LeoTihardt's HEM-ROID no greasy salves no cutting a harmless remedy that 13 guaranteed to quickly han- " h all misery, or costs nothing. A. G. Luken Drug Co. Advertisement.

Lessons in Correct English Don't Say I have drunk two TEACUPSFUL of tea, I have put two TEASPOONSFUL of medicine ip the glass. Use three CUPSFUL. . Bring TWOCUPS full of water. Say I have drunk two TWOCUPFULS of tea. I have put two TEASPOONFULS of medicine in the glass. Use three CUPFULS.

Bring me TWO CUPS full of water

(Written in two word3 )

Headaches from Slight Colds Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets relieve the Headache by curing the Cold. A tonic laxative and germ destroyer. The box bears the signature of E. W. Grove. (e sure you get BROBO.) 30c. Advertisement.

Getting a satisfactory cabinet In the average European scheme of affairs is somewhat like getting a new hired girl in this country. You fire the old one for incompetency, send for a new one and get one just like the one you have discharged. t I'M STILL LOOKING FOR A roommate who doesn't snore. A blackface comedian who doesn't imitate Al. Jolson. A guy who doesn't sing while in the bath tub. A patent medicine that doesn't cure everything. A beauty chorus.

A homely man on a collar ad. A picture of John Barrymore with his hair cut. A movie actor who doesn't take himself seriously. The guy who made the first saxophone. Guy Purcell.

ones

After Dinner St

A man had been fishing patiently by the side of a large pond for an hour, and his efforts had been watched by a villager. "I say," said the fisherman at last, "do you know if there are any fish in this pond?"

wen, said the villager, "if there are they must be very small, for before the heavy storm came yesterday there weren't no water in that there

Peter's father had brought home some cloth for an overcoat, and hnth

he and mother praised it highly. Little Pete eyed it thoughtfully, espe

cially on ine inner side, which led his mother to ask him how he liked it. "I don't care so much for the. natl

tern on the inside," said Peter

"What are you worrying about that

ior

wen, mats tne side I'll have to wear on the outside some day" Klods-Hans (Copenhagen).

Br FREDERICK J. II A SKIN WASHINGTON, D. C, Jan. 5. A skyecraper jail has been suggested for Chicago. Heretofore public buildings have been allowed to spread recklessly over valuable city ground, in Greek temple fashion. But the skyscraper church and the skyscraper school have made their appearance In New York, and the prospect is that eventually even the jail in a big city must take up as little space on earth a3 possible. If the jail must accommodate as many guests as a medium sized hotel, then it must, like the hotel, spread itself vertically. The newest thing- in jails, designed by H. H. Hart, president of the American Prison association, saves consid

erable city space. And the designer points out that if. with the growth of a city, even a nine-story jail should become uncomfortably crowded, extra stories can be added. The jail can

thus be enlarged without the usual trouble and expense involved when adjoining property must be acquired. But besides taking up very little

ground, this new etyle jail provides remedies to some serious conditions which obtain in county jails all over the country. The thinly populated county may have no need for a ninestory, four-wing structure to hold 600

offenders, but as a rule the little one-

story county jail is characterized by the same conditions that cause city jails to be regarded as veritable schools of crime.

In most places the person who is

accused of breakin? the law is taken

into custody and herded in with a mot

ley collection of prisoners, some of

them "old timers," some diseased, some

with poisoned minds. The accused is

supposed to, be treated as innocent until he is proved guilty, but if for any reason Hhe is not let out on bond he must stay in jail, and with these associates, until his trial, months later, perhaps. In a progressive metropolis like Chicago, a suspect is lockpd 'n a cell with two or three other men for 20 hours out of each 24, Mr. Hart points out. And he adds that "it is impossible to distribute the. men according to their habits of cleanliness and decency." Mr. Hart further says that in most of our jails there is inadequate space for exercise, and no useful way is provided for the prisoner to employ his time. Clinical and hospital provisions are rarely satisfactory, though the majority of jail inmates need medical, surgical, dental, or psychiatric treatment. Evil of Bad Associations. But most serious of all is the first evil mentioned, that the prisoners are not carefully segregated and classified. The result of this is that the new prisoner, who may be never legally committed to jail, or who may be serving a short term for a minor offense, is often so influenced by the stories and

opinions of his fellow inmates that he leaves the jail to start on an intentionally crooked career. And yet, Mr. Hart says: "The county jail ought to be the most reformatory institution in the land. It receives offenders at the beginning of their careers, before they have become hardened and confirmed criminals. More can be accomplished for the reformation of a young criminal in the first week of his imprisonment than by six months' confinement in a state prison after he has become a confirmed law breaker." In Mr. Hart's skyscraper plan, the jail is connected with the criminal court building of the citv. This court

building is a square structure three or four stories high, and above the roof of that the jail rises in the form of a cross with a central rotunda. The public elevators and stairways of the court building stop at the top floor of the court. To go on up to the nine jail floors it is necessary to pass a gratiil and guarded passageway in order ) reach the jail elevator? Mr. Hart slows that if prisoners on the upper floors were to hold up the jail elevator they would have to storm the

guarded gate before they could reach an elevator to the ground. The difficulties that a prisoner would have to overcome to escape from such a building would be more hazardous than those faced by Jack Shep-

pard who battered his way out of Newgate prison, or by Casanova who escaped from the inquisition prison. Sheppard worked six hours going through various rooms of the prison, and making great clatter with falling bricks and the resounding clang oL. an iron bar bursting through heavy doors. Such a night's work would be impossible in a' modern skyscraper prison

with walls not nearly so thick as those of old Newgate. In prisons nowadays bolts and locks are as unobstrusive as

possible, but they are efficient. The short cell wings of the skyscraper jail would be constantly supervised from the central rotundas, and the jail elevator would make it possible for the guards to gather quickly in an emergency. Escape from the windows would be equally difficult. There are six feet of wall space between the sill of each window and the top of the window below, in' Mr. Hart's plan, and they are designed to give the least possible opportunity for a foothold. Human Fly Could Not Escape. Escape by ropes would be practically impossible because of the height of the building. Eut if a human fly could swing down a rope he would stand slim chance of getting away. The outer walls of the prison would be illuminated at night, and four guards on the roof of the criminal court building con

stantly keep the entire exterior of the jail in view. Writh the jail located conveniently In the heart of a city it might seem likely that signals would be exchanged between prisoners and friends in nearby buildings and that outsiders could look into the jail rooms. Mr. Hart explains that the wing arrangement makes It possible for the windows of cell3 to be 350 feet from any winders in nearby buildings. Security is carefully provided for by

Mr. Hart, since the jail's primary purpose is to hold prisoners safely. But Mp. Hart is more interested in progressive features of his plan. Thus, instead of the "bull pen," a corridor or court into which prisoners crowd in

the exercise period, the skyscraper

jail has a roof garden. Here the pris

oners can get outdoor exercise without being observed by onlookers. Part of the roof would be closed in, so that athletic games might be played in cold weather, and a strong netting around the open section would prevent attempts at escape or suicide. Prisoners who have not been convicted may not be made to work in a jail, but many grow tired of idleness or worried over their families. These unconvicted prisoners would welcome a chance to earn something for themselves or for their families. The new style jail has a shop where they may work. It also has four school rooms

where prisoners may be graded to

;to some extent and given instruction.

Clinics, hospital wards, and an audi

torium are other features of the Institution. Individual cells eliminate the vil of having prisoners lodged together indiscriminately, and the arrangement of the cells is such that inmates can be grouped into as many as 30 separate classes. This facilitates observation of certain classes of prisoners, and makes it possible for them to work or take exercise in specially selected

groups. Suspects need not come into contact with old offenders. The sane do not associate with the insane. This plan, it should be understood, is for a jail, where accused await trial, and where minor offenders serve terms. Penologists have long ago shown that the state is not improving social conditions if it releases its prisoners in worse mental, physical, or moral condition than when it confined them, and this is particularly true as applied to jails. ' Mr. Hart makes an indictment, of our cities at least, when he says that "no metropolitan city of the United States has yet succeeded in constructing a satisfactory jail for the detention of prisoners awaiting trial."

WOO! DYE WORN, FADED THINGS NEW

Sweaters Skirts Coats Waists

Dresses Kimonas Curtains Coverings

Draperies Ginghams Stockings Everything

Bank

Tell-Tale Symptoms of

.Woman's Ills Every woman who suffers from backache, headaches, -dragging-down pains, nervousness, irregularities, displacements, irritability. or despondency should recognize in such symptoms some derangement of her system which should have attention before some more serious ailment develops. These conditions are often evidenced by a sallow complexion, dark circles under the eyes, lnssitude and sleeplessness. For nearly fifty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege

table Compound has been pre-eminent-

anker s friends h ated

"Twelve years- ago I became afflicted with stomach trouble which steadily became worse. I frequently became prostrated with colic attacks

and bloating. My doctors wanted to

operate for gall stones. I wished to

avoid an operation and on advice of a

mend tried Mayr's Wonderful Remedy with excellent results as since taking it about 2 years ago my trouble has entirely disappeared." it removes the catarrhal mucous from the intestinal tract, and allays the inflammation which causes practiclly 11 stomch, liver and intestinal ailments, in-

eluding annendicitis. One i n; a -will i A. O,

convince or money refunded at Clem

Why Suffer from Rheumatism

Diamond Dyi

es

Each 15 cent package of "Diamond Dyes" contains directions so simple any woman can dye or tint her old, worn, faded things new, even if she has never dyed before. Buy Diamond Dyes no other kind then perfect home dyeing is guaranteed. Just tell your druggist whether the material you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether it is linen, cotton or mixed goods. Diamond Dyes. never streak, spot, fade or run. Advertisement.

When Our Local Druggist Sell Rhenma

on Money-llack Plan.

If you suffer from torturing rheumatic pains, swollen, twisted joints, and suffer intensely because vour system is full of uric acid, that dangerous poison that makfs thousands helpless and kills thousands years befor-e their time then you need liheuma, and need it now. Start taking It today; in 24 hours it will begin to act on kidneys, liver, stomach and blood, and you can sincerely exclaim: "Good riddance to bad rubbish." Many people, the most skeptical of skeptics right in this citv and in the

country nereaDours, oiess the day when

ijuhwi urus to. wun character-

lv successful in -overcoming such con

dHions, and it is now recognized every-irhistlethwaite Drug Co. and druggists where as the standard remedy for worn-1 v , .. " 60

an's ills. Advertisement.

everywhere. Advertisement.

aiiiicipn ai a smau price and guaranteed money refunded if not satisfied. If you have rheumatism get Rheuma today. Advertisement.

BETSY ROSS BREAD . Fresh Dally at All Groceries

The loaf with the good fashioned taste.

oldj

ZWISSLER'S 28 S. 5th St.

K

esina

for that skin eruption

You don't have to wait to know that Resinol Ointment is going to overcome your skin trouble. It gives such quick relief from the itching and burning and so generally succeeds in clearing away the eruption that, with Resinol Soap, it is the standard skin treatment in thousands of homes. , Resinol products sold by all druggists.

-if t Off with Fingers

Doesni nurt a bit! Droo UtUa

! Treezone" on an aching corn, InstantI ly that corn stops hurting, then shorti ly you lift it right off with fingers, i Truly! j Your druggist sells a tiny bottle o! : Treezone" for a few cents, Bufficiejj; , to remove every hard corn, soft corn. ; or corn between the toes, and th ' callouses, without soreness or Irrita" . tioa. Advertisement

GOOD, CLEAN COAL PHONE 3165 RICHMOND COAL CO.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM

New Universities

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22 DICTIONARIES IN ONE

AH Dictionaries published previous to this one are out of date

.3

1

t