Richmond Palladium (Daily), 13 May 1904 — Page 2
CT70.
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM. FRIDAY, MAY 13, 1904.
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Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
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" I know that your medicine will do everything that it is re
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" Dear Mrs. Pinkhaut : I -vant to tell you what your remedies have done for me. Bcforo taking them I used to have a continuous headache, would bo very dizzy, would have spells when everything seemed strange, and I would not know where I was. " I went to our local doctor. Ho gave me some medicine, but it did not seem to do me any good, but after taking Lydia E.
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ifiDif. nmm Mwrnmn , -
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in America can speak from a wider experience in treating female L Ul ills. She has helped hundreds of thousands of women back to llf ni health. Her address is Lynn, P.Iass and her advice is free You III PA are very foolish if you do not accept her kind invitation
n
ART AND - -S, ARTISTS WHITE i . - -
Quarter and gives tlie most intimate J jeets of art and the making1 of coun-
!
jview of that celebrated part of Paris
ever afforded Engish readers.
The Indianapolis Journal whicli is apt to take a rather lofty stand with reference to the originality of its news and various features, copies its
Art and Art "Workers
bodily
The visiting musicians who were who runs may read, and he v h . here at the time of the May Mu-'icvil thinks must tind sutlicient to think Festival were treated to the worst ey- about, as he lingers about a statue
lubition of bad manners ever shown or passes it day by day. Tl
in public in this city, this on the occasion of the last concert vJen a portion of the audience started to leave before the concert was oxer. America suffers as no other country in this way, the effect of the finale of many a play being utterly destroyed bv the rising of many in the audi
ence and
from Hyde's Art "Weekly, and sometimes forgets what it has put in the previous week, these notes coming out on Sunday usually. In instance
saying in vogue in Paris which defines my meaning in part, uaiiidv, that
most men work tor the Salon r ilher i I. j? i mi i
mail lor art. iney cultivate a species j
or sculpture which is char-.u'i i .y.od by a theatrical quality and which cries out at you as you pass becau.se of some contortion of form, instead
before the curtain goes down of impressing you with a s?i.-. of their preparations previous to . harmonious beauty. The new move-
last Sunday they had in this part of the paper practically the same news published the week before and at one or two other tim.es. And then there are other papers that copy bodily the stuff published in this department of
. ! the Journal without giving the cred
it that the Journal shouldn't get. This is the way of the world however. Nine-tenths of the people who think they think and fancy themselves awfully original you know,
pass off for their own other people's!
try houses, are all of great interest, and the reprints from William Mor- t ris, "Art or No Art? who shall Settle It?" and "The Dull Level of Life,"( are illuminating. The beautiful illustrations are especially noticeable
in this number of the new magazine,'
the constant improvement in repro- ' duct ion being observed every month. This column know sof no more attractive and useful publication to the art lover and can heartily recommend it to all those who desire a periodical of j this nature. As well known it is pub-
hshed in Syracuse by Mr. (Justav Stickely.
May "Header," noticed elsein this paper has for its cover
their exit. It is an outrage upon which foreigners comment and rie resignedly and good naturedly nndured by those in this country h sc pleasure is spoiled by this K'.sluc wholly unjustihable and uttetly s-?l-fish mode of procedure on the part of a certain class who frequent public assemblages. 1 Jut in this pnrti'-ilar instance, at the concert given by the May Festival Association, it w-.vs the more flagrant, in that it was, in effect, an insult direct to those who were practically guests of (he city . and the management of the festival, to dine with you and leaving the tato dine with you and leoavin? i' table when dessert was brought on. What matter if the conceit was lengthy and part of the aud'ence tired and bored. That was absolutely no excuse. Neither was the;?: the excuse of a fear of being left b tlu cars as the officials had agreed to hold all cars until the concert was over. The truth of the matter is thai this was one of the most outrageou.?
ment in sculpture, which is revealed in a measure by the breaking away of a few men from the National Society in the attempt to reconstruct that organization, if possible Implies, first of all, an expression )f .dissatisfaction with traditional .neth' Js. It is only a phase of a general up
heaval that is passing over this land
ot i ne i iiiu re. aiun to ine mo'ne ii
of the socialist in other 3ph"res, of artistic activity. The poets have
found their exponent in Fdvard
Markham, whose verses on "The Man With the Hoe" refleet this sentiment.
The movement signifies a noble dis
content with accepted ideas and with the names of men who have too often been used to conjure with. We are tired of living in strict accordance with types associated with history and story." Mr. Partridge is at present doing the Schemerhorn Memorial to be placed in Columbia University, his Alma Mater, this including a bust
ideas, sometimes unconsciously and frequently consciously. Borrowed ideas, however, are more to be preferred perhaps than anything such people could evolve out of their own mental processes, so that in the end it is better for the bored to be treated to plagarism than to platitudes. During the past year the total number of visitors to the Boston Museum
of Fine Arts was 295.41G, this mcluding 1,523 paid admissions, and 19S,S00 free on the days when the
institution is open to the public, namely, Saturday and Sunday. During the past art season three silver seals belonging to Sir Walter Raleigh were sold at auction, the seal made for him when he was Governor of Virginia having been presented to the British museum. The art season is now practically over in the large cities, especially the i metropolis, the "season," being re-
breaches of ordinary courtesy, good breeding and consideration ever seen in liichmond and that it was heartily disapproved by the majority "f those in the audience was indicated bv the round of hissing whicli efiV-ct ually st op ed the egre. Il is well remember that a musical affair of -ins kind, which also partakes of the nature of a social function, is no: cC an ilk with a polo game, say. Visting musicians were bitterly sarcastic, in their censure of this manifestation of public discourtesy and this city certainly owes them and itself an apolo-
and pedestal for which he is to re- 'jrarded as opening in November and ceive 10,000. J closing in May This is as it should
,be elsewhere, the summer time being,
A few days ago it was announced .after a " fashion, inapropos for gen-
; in the Indianapolis Journal in special eral exhibits. This year, too, when
dispatch from this city, that Mr. ( all the American world presumably lliushaw now in Paris and well ' flocks to St. Louis where will be givknown in this town Avas to be repre- en one of the greatest and best art sen ted in the Salon. This informa- . exhibitions in the history of the tion was given in this column several , world, local affairs dwindle in importweeks ago. Mr. ilinshaw, as stated janco. One of the interesting displays here at that time, is thepupil and at St. Louis in the Fine Arts Section protege of Mr. Seaford who was per-, will be that of the Phillipino artists sonally instrumental in having his who have an exhibit of astonishing studies in black and white exhibited excellence and charm according to
in Richmond. Mr. Seaford has every, news from the reposition
reason to be proud of his pupil's suc
cess.
"The Real Latin Quarter of Par
is," by F. Berkley Smith, gives, per-
gy, profound and abject. Mr. William Ordway Partridge, one of the most celebrate! sculp us of this country, who ranks with St. (laudens, MacMonnies, Ward and two or three others as artists of interna
tional reputation, has a thou
and illuminating article on Nr.tional ; i,u0 print, and is of added interest
Sculpture in the current, "Forum." jou account of a reproduction of a waMr. Partridge says in part: t,.r lor for frontispiece, done by "What we heed in sculpture, as in t10 author's still more famous faththe other arts, is , first of alt, tliink-1 0r, F. llopkinson Smith. There are ers; and they must be possessed of also about one hundred original
sufficient technique to make th r con-
"The Craftsman," for May is an attractive and instructiVe issue of this publication and should especially commend itself to those who care for
terna-1 hapS, the best picture of that famous; civic beauty in such articles as ghtfui section of France's capital, yet put , "Parks," by H. K. Bush-Brown,
with numerous illustrations; "lhe Town Beautiful," by Susan F. Stone:
X lie 'JL wujirtuce viiirueiuii;, etc. "A Comparison of Critics, Suggested by the Comments o Dr. Pn
dor," by Irene Sargent; an illustrated article on the art of William T.
Dannat; "A Clarkson Crolius Jug;"
the fifth article concerning: the Cali-
Thc where
another of the reproductions of portrait sketches in chalk done by John Cecil (Hay, this omnth presenting Mr. Thomas Nelson Pago. The originals of these portraits must be stunning, and they are without doubt helping to make the magazine one of
the popular successes it bids fair to become. The "Reader" is rapidly gaining in circulation and will present a larger table of contents in June, the magazine becoming more pretentious in size each month.
ATTENTION, FARMERS ' Why remain in the North and stay n doors 'six months iu the year consuming what you raise during the other six months? Go South where you can work out doors every month in the year, and where you are producing something the year round. If you are a stock raiser you know your stock are no"W "eating theii heads off" aid, besides have to be protected from the rigor winter -;y expensive shelter. Economical stock feeding requires lie combination of both flesh-forming
and fat-forming foods in certain proortions. Alabama and Florida prodace in abundance the velvet b?an
nd cassava, the first a flesh producer, md the latter a fat producer, and they are the cheapest and best fat
tening materials known to the world.
More money can be made and with
less labo, in general farming fruit
and berry .growing and truck garden
ing alom our road in the South than in any other section of the Union.
If you are interested and desire
further information on the subject, address
G. A. PARK,
Gen' I Immigration and Industrial
Agent, Louisville & Nashville R. R. C, Louisville, Ky.
drawings and camera snap shots by
ception comprehensible to the oeoplo. the writer himself with two caricaotherwise their thought will be edh-. tures in color bv the celebrated
er crudely expressed or will resolve .French caricaturist. Sancha. Mr. forma Missions; several more techni
itself into a mere abstraction, lie Smith spent teu years in the Latin cal articles concerning various ob-men of our product.
IE
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935 Main St-
DR. J. A. WALLS THE SPECIALIST Monday, Tuesday, Friday and Saturday of each week. Consultation and One Month's Treatment FREE!
. . imnw- A TO OllPPCCCrill I V all formo of Chronic Diseases that ar cnrabl HE TREATS SUCCESSFULLY diseases of the throat, lttkgs. KIDNEYS LIVER and BLADDER, RHEUMATISM, DYSPEPSIA, and all DISEASES OTHE BLOOD SpilepVv (or fallinjr file), CanJer. Scrofula, Private and Nervous Diseases female Dae8,Nht tosses Loss of Vitality from indiscretions in youth or maturer years, Piles, Fistula. Fissure and Jlceration of the Rectnm. without detention from business. nrPTlTlE POSITIVELY CURED AND GCABAfTEED. It will be to your interest to consult the Doctor if you are suffering .rom disease. And if h cannot cure vou he will tell you so at once. - Remember the time and place. Will return every four weeks. Office and Laboratory.. No. 21 SOUTH TENTH STREET, RICHMOND, IND.
E. B. Grosvenor M.D., Specialist
Special excursion tickets will be
sold May 21st, to 25th (good return
ini? May 2Gth) to Filbrims, Stop No.
10 on Dayton and Northern) via Day
ton and Western and Dayton and Northern Traction Lines on account of the Old Order Dunkard National
Meeting;.
Fare to Filbrims from Richmond
$1.25 round trip. For further infor
mation call on agents.
OFFICE HOURS: 9 to 12 a. m. 7 to 8 p. m. 2 to 4 p. m.; SUNDAYjS to 12
colonial Building. 7th and Main Sts.
EYE EAR, I NOSE and THROAT SCIENTIFIC GLASS FITTING
THft : I Jt r a. jl &15 North
11 PRICES REASONABLE. EVERYTHING UP-TO-DATE.
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Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Rootii rt n1 7 ?;elly Bldg
Richmond, Ind.
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BRUMLEY
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Dentist
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Notice. We strive constantly to bake goods that lead in quality. Ideal and Mother's bread is the result of improved modern methods of baking. No other
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Richmond Baking Co.
Everybody should eat the famous
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