Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 112, 1 March 1911 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIU3I AND ' SUN-TELEGRA3I, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 1911.
PAGE THREE.
LOVELESS UIIIQHS CAUSEDJY MONEY Lack of Means Responsible for Degradation of Women, Zucblin Says. Chicago. Mar. 1. Money, not the poMRBlon of It, but Its lack, ! reponftlble for the degradation of the millions of women who must marry men whom tbey do not love. The Uric of economic Independence has compelled womn to place this stigma upon their aex. These are the conclusions of Professor Charles Zueblln, who In a lecture on "The Family" at the Fullcrton avrnue Presbyterian ohunh arraigned the system that he declares works havoc with the relations of men and women. In the courso of his remarks the eollepo man ndvanced u new reason for the existence of "the unwritten law." lie Bald that It was due to the face that a woman with "a million-dollar personality" found herself dependent upon a "thounond dollar masculine Income." "If you want to see ome of the spiritual po"llllltles of the economic In
dependence of women, consider the degradation whlrh accompanies marrying for support, even thoiiRh the majority may do It," said Mr. Zueblln. "It Is a gainful fact that unless a man and womm love each other, or are sacrificing themselves for the sake of their children, they havo no rlpht to live, together. Vet there aro millions who do and must. Chief Moral Defect. "Hut If woman were Riven her economic Independence It would relieve her of that sllgma. It would seem also that it would relieve woman of her chief moral defect, her method of circumlocution, by which she rhs around men, whether It is during the courting Illusion, or by rifling her husband's pockets, or any other way by which she circumvents him, and gains her end. "If men can be brought to see the vndeslrablllty of the Kwer of man over woman, n power enjoyed by the lossesslon of money, we may even bring him to see the degradation of the power of money over man. Dependent en Income. "The difficulty Is that that not only Is woman dependent upon man. that not merely Is one woman dependent upon one man, but all her rich nature, the sum total of her personality, is dependent upon one man's Income. What, are we going to do when we have the It.OOO.nno feminine personality dependent on a $1,000 masculine Income, which we sometimes have. "The expression of this which Is the tnost degrading comes In the appeal which seems to be Increasingly made, or has Increasing publicity the aipeal to' the unwritten law. Woman Is regarded as man's property. And when this choicest piece of property Is violated, then he avenges himself. The appeal to the unwritten law Is the appeal to a law we dare not put on cur statute books, where nearly all the laws are concerned with property, because we do not like to admit that woman Is property. No man ever kills lils wife for love. He dies for It, he lives for it, and sometimes a woman kills herself for It, but women do not want that kind of defense. Love Made in Heaven "We havo to ask ourselves Is marriage a legal, an economic, a spiritual, or a physlloglcal relation? It Is, of course, all of these. It Is a spiritual relationship, generally. There Is tho old saying to which wo still an addicted that marriages are made in heaven. Wo mmt get rid of that Idea. Marriage is u social institution, sanctioned In a state functionary's office. Rheumatism Comes From Bad Kidneys Once Your Kidneys Work Properly, Rheumatism, Kidney Disease and Bladder Trouble DisappearHow to Cure Yourself. It is no longer necessary to spend months nnd months undergoing a complicated treatment for rheumatism, kidney or bladder trouble, or spend a good many dollars in doctors' bills. A new treatment tan now be obtained which seems to act more like a marvel than a medicine. This treatment has produced such satisfactory results In a rhort time that it Is now guaranteed from first to last. There should be no more doubt nbout the rapid cure of rheumatism, no fears of the fatal termination of treacherous kidney disease or dropsy. Uheiim.it ism means nothing more ror less than that your kidneys do not work proicrly. Your blood passes through the kidneys hundreds of times n day to be- filtered and purified. When the kldnejs are weak, the poisons are not taken out of the blood as they sjhould be. This lead to various disVaes. such as rheumatism, terrible Itright's disease, diabetes, dropsy and bladder trouble. The new guaranteed treatment is Dr. Derby's Kidney Pills. One day's use of them will prove their remarkable effect. M. T. Itidenour of Lima. Ohio, says: "When I feel bad in my back, I Just take a couple of Derby's Kidney Pills and get Immediate relief." If you have rheumatism anywhere, back pains, cloudy, foul urine, pains In the bladder, Bright disease or diabetes, put your whole confidence in Dr. Derby's Kidney Pills, and you will not be disappointed. Dr. Derby's Kidney Pills are sold at 11 druaj stores 60 pills 10 days' treatment 23 cents, or we will send them direct from the laboratory of Jrby Medicine Co.. Eaton Rapids, Mich., prepaid If you wish. If you want to try the mflrst. Jus, tell your druggist to give you free sample package.
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BLANCHE WALSH, AT THE Love may be made in heaven, and we may hope lhat every marriage may bo Infused with love, but marriage is a social device for the protection of children. "There would be no objection to iforl hnvlnc tholr sniritu:.! relationships without a license, if it were not for tho fact lhat marriazo is a social Institution. It is also an economic institution. Women have held before their eyes as their goal in life finding ! a man who will take care of them, they hope also love them. Asks " What Is Love?" "You cannot tell, even if a couple are drawn together with an irresistible impulse, whether it is going to endure. There is no doubt that some few out of the great multitude will find In some others their affinities. Hut what Is its mark? There are peoplo who havo been ready to die for an afrinity, and they have lost that affinity, and found another in a comparltlvely brief space of time, for which they are also willing to die. Is there any sufficient collection of data warranting the assumption that because a man loves a woman it is impossible to love somebody else at tho samo time? What is love? It Is that wonderful thing tho mother gives to the new born babe which she has brought Into the world. It is that feeling we have toward humanity, toward mankind, that vague thing we all profess, and which so few of us execute In our lives. And It Is everything between those. Hut we go on the supposition that a man and woman loving ench other enough to marry must thenceforward love nobody else in any way." COLDS CAUSE HEADACHE LAXATIVE HUOMO Quinine, the
world wide Cold and Grip remedy, ro-jinJl OI 1113 y,ncmoves cause. Call for full name. Look I The man In question loves "the othfor signature, E. W. GROVE, 23c rr woman" and gains her consent to 1 elope with him. Just in time, however, she learns of the wife, and being
At Local Theaters The Golden Girl. Mort H. Singer will offer at the Gennett, Saturday matinee and night the musical comedy "The Golden Girl" noted for its beautiful plot and tuneful melodies. For nearly a year "Tho Golden Girl" has charmed the theatergoers of Chicago, and will be presented here by a cast of great magnitude Including such artists as, Leona Watson, Lionel Lawrence, Xeke Colvin, Lawrence Beck, Addie Doughterty, Harry Joyner, Clyde Hall, Earl Mountain, John Barry and many other Broadway favorites surrounded by a bevy of 1910 debutantes. In "The Golden Girl" there Is mu,ch of the good cheer spirit; plenty of action, a beautiful chorus with many new and frequenly changed costumes, spicy dialogues, a dream plot that carries the idea of the title, and nicely balanced principals, all of whom have good voices that are cleverly used to exploit decidedly pretty songs. The splendor of military regalia and j the atmosphere of West Point form the background, a beautiful story well told. "The Golden Girl" can be truthfully called a beauty show of unusual excellence. Seats will go one sale tomorrow morning. The Spendthrift. "The Spendthrift," the latest dramatic work of Porter Emerson Browne, who wrote "A Fool There Was," will be the offering at the Gennett tonight. The scenes In "The Spendthrift" are laid In New York. Its characters are Ieople of culture, active in the social life of the metropolis. Its most important two figures are a man and his wife who, while appearently are leading a life of ease and contentment, are In realty harrassed by many misunderstandings and combinations of untoward circumstances. The play is In reality brief against the foolish extravagant and frivolousness of this kind of a woman. It points with emphasis to the tragedy resulting from the deliberate waste of opportunity. Frederick Thompson, producer with his usual careful attention to the selection of casts has cboscn a company whose dominant characteristic
Other Woman'9
GENNETT, FRIDAY, MARCH 3. considered individually or collectively is efficiency. Doris Mitchell and Lionel Adams have the leading roles. Other characters are in the hands of such capabl artists as those of Albert Sackett, Gwendolyn Piers, Forrsi. urr, lizzie .Mcv.au, uiiuara tl. a. "v . t ( tl 't li' t w Sul,ivan and Alice Kelly. . The scenic ; production of "The Spendthrift is a typical Thompson effort marked by combined beauty and atmospheric acuracy A Western Play. Victor K. Lambert's romance, "The Girl and the Stampede" will be the attraction at the Gcnnett. on Thursday, Matinee and night. It abounds in tho quaint and interesting types that Mr. Lambert has been so successful with in his productions to the public, through his plays and books. The piece dwells with the Westerners and for the first time in all the so-called Western plays. Mr. Lambert has in "The Girl and the Stampede" correct-
ly portrayed the man from the West in ' velt saw them in New York and was his true character. The company is entrusiastic to the extreme. The ara long and strong one, headed by cade, by paying a heavy price, secur-
Grace Mayes Lambert. The Other Woman. To portray a woman's emotions, through which she passes and suffers in tho course of giving up to another the man she loves, is the ask to which Blanch Walsh has set herself In her new play. "The Other Woman" presents the story of a passionate, wholesouled woman who has given the one love of her life to a man, who, she learns too late for her own happiness. Is already married. The man's wife loves him as a true wife should, moreover, so that "The Other Woman" faces the question of whether she shall place her own happiness beforo possessed of the quality of love which seeks the happiness of its object as its greatest desire, she decides not to separate the husband and wife, but to havo the man return to his home where, she feels sure, he will find his love for his wife return in tho midst of old friends and home sur - roundlngs. Tho presentations of tho progress of this battle with self is given in "The Other Woman." It is not a problem play, but a ulay with a problem; a love story of a woman who faces the problem of effacing herself for another. To portray all this in a manner to stir the hearts and arouse the sympathies of the audience Is the duty fallling to the role which Miss Walsh has in the new play. She has for years specialized in emotional parts, however, and in fact has won her fame theirein. As Eleanor Gates in "The Other Woman," Miss Walsh Is said to At Fountains & Elsewhere Ask for ' CLICK'S Ths Original and 6enuim MALTED (VI ILK Tht Food-drink for Ail Ages. At restaurants, hotels, and fountains. Delicious, invigorating and sustaining. Keep it cn your sideboard at home. Don't travel without it. A quick lunch prepared in a minute. Take no imitation. Just say ORLICTS." iff Mo Combine or Trust
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Two Days Only. WED. and THURS March 1 and 2. Buffalo Jones and His American Cowboys. Lassoing Wild Animals in Africa The wonder pictures of the year. These men rope lions and other wild creatures, using nothing but the lasso. No fake; film is genuine. See today's amusement column. Extra long show.
ADMISSION lOc.
THIS DATE MARKS OPENING OF LENT
Social Festivities Give Way to the" Season of Forty Days Fasting. (American News Service) New York, March 1. Today. Ash Wednesday, marks the beginning of Lent, when social gaities give place to a season of fasting and prayer for forty days. Lent had its prefiguring in the forty days of temptation of Christ in the Wilderness, as well as in the fasts of Moses and KUas. it is a season of great jntiquity Ash Wednesday is so called because in tne itoman cainouc cnurcn ii oegins with t'je solemn ceremony that has given the day its name. After a suplicatory service, the devout approach the altar rail and the priest places ashes on the head of each, reciting in Latin, "Remember, man, that thou are dust, and shalt return to dust." The ashes are customarily obtained by burning the palms of the previous year. The Lenten season is strictly observed in the Episcopal and other ritualistic churches as wel as In the Roman Catholic church. Special services are designated for Ash Wednesday, Holy Week, Good Friday, Palm Suuday, and ending with the grand triumphant service of Easter Sunday. Int is also the season of the confirmation classes when those who propose soon to take t'.ieir formal stand as church members attend classes of instruction and nrenare for the visita tion of the bishop. It is also a season of giving, especially in the Sunday schools. Trinity church, at the head of Wall street, in this city, seats 900, but during the forty days of Lent, and including Easter Day, the attendance upon its services usually exceeds 50,000, the largest number by far attending any American church during a similar period. The unusually large attendance is attributed to the extraordinarily successful noonday services, which pack tiie church to its doors during the Lenten period. Preachers for these services this year are Bishop Gailor, of Tennessee; IMshop McCormick, of Western Michigan; Bishop Tuttle, of i Missouri; Rev. Dr. S. S. Marn.uis, of Detroit, and Rev. J. O. S. Huntington, of the Order of the Holy Cross. Getting Sen.ms. Flubdub says he is thinking seriously about marriage. "Why. I thought he was married two or three months ago." "So he was. but he i? Just beginning to think seriously about it." Town Topics. n n n LriJ(Qj Sarsaparilla Is the most effective medicine for the complete purification of the blood and the complete renovation of the whole system. Take it this spring. Get It today in usual liquid form or tablets called Sarsatabs. 100 Doses 51. WE SELDOM FIND TWO EYES ALIKE In most every case we find a difference between the value of the two eyes which produces an imbalance that requires very careful consideration. OUR REPUTATION IS ESTABLISHED and is sufficient guarantee for your safety. We solicit your patronage through our capability to improve and correct Imperfect vision. MISS C.M.SWEITZER OPTOMETRIST 9272 Main St. 1027 Main Street ADMISSION lOc.
WHAT IS PROFANITY New York Aldermen Find It Hard to Determine.
New York, Mar. 1. The aldermen's law committee have attempted to decide just what is a "cuss word." The occasion was a public hearing on a propsed ordinance to prevent the use of profanity on the stage. The com-' In its efforts to solve the problem, the speakers appearing for the ordinance differing widely as to what should be classed as profanity. One speaker said "hell" and "damn" could only be considered profanity when they are used with "a certain emphasis," and another said both these words and "darn" and "devil" should be regarded as profane language when uttered on the stage. Alderman Mulhearn, who Introduced the ordinance, replied, when it was pointed out to him that such words appear with great frequency in the plays or Shakespeare, that "the people of his time were not as well educated as we are today in the difference between right and wrong," and added: Shakespeare's plays ate not seen much on the stage today." The ordinance provides for the revocation of the license of any theater in which a play is produced in which there is "vile or profane language." The chief advocate of the measure, outside of Alderman Mulhearn, was A. CHICHESTER S PILLS W TDK UIAKOXB BRAND. A. I 'Ilra! Ask! hl-'k-tcr' fill, ia Kr4 Take other. DrMfrrlftt. Ask foi DIAUUNn IIKAltU PILLS, for sa yei.-s known M ltact, Safast, Always Reliable. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS FVERYWHEEf The Endowment policies issued by the Provident Life & Trust Co., are superior ones and from the point of security and low cost, should interest YOU. E. B. Knollenberg AGENT Murray WEEK OF FEBRUARY 27. Harry M. Morse and Co. Present "Uncle Seth and the Hoodoo," Helene Hardy Proteam Sketch. Matinee, daily, 10c. Evening Continuous, 25c to 10c.
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TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY MORNING, AFTERNOON AND EVENING Moonlight Skating Thursday Night
GEMMETTT TONIGHT! 25, 50,75, $1.00, $1.50. This season's biggest scccess: THE SPENDTHRIFT
WITH A
Tomorrow: ftatoo10'oNIOso TIE Cm rag STMPlEiE FRIDAY: 25 to $1.50: musmwrnm
in THE OTHER WOMAN Seats Tomorrow for Saturday: THE (E(0LPEM (EffiL MATINEE: 25 to $1.00. NIGHT: 25 to 51.50.
S. Colborne, president of the Anti-Profanity league. , HOW TO MAKE
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