Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 93, Number 21, 24 January 1923 — Page 6
I
AGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, JAN. 24, 1923.
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-Class Mail Matter
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PIIESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to tt c not otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
More Laws Montaigne wrote many years ago: -"It would be better for us to have no laws at all than to have them in so prodigious numbers as we have."' In his day he found that books of law did not change the human hearfc or obtain the results for which the framers of the statutes hoped.
His observation is applicable to modern conditions. We do not need more laws, but we do
need a change of heart toward the laws on our
books. " If we paid more attention to getting our hearts in right relation with the truth, we could lop off laws by the hundreds and still be a
better and happier people.
Every untoward situation that arises, now
days gives occasion for the enactment of a law to control it. Seldom do we analyze the condi
tion to discover , its cause, and then apply the remedy at the very source. . Wa legislate against
an irksome condition, but we do not remove the cause, and consequently we have law violations, disrespect for the law, and, in instances, open
defiance.
Many, reform movements fall short of accom
plishing results because they are directed
against manifestation ; of evil and not against!
its root, which is to be. found in the heart. If all the reform agencies in the United States were to combine in an educational effort to make
men and . women see the advantage of right thinking and right living, stressing the positive factors, appreciable evidences of improvement would be noted in a very short time. ' Men and women will do rigt as soon as their hearts prompt theift to think, speak and do right. If the heart attitude toward right is a correct one,.. it .will manifest itself in good deeds. The beginning of all reform is in the conviction of the individual to do right for right's sake. This does not imply that an abrogation of all law is desired, for society will never be so per
fect that some of its individuals will not lack true discernment and prefer evil to good. Laws will always exist. Education of the individual,
however, in correct thinking, in love of righ
teousness and justice, will give him a new conception of his duty toward himself and the social state of which he is a member.
Some times we become unduly alarmed overi-
law violations and hastily conclude that the whole nation is made up of men and women who have no respect for the law. If this were true, we would have no nation today. Anarchy would prevail everywhere. But quite the opposite is true. For every person who violates the law we have thousands of law-abiding, respectable citizens, who are the real backbone of the nation and shape its destiny. These are the ones in whom rests the future of the country. Because they are overwhelmingly in the majority, the criminal is hopelessly handicapped in his attacks on the peace and society of the country.
Tedious Pastime Answering All Calls
THE HIGHEST ART By George Matthew Adams.
We hear so much of art. But what is art? And what is the highest kind of art? Lafacadio Hearn says that "unselfishness ought to be the real test of the very highest kind of art." Why do I stoop and fondle and smell the velvet faces of my pet pansies during the summer time? Why do I look into the colors of the sunset and feel natural thrills, like streaks of electric threads, light , up my brain? Why do I understand the song of the creek, and stand for hours listening to the joy of some golden birdas its little throat trembles and bubbles with happy song? Are we not all to greater or lesser . extent worshippers of the highest art when we do these thiDgs? Do we not come away from such experiences richer in heart and with a feeling of kindness toward others that we did not feel before? I watched an actor the other evening. It seemed to me that from beginning to end, in his part, he did not utter one false note. He was so much the actor that he was almost all art. Is not this art, then, some touching of all that we are into all that has ever been? And when we have done this thing extremely well better than we have done it before, with no thought of selfish gain have we not "played upon the harp of the highest art? Has not someone written that what this old world needs is just the "ar. of Being kind?" And isn't he, also, fulfilling the highest are who appreciates?
Answers to Questions
(Any reader can pet the answer to my question by writing The Palladium ! Information Bureau, Frederick J. Hask- j In, director, Washington, D. C. This of- ! ter applies strictly to information. The huri'aii does not Rive advice on les?al.
medical and financial matters. It does .lot attempt to settle domestic; troubles, nor to undertake exhaustive research an any subject. Write your question plainly end briefly. Give full name and iddress and enclose two cents in stamps for retui-n postajre. All replies are sent Jirect to the inquirer. , Q. Where have American Legion 'conventions been held, and where will the next one be? R. H. G. A. 'In 1919, the convention met at Minneapolis; in 1920, in Cleveland; in 1921, in Kansas City; in 1922, -in New Orleans. This year's convention will be held in San Francisco. Q. What is the size af the great Saraha desert? C. It. V. A. The area of the Sahara is about 2,500,000 square miles . Q. Did any clergyman sign the Declaration of Independence? C. M. I). A. There was one clergyman among the men who eigned the Declaration of Independence. This was the Uev. John Witherspoon. Q. How large are Australian kangaroos at. birth? A. II. F. . A. When born'they are very f.mall, an inch op less in length, naked and 'entirely unable to help themselves. They are placed in her pouch by the . mother, and .spend weeks or even
months there.
Who's Who in the Day's News ,
F. EDSON WHITE F. Edson White, once an flS-a-week clerk, has just been made president of' the billion-dollar packing firm of Armour and company. According to ' White himself, his
"Slps career seems to have
i i Zk :-; followed a logical
' (i sort of sequence. I' His father was a cati tleman -before him ik-iw an be was in a way L ' ' , born to the livestock
. J business. He was born at Peoria, III., i , j and educated in the public schools there. His first job as a
boy was in a Peoria
t::..'v.
f.y ';: packing plant. At 19
i.isp.l r::r3f&.v ne tooK a position S2&gg&$< with the Western eosoh white. Meat company in San Francisco. After two years there he decided that the greatest opportunity lay in Chicago, and he hired out to Armour and company as a clerk in the car route department at $18 a week. He was,only one of 12,000 employes. His first step ud the ladder was when, at his own
request, he was given permission to organize a sheep department. He de-
Dinner Tricks
After
(5" 4 is i Ls - FIG. 8 L v)
The Changing Card No. S88 The three of diamonds is shown as in Fig. 1. It is turned away for a moment, and changes into an ace (Fig. 2). To do the trick, an ace of diamonds must be prepared with the aid of a knife and some red ink. Scratch out the "A" In one corner, and convert it into a "8." At the same end of the card draw In an extra Dip. Tou will then have a card as shown in Fig. S. By holding the trick card as shown in Fig. 1, you can exhibit a three. When the card is held as in Fig. 2, It appears to be an ace. CowtoHt, V Publio Lt&ocr Company
Lessons in Correct English N DON'T SAY: THESE KIND of grapes are sour. THOSE KIND of plays . are unpopular.
I do not want tnat KIND OF A BOX.
Why do they sell THOSE KIND of
hats? I don't like THEM KIND. SAY: THIS KIND of grapes are sour.
THAT KIND of plays are unpopular,
or THOSE KINDS of plays. I do not want that KIND OF BOX.
Why do they sell THOSE KINDS of
hats? I do not like THOSE KINDS.
Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON
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Presidential Possibilities-IV. Cox and Pomerene of Ohio Regarded as Democratic Aspirants for Presidential Nomination.
Q. What cities in The United States veloped it into a highly lucrative
have the largest area? V. L. W.
A. Los Angeles, New York City, . Chicago nd. New Orleans head the list in the ordei named. Q. How tall' was George Washington? E. O. - A. There if- some . difference of opinion concerning the exact height of Geoige Washington, but his leading biographers Vera to be of the opinion that he was six feet two inches. Q. Is there any country 'where Inventions are not patented? It. E.1 G. ' A. China has no patent laws and no patent office. Q. Was the bank of England established by the government? O. R. V A. William Paterson, an English financier, was the founder of the Bank of England, having proposed it as early as 1691 and becoming one of its directors in 1C94. Q. 13 the "deadly upas tree" as deadly as fiction writers assert? O. R. W. A. The upas tree, Javanese, is celebrated for its poisonous qualities, but 4 hey have been greatly exaggerated. A deadly poison is made from its eap, which hardens into a gum, and when I he tree is felled or its bark much injured, it gives out noxious exhalations which will cause cutaneous eruptions. If the tree be burned the emoke from it will produce a similar effect.
branch of the business and remained at the head of it for 11 years. He went-froni there into the office of Arthur. Meeker as assistant to the vice-president, and his next step was the presidency. White says that the men who have most influenced his life are - Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt. ( .Here are a few of White's theories on. success: "Enthusiasm for the work is the greatest singlo factor in any success. "It must go hand in hand with loyalty loyalty to your purpose, your work, yourself and your employer. "Loyalty btgets loyalty. "Big business is best directed by co-operation and brains. "Co-operation should always be spelled 'we.' 'I' can never bring about co-operation.. "Young men should look to the future, not to immediate returns." , .
Br FREDERICK J. HASKIX WASHINGTON, D. C, Jan. 24.
Ohio, like the old woman who lived in A shoe as to children, has more Demo
cratic -presidential possibilities than
she knows what to do with. In the matter o candidates for the presi
dency, two is the embarrassing num
ber, for a state cannot have more
than one favorite son according to all
the unwritten rules and precedents of.
the national game of politics, and the
Buckeye commonwealth has two possibilities James M. Cox and Senator Atlee Pomerene.
Mr. Cox U distinctly a possibility
because he was the Democratic nominee for president in 1920, if for no other reason. Peculiarly enough, the overwhelming defeat that was adminis
tered to him by Warren G. Harding does not eliminate him from consideration. If he had been defeated by a narrow margin his availability as a candidate for 1924 might be doubted to a degree that p would not be reckoned with seriously. Charles Evans Hughes made an exceedingly close race of it in his contest with Woodrow Wilson in 1916, but he was never really in the running for the Republican nomination four years later. In the case of Mr. Cox, he wa3 snowed under by such an avalanche of the popular vote in 1920 that the result could not be attributed primarily to his jOvn weakness as a candidate. There must have been something else the matter. Other factors must have contributed to the Republican landslide. At any rate, the friends of the Dayton editor insist he was the victim of a freakish political fate, that the voters were not passing judgment on his fitness for the high office or his
strength as a candidate, that any other man the Democrats might have nom
inated would have been similarly de-
feated, and that Mr. Cox is entitled. to
another trial at a time and under conditions that would promise him a rea
sonably fair chance of success. A comparison is drawn between the 1920 election and a fight for the heavyweight championship in which one of the contenders stubs his toe and stumbles into a knockout. The Cox adherents believe their man lost on such a fluke and that he can give a better account of himself if he gets a return match. Obviously" the other prospective Democratic candidates and their supporters cannot see it that way. From
INDUSTRY PAYS
By industry we thrive; so let us
look alive, and work six days a week
we shoyld be cutting grass, the golden
moments pass, they re going like a
streak. I used to bask and dream of
music and ice cream, of islands far
away; I dreamed of idle things, of cabbages and kings, while neighbors put up hay. No wolves were at their doors, and at the village stores their credit stack up high, while I must dig the price of prunes or shredded riee or anything I'd 'buy. Collectors agle-eyed were ever at my side, with bills that long were due; the merchants whom I owed pursued me ud the road, a fierce.
excited crew. And then I saw at last ! looking for a new president. Well,
Musings for the Evening
One of the eastern universities is
Your skin tingles with awakened life when you use Graham Lemon Cocoa Hard-Water Soap. Advertise-
Are Women Overworked? yes, hundreds of thousands of them are-. This applies to the housewifo and piother who struggles on a small inciinie to make both ends meet by doing nil the washiner. Ironing-, cooking, making and mending for a large family. There are others who not only support themselves working- in factories, shops, mores and offices, but often have an invalid father or mother to support, therefore do housework beside. These are the women who break down early and are afflicted with various forms of female weakness. Xlnety-eisht out of everv lf)(1 women who have tried Lydia E.
Pi'nkham's Vegetable Compound have
successnii remeny
For Colds, Grip or Influenza and as a Preventive, take Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets. The genuine bears the .signature of E. W.
Grove. te sure you get bkujiu.) sue. Advertisement.
the errors of my past; I girded up my
loins, and said, "I'll dream no more.
but do the useful chore, and earn 12 brands of coins." From dreams that
wasted time, from sloth that was a
crime, I rose, a figure-grand; I shooed old things away, and now, throughout the day, you see me pounding sand. I have a tranquil mind, and when I look behind I have no craven fear that constables with writs and bailiffs throwing fits are swiftly drawing near. I work and pay my bills, and when I climb the hills no creditors pursue; but every merchant prince looks sweetly on me since I took up methods new.
Henry Ford isn't so very busy just
now. Gen. Chin is now leading the Chinese armies. He is out of place. He should be in diplomacy. .
MEDIUM BROWN HAIR looks best of all after a Golden Glint Shampoo. Advertisement.
Farmer Has Terrible
Experience "I don't think anybody ever suffered more pain than I have. Twice I was operated for gallstones and a third operation was advised. A friend in Iowa wrote me how he was cured by taking Mayr's Wonderful Remedy. I took a bottle on his advice, with good results, and have also taken the full course. My pains are all gone and I feel I am permanently cured." It removes the catarrhal mucous from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation which causes practically all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. One dose will convince or money refunded.
for woman's Ills. For nearly fifty years Clem Thistlethwaite Drug company
it has been restoring: women to neaithv
nd it will pay every auins woman 10
tisement.
A Clear Complexion Ruddy Cheeks, Sparkling Eyes Most Women
tan Have.
Maybe Turkey's initiation fee will keep the poor old league out of the poorhouse for another few weeks. When we consider the present cost of living we are bound to believe that while this may not be exactly the land of the free it is most certainly the home of the brave.
their point of view, Mr. Cox was beaten so soundly that he should not have the temerity to be a candidate again and they say that he ought to be glad to "get out of the way and let somebody run as can run!" They recall that Alton B. Parker was never seriously considered after the drubbing he received at the hands of Theodore Roosevelt in 1904 and their advice to the Cox following is to "get on a live one." To the argument that William
J. Bryan was given the Democratic
chance at the presidency three times their rejoinder is short and snappy "Well, and what happened?" As in the case of any other Democratic possibility, Woodrow Wilson may have somethnig to say as to Mr. Cox's availability in 1924. It is admitted that the Ohian made the kind of a campaign in 1920 that Wilson insisted should be made. After getting off to a bad start with the charge that the Republicans had unlimited funds at their command and were prepared to buy the election. Cox settled down to the League of Nations as the main issue and made his fight solely along that line. Some of his friends whisper that he did this against his own better Judgment, but that he was so situated that he could do nothing else. The Wilson administration was on trial before the
American public, they say, and if Cox
had not stood by it loyally he could
not have expected the general public to have done so. And if he did erdorse and support the administration there was no sense in doing o in c half-hearted manner. It was this loyalty to Woodrow Wilson that had much to ,do with the extent of the disaster that overtook Cox, according to these supporters, and thej argue that if there Is a grain of gratitude in the former president he will show it by doing all that he can to give the' man from Ohio a second nomination. The least he could do would be to keep hands off, in any event.
pomerene' Candidacy Not So Sure To get back to the subject of Ohio's embarrassment of riches in Democratic possibilities it may be said that
Senator Pomerene is generally regarded as by no means so certain to be a candidate as is Mr. Cox. The senator, as it happens. Is also in the position of having a defeat as a handicap, but his is more recent and in some respects more difficult to explain away. As a candidate for re-election to the senate last fall, Pomerene ran a bad second to the Hon. Simeon D. Fesa and on March 4 will relinquish his
toga to a Republican.
That would not seem to ausrur well
for the senator's presidential ambitions, if so be it he cherishes such, and there is.no gainsaying the fact that there has not been so much Pomerene talk since November. Prior
to the election, when the forecasters
were almost unanimously of the opin
ion tnat pomerene would be re-elected, his backers were enthusiastically in
sistent tnat he was the logical candi-
After Dinner Stories A young physician was buying furniture for the equipment of his office. The salesman racked his brain to think of something else to sell him. He had sold almost everything that
was appropriate or necessaray when he
ha,d a happy thought. "Oh, yes; I nearly forgot," he exclaimed. "You need a doormat." "Not a new one," said the young doctor. "I'll get that at a secondhand store. A worn one will be a much better advertisement for me." Pickup.
In the days when something stronger than one-half of one percent was being dispensed over innumerable bars, a group stood in front of the polished mahogany. A man who had travelled all over the world was telling the strange sights he had seen in far corners of the earth. All were intensely interested save one little red-eyed man. Finally he turned to the traveler and asked, "Stranger, did you ever have delirium tremens?" "No," ' said the traveler. "Rshaw," said the little man, "Mister, you ain't seen nothin'."
date for Ohio Democrats to present to
the national convention next year, and
undoubtedly it was a decided jolt to
them as well as' a surprise when Fess was returned a winner. However, this defeat of Pomerene is
another that can be explained as not
decisive as to a man s strength as a
presidential candidate. In the first place, it is hinted that Pomerene would
have been re-elected if a certain ele
ment among Ohio Democrats had not
preferred to see him retire to private
life, and again it is said that the senator had the opposition of the labor vote and would have been triumphantly re-elected had the general voting public in Ohio realized that he was being kinfed for the stand he had taken on industrial questions. It would be an interesting fight were """""enc and Cox to contest for the Ohio delegates to the next Democratic ention. Both have strong personal machines or organizations.
Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today
Prof. John F. Thompson, science Instructor of the high echool, was appointed to act as principal until a successor to I. E. Neff, who resigned, could be found. Prof. Thompson has acted aa assistant principal at the school and was informed as to the duties of the office. It was not thought that a successor to Mr. Neff would be appointed until after the close of the school year.
LOOSEN UP THAT COLD WITH MUSTER0LE
Says
Dr. Edwards, a Well Ohio Physician
Known
Dr. F. jr. Edwards for 17 years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edward's Olive Tablets. You writ know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and, bowels, which cause a normal action, carrying off the waste
ana poisonous matter in one's system. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results.
Thousands of women and men take
Edwards' Olive Tablets the sue-
Have Musterole handy when a cold starts. It has all , of the advantages
Of grandmother's - mustard plaster
without the blister. You just ap
ply it with the fingers. First you feel
a warm tingle as the healing oint
ment penetrates the pores, then comes
a soothing, cooling sensation and
quick relief.
Made of pure oil of mustard and
other simple ingredients, Musterole is
recommended by. many nurses and doc
tors. Try Musterole for bronchitis, sore throat, stiff neck, pleurisy, rheu
matism, lumbago, croup, asthma, neuralgia, congestion, pains and aches of
the back or joints, sore muscles,
sprains, bruises, chilblains, frosted
feet, colas or the chest. It may pre
vent pneumonia and "flu". 35c and 65c
jars and tubes.
Better than a mustard plaster
i ,i-,.;r, . ..-,-..-v,. A A ' i Dr. Ed
7- --d - E cesstul substitute for calomel now and
I
I in Tonsilitis j Cut This Out and Save if
HOW HE CURED
HIS RUPTURE
Old Sea Captain Cured His Own Rupture After Doctors Said "Operate or Death"
aa doubtless they would prefer them to be called in ,the state. Pomerene has built his up through the prestige and patronage that go with being a United States senator, while Cox constructed his as governor. The former may have his in slightly better repair, since he is still in the senate and Cox has been out of the state house more than two years, but it would be a fight such that might prove which is the more efficient machine federal or state. There is little likelihood, however, that such a contest will be staged. One or the other of the two possibilities will be eliuiinated, in all probability, before the race for the nomination is really under way in order that Ohio democracy may present a united front in support of a favorite son. Just how that elimination will be brought about remains to been seer and it i3 as useless to speculate about.'" it at this time as it would be to guess whether the favorite's eon's name will be Pomerene or?ox.
A harmless and effective gargle is
to dissolve two Bayer Tablets of Aspirin in four tablespoonfuls of water, and gargle throat thoroughly. Repeat in two hours if necessary. t Be sure you use only the genuine Bayer Tablets of Aspirin, marked with the Bayer Cross, which can be had in tin boxes of twelve tablets for few cents. Advertisement.
i
j-qnt use .cosmetics to hide skin trouble Resinol aids poor complexions If your complexion is rough, red, or pimply, don't try to cover cp the de.j fects with cosmetics which do not conceal, but usually attract attention to the ! reason for their nse. Begin today to clear your skin with Resinol Ointment! and Resinol. Soap, This treatment not only cleanses th! skin and "enables it to breathe, but 11 VI I i .1
usuany iciuuvts uiuicnes, reaness ana roughness. Ask johj dealer lor Reitnol Sop and Ointment.
t.
His Remedy and Book Sent Free
Captain Colllngs sailed the seas for many years: then he sustained a
double rupture that soon forced him to not only remain ashore, but kept him bedridden for years. He tried doctor after doctor and truss after truss. No results! Finally, he was assured that he must either submit to a dangerous and abhorrent operation or die.' lie did neither! He cured himself instead. Captain Collintfs made a studv of himself, of his condition and at last he was rewarded by th finding of the method that so quickly made him a well, strong, vigorous atul happy man. Anyone can use the same method; It's simple, easy, safe and Inexpensive. Every ruptured person in the world should have the Captain Collings book, telling ail about howie cured himself, and how anyone may follow the same treatment in their own home without any trouble. The book and medicine are FREE. They will be sent prepaid to arhy rupture sufferer who will fill out the below coupon. But send it right away now before you put down this paper.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
New Universities Dictionary
FREE RUPTURE BOOK AND REMEDY COUPON Capt. "Vi. A. Collingrs flnc Box 602-11, Watertown. N. T. Please send me your FREE Rupture Remedy and Book without any obligation on my part whatever. Name
Address
IS I I
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secure this NEW authentic Dictionary, bound in black seal grain, illustrated with full pages in color. 41 Present or mail to this paper three Coupons with ninety-eight cents to cover cost of handling, parking, cleric hire, etc Add for Postage: MAIL Up to 150 miles j07 ORDERS Up to 300 miles .10 WILL For greater disDB tances, ask PostFILLED master rate for 3 pounds.
22 DICTIONARIES IN ONE AO Dictionaries published previous to this one are out of date
0
try it. Adverusjiment.
tnen just to Keep tnem fit. lac and 30c.
