Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 93, Number 18, 20 January 1923 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., SATURDAY, JAN. 20, 1923.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM -'AND SDN-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 fo republication of all news dispatches credited to It o rot otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local rews published herein. All rlgrhfs of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. K 1 " " Hatred Hatred is a venom that paralyzes friendly connections, stifles neighborly co-operation and deadens the unselfish impulses whereby communities are knit together closely for the attainment of a common objective.

In the individual it is the forerunner of animosity which culminates in controversy, rancor and strife; in communities it severs old associations, arouses distrust and lines up" faction against faction until the entire citizenship is in the throes of unrest. When hatred takes possession of a man's heart he quickly loses the sympathetic attitude Vhich formerly enabled him to befriend the unfortunate, to ,be tolerant of the opinions and beliefs of . others, and to practice forebearance in the face of provocation and antagonism. Base influences, suggested by the power of evil, suppress the nobler instincts of the soul until his whole moral nature undergoes a change

for the worse, leaving him capable of performing

deeds which formerly he would have shunned and, despised as if they were pestilence. ' A heart full of contempt for mankind finds little enjoyment in communion with upright men and women who dedicate their lives unselfishly to the elevation and succor of all mankind. It cannot -share the joy with which they help all their fellow men, and it rebels against the broad

humanitarian motives that prompt their performance of works of love and mercy. The creation and promulgation of hatred in all its forms is one of the most detestable enterprises in which one can engage. Not only does it give opportunity to exploit spite work and animosity, but it arduses a natural and justifiable resentment in the hearts of the men and women who are the victims of the malicious attacks. Gradually they, too, lose control over their better selves, hatred usurps love, and recriminations and bitterness are felt in their hearts against the persons who instigated the malicious attacks

against them. And so by perceptible gradations, hatred spreads from individual to individual, until the community is torn by factions and

divided into hostile camps whose members deride, despise .and mistrust each other. No community in which factions are breeding hatred is able to make progress. The unity of action and the singleness of purpose, prime requisites for growth, are stifled. No one trusts his neighbor or business associate. No one takes hold of a community work with vim and energy, inspired by the feeling that what is good for one is good for all. No - one develops or cherishes a cordial and confiding spirit for the other. The source of untainted community ac

tion, poisoned by malice, polluted by prejudice and bigotry, and enervated by distrust and suspicion, no longer prompts to action and inspires to attainment. Internecine hatred has destroyed the highest and best quality of civic growth mutual confidence.

The ultimate consequence of hatred inexorably destroys the basic element in community development, for confidence of man in man is the dynamic force in the structure of social life and business. Weaken it by teaching hatred, or attempt to supplant it with calumny and distrust, and you have removed that basis upon which men from time immemorial have banked their faith and gone forth to victory.

After Dinner Tricks

i - s---" 1 ' POINT , JT BROKEN FIC 2

THE DROP-OUT LIFE By George Matthew Adams.

- It is good that, though, human beings have so much in common, an uncommon human being is not common. Every once in a while I come across someone 'who makes me marvel at human nature itseir. I have a friend in mind who seems to me to be one of the marvels among humans. He seems to know everything yet he is not what one would call a "learned men." He had nothing -but a common school education. He never has walked into the halls of a college. And yet, he is a scientist, an artist, an engineer, a fine writer, a biologist, a man who knows the staVs as a boy knows his alphabet, a remarkable builder with his hands, a poet, a man, and a boy! Here" is a man who has carried the experiences of his entire life all along the way with him. And though he is now in middle life, he is still in youth. And all because he has dropped out of his life nothing from all his experience that has been worth while. The drop-out life is one which becomes more and more barren as it increases in years. When its youth is gone, its youth is dead. And so in all things. My library grows in size with the years. I cast loving eye3 down the long rows of books as they brightly stand on end In their places along the shelves. As the number increases and space becomes a prob, lfm, I almost take each literally by the hand and wonder if I may not now part with this one or that but no, are they not all my friends? I cannot drop out a single one from my association. Our lives are somewhat like a library. On its shelves are the memories and experiences of the years. And all very dear and intimate to us. Why should we live a drop-out life?

Answers to Questions (Anv reader can get the answer to anv m'jestion bv writing The Palladium Information Bureau. Frederick J. HafkIn. director, Washington, D. C. This offer applies strictly to information. the bureau does not grive advice on lPtral, . medical and financial matters. It does not attempt to settle domestic troubles. -nor to undertake exhaustive research on anv suMect. Write. your question "plainly tnd briefly. Give full name and address and enclose two cents in stamps for return postaee. All replies are sent direct to the inquirer. Q. ' What is the lightest' substance known? H. G. A. Hydrogen is the lightest. Atmospheric air is 14 times the weight of hydrogen. Q. What is the difference beteen a meadow and a pasture? N. E. D.

A. Pastures differ from meadows in the character and habits of the plants which grow upon them. Whereas meadow grasses and other plants are us-ually tall-growing and ready to "cut al lat one time, the herbage of pastures is generally low-growing and the 4 various species reach maturity at various times throughout the season. Q. Is it good form to say "Mrs. Doctor Hall has returned?" C, B. A. There is no expression more provincial and hence more to be avoided than "Mis. Doctor Hall" or "Mrs. General Grant." Her husbands occupation has no effect upon the mode of address. Should the woman be a physician, the would be addressed "Doctor Hall." Q. What state first recognized osteopathy? J. G. R. A. Osteopathy received its first legal recognition by the legislature of Vermont in 1S96. Q. Is 1he dromedary noted for its speed? T. V. A. A. Originally, the name was given io a camel of unusual speed, especially bred and trained for riding. Today 1be Arabian or one-humped camel is known as a dromedary as distinguish

ed from tho Bactrian or two-humped

camel. Q. When will Easter Sunday be this

year? A. O. " A.. Easter will fall on the first day of April. Q. When were the first cotton mills erected in the north and south? W. T. L. A. The first cotton mill In the United states was that of Samuel Slater, established at Pawtucket, R. I., in 3791. It is known as -the Old Mill. Mr. Ramage, widow of a South Carolina planter, was the first to undertake tho establishment of a factory in that faction. The mill was erected at .Tames It-land near Charleston, in 17S7. Three years later a( factory was built at Statesboro, S. C.

Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON

Who's Who in the Day's News

No. 383 A Trick With a Point The following is a clever little joke that will cause much amusement and will serve well to work on some one who "knows it all." The performer takes a pencil and states that it is a magic pencil. He very solemnly writes the word "Abracadabra" on a piece of Taper (Fig. 1). He turns to the spectator and asks him if he could write the word 'correctly within fifteen seoons. Of course the reply is "yes." The performer then states that the magic pencil will work against the spectator's will, and that he cannot write the word within the required time. He takes his watch and says "Go" at the same time living the pencil to the spectator. The latter, however, finds himself unable to write the word. The reason is very simply. Before doing the trick, the performer broke the point of the pencil. It still, however, fet in the wood, so that he could write the first word fFig. 2). In handling the pencil to the spectator, the performer retained the point between his tin if era, and hence the victim was unable to write "Abracadabra" or any other word. Copvrivht. 1913, by Pttblio Ledjer Company

Presidential Possibilities-Ill. Herbert Hoover Mentioned as Having Qualifications for Presidency by Many of His dmirers.

PEDIGREE "I have blue blocd," said Hully Chee, while seated on a mortgaged tor; "I have a princely'pedigree, and

low-born people I abhor; with kingly

blood in every vein, a cheap descent gives me a pain; my fathers camped

on England' plain, with William H.,

the Conqueror." I listened while he told the tale of great ones in bis line of sires, of baron in their -coats of

mail, and Homers with immortal lyres, i and to the laundryman I said, "No wonder Chee has haughty tread; his

pedigree is writ in red that sort of thing the world admires" "Ods prunes," the laundryman replied, "he v'ews with scorn plain gents and skirts; he is so full of misfit pride it often chokes him up and hurts; of forbears grand he'll talk all day, but I would nothing caustic say if he would only call and pay my bill for laundering his shirts, t I've chased this Hully Chee around, while bitter sweat ran down my face; behind him I have pawed the ground, like some prize sprinter in a race; when-1 pursue him through the mud I do not care for his azure blood, for sires who lived before the flood I think his conduct a disgrace. We'ie mostly low-born skates in town, but still we do things up in style; whea we owe coin we plank it down, and try to do it with a smile; I've no respect for princely wight if he won't pay his bills on sight; I'm going after Chee tonight, and chase him round another mile."

MISS CAMILLA TREADWELL

Miss Camilla Treadwell, of Albany,

N". Y., has returned to the United States after eight years' service with the French armies with a war record

which has been surpassed perhaps by no woman of any nation. She is planning to live with her brother for a brief period while she convalesces from a nervous b r e a k d o wn. during her service abroad she received only three "permissions" or vacations from duty. She brings with her many decora-

for her

work both as a nurse and canteen worker with the French soldiers in France, Germany and Upper Silesja. She is to get still another medical in Alabany. Governor Miller will give her the Conspicuous Service Cross, a state decoration. For her work abroad she gained the

Croix de Guerre of both the type given during the war and after the war, the Legion D'Honneur and the honorary post of Corporal in the regiment of the Chasseurs, or Blue Devils. Miss Treadwell was wounded" twice. The first wound she received while tending wounded for three hours in the exposed streets of Compiegne under shell fire, . The second when the

civilians in a small city in Poland fired on French barracks.

( z

After Dinner Stories "Friend," said Cactus Joe . to the

stranger in Crimson Gulch, "you have

held four of a kind three times, a roy

al flush twice, and several ace fulls." "Lucky, I call it."

"You're luckier than you think.

The boys here is willin to let you go on your way intact provided you start immediately. There won't be any gun play unless you linger. The big luck fur you is the fact that you happened

to pick 'Safety First week for your performance at this here card table."

When Thomas placed a rosy apple by the garden gate and then secreted himself behind a hedge he thought he had done so unobserved. But he was mistaken. An old gentleman approached him and began a lecture: "My boy,' he said, "do you not know that you are very wrong in placicg

that apple by that gate? Some poor boy might be tempted to take it," "Well," said Thomas, "that's just what I want to do." "Why?" inquired the old gentleman. "Why?" repeated Thomas. "Because I've hollowed out the inside and filled it with mustard." llion Citizen.

tions, both military and civil.

Evening

Musings for th(

DR COUE V I do not know Dr. Coue, " But I have read through his book. It's plain to me the methods that he Sets forth have a sensible look. . Brain is a sensitive tissue. Mind is quite easily swayed,

It can be turned, we've already learned,

By every emotion that's played. Mine is susceptible, very Others can fuddle it, right. Others can sway my mind any way And make me believe black is white.

Outsiders easily swing me, For their own reasons of pelf. So why shouldn't I provided I try. Perform that same trick on myself? "Master your mind" is the watchword. He who does that cannot fail.

Make it your slave from the cradle to grave And you'll have the world by the tail.

Lessons in Correct English DONT SAY: What are you thinking OF? How FREQUENTLY have I seen the sun set? Who DONE this? I have DID this. He has DID the job. SAY: What are you thinking ABOUT? How OFTEN have I seen the sun set? - Who DID this? I have DONE this.' He has DONE the job.

President of Long Island railroad says you can raise anything on a farm if you try, but one of the hardest darned things to raise on a farm, we do believe, is the mortgage.

By FREDERICK J. HASKIN WASHINGTON, D. C, Jan. 20. If

Herbert Hoover is still in theHarding cabinet a year hence it Is a fair assumption that he will not be a candidate for the Republican nomination for president in the 1924 campaign. At this time there is nothing to indicate that he does not purpose con

tinuing indefinitely in his, post as

less Mr. Hoover is regarded by well in-

fonnd observers as distinctly as presidential possibility. It would not follow necessarily that

he would become a candidate if he re

signed from the cabinet. Secretary

Fall is quitting the Harding family on March 4 and, no one ,has the slightest idea that(' he has aspirations toward the presfdency. Mr. Hoover might retire and still hold himself aloof from next "year's fight. He might' do this from considerations of loyalty to the man with whom he has been associated closely since March 4, 1921, and he might do it because of a belief that he would fare better were he to make- his bid for presidential honors in 1928. But if the commerce secretary does

leave the cabinet during the present

year it will be difficult to convince the

political wiseacres. that he is not doin

so, in order to be free to enter the 1024 lists. He is assumed to have ambitions looking to the White House as the most desirable Washington residence, and he has friends who look upon him as a man of destiny. There have been rumors, too, that Mr. Hoover has not been entirely happy position. This is not ascribed to any lack of harmony in his relations with President Harding, but rather to disappointment at not having been able to acomplish much that he hoped to accomplish when he took the commerce portfilio. He is said to have had big plans for the department-when he undertook its administration to have believed that it could be made

of first importance in governmental affairs. It was understood that in the proposed reorganization of the executive departments he believd that his

dpartment would be greatly enlarged in scope and power, and that he would have opportunities for service that none of his predecessors had enjoyed. However, the general reorganization program is yet in abeyance. The department of commerce remains unchanged, except in so far as Mr. Hoover has been able to effect readjust

ments and extensions withinit, and what he lias done in that line has been at the expense of much trial and tribulation. He ran foul of what every man encounters who seeks to improve any branch of the government service the inertia and immutability of bureaucracy. Bureaucrats Here Forever. Cabinet officials come and go even presidents come and go but the bureaucrats are here forever. Their ways are mysterious and their power is amazing. Some are protected by the civil service, others by a presumption of their fitpess based on their long tenure, and still others by political influence that has been known to worst a secretary when it comes to a showdown. They are determined that there shall be no changes in the governmental service save increases In petty powers, and through long experience they knaw how to play the game to that end. Secretary Hoover knows a great deal more about this than he did two

years ago, and it is quite possible that he may have the idea that he would like to be president if for no other reason than to be able to show the bu reaucrats a trick or two. But of coursg he has other reasons. Few men are so well equipped and so well situated to get into the presidential running. In the first place, he has an independent fortune and can well afford to dedicate his life to the public service, his ability is recognized and his capacity for work has been

demonstrated. Again, since he came into prominence as the head of the American Relief Committee early in the war he has enjoyed publicity of a favorable character such as few men receive in a lifetime. His frinds say this has come about because Mr. Hoover has reserved. Some who are not so warm in their admiration of him eay that it is due to the fact that he has greater genius for actiieving publicity than anything else. However, that may be, publicity is one of the great problems of presidential aspirants, and it has been Eolved already

in a large degree for Mr. Hoover. On top of all this, Mr. Hoover has youth, or. comparative youth. His Age In . , His Favor. He will have just turned 50 when the 1924 fight is at its height. This means that he can look forward to at least four campaigns in which to attain his ambition so far as age is a factor, for he will be but 62 in 1936 and men have been candidates for the presidency after they have long since passed that milestone. . It is not suggested that Mr. Hoover wilt be a perennial candidate, rivaling William Jennings Bryan, but when a man is after the big political prize

it must be a comfort to him to know that he does not have to win it in his first attempt or be eliminated from serious considerationby old age. Herbert Hoover is generally rated as able as an efficient executive and as

well grounded in the economic prob-'

lems and international questions that are of prime importance at this time. But he is not so highly regarded as a politician. It is pointed out that he had a rare opportunity in 1920 and made comparatively little of it. His failure is attributed largely to poor political judgment either his own or that of the advisors with whom he surounded himself. It will be recalled that from the very beginning of the preliminaries looking to the 1920 campaign It was expected that Mr. Hoover would be a candidate for President, and he was regarded as formidable factor in the situation even ,when it was not definitely known whether he would align himself with the Democrats or with

the Republicans. It was assumed that he had been a Republican, but he had been prominently identified with a Democratic administration and it was considered possible that he might identify himself with that party. Other candidates and their friends naturally sought to "smoke him out" on the question of his party affiliations. It is a sound principle of politics a3 well as of other kinds of warfare never to do what your opponent wants or expects you to do. Mr. Hoover was In a splendid position to keep everybody guessing. He might have 6ald, substantially, that in the crisis confronting this country and the world at that time partisanship was a matter of minor importance, that ho was first f all and above all .an American.

that his position on the vital issues was thus and so, and that he stood ready to lead any considerable element of his fellow Americans that deemed him worthy of leadership. That would have given an entirely differnt slant to the campaign. The Democrats might have nominated Hoover for fear the Republicans would if they didn't, or the Republicans might have named him on the theory that the Democrats had overlooked the one best bet. But Mr. Hoover permitted himself to to be smoked out. declared his partisanship, and from that hour his stature as a presidential candidate lessened perceptibly. That, however, is all water over the dam. and has no bearing On him as a 1924 presidential possibility, which admittedly he is.

VIOLINIST WEDS PUPIL CONNERSV1LLE. Ind., Jan. 20. Haig Gudenian, Armenian violinist, formerly of the faculty of the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, and Miss Kathtrine Lowe were married at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Glockzinhere by the Rev. J. & E. McMichael. Mr, Gudenian established a studic1 here several months ago and Miss Lowe, who came here three years age from Lansing, Mich., studied undei him.

The Mother of Three Strong Healthy Children

They have gone and invented a vest pocket typewriter. But where is a man going to carry his stenographer?

At least one shift in style takes time. No woman can change from bobbed to long hair over night.

A new natural gas field has been discovered in northern Louisiana, which is estimated to hold about 5,000,000,000.000 cubic feet, making it the greatest natural gas supply yet discovered.

China: has 225 people to each square mile of territory. Japan has 276, and Australia less than two.

KIDMOV TROl'BLK CirSES I.AHESE5S ;"V 'lampi"M fnllowcil me tor some tim?. ami I felt that it was caused from Uirfnrv troublf. One bottle of l'oley KMupV ril! liad the deslrpd effer-t. writes II. H. Arhuckle, South Barr Vermont. nackache, rheumatism, dull headache, too frequent or Mimlm? urination aro symptoms of Khlney ami bladder trouble. Disordered kidneys require, prompt" treatment. .K'ect f-atines serious romplieations. I'Oley t. iA,,t.ir rm lve ouiik relief. A. I.

lukeii Prupr Co., 62-62S Main St. verliscment. '

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New System of Fat Reduction

Here's a new way for all fat people, to laugrh together at thaf'old bugaboo Obesity. The sayinpf that "there is nothing new under tho sun" does not now apply to fat people any more. Here is poim-thing new for them a new sensation, a. new pleasure, a new and graceful figure, easily found bv anyone who is passing beyond the limits of slimness. Kveryone has beard of the Marmula. Presc ription ; that harmless combination of fat-defying elements perfected by one of tho foremost plivsIcians. Now. from the. same high authority, there comes another idea the idea of condensing these Fame, pure, harmless ingredients into a pleasant little tablet. Taken aftet eating and at bedtime, they help tho stomach to dispose of all the fatty foods, converting them into compact solid flesh, musrle and energy, without dieting or exercise. Marrnoia Prescription Tablets regulate the entire system do for vou

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NO OPERATION FOR HER She Took Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound and Escaped the Operation Doctor Advised

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( A

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Cold in the Head? Get a jar of Jack Frost Cream, apply liberally in nostrils. Head will clear instantly : inflammation

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Evervbodv likes RAISIN BREAD

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Peas 3 cans

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM

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