Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 22, 30 November 1911 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR.

THE RICHMOND PAILuA.I)IUM AND SUX-TELEGRA3I, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1911.

Tte Richmond Palladium ezi Sca-Tclcgnm Published and owned by th PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Issued 7 day ach week evening and Sunday morning. Office Corner North th and A streets. Palladium and Bun-Telegram Phones Business Office, 2(86; News Department, 1121. 1UCHMOND. INDIANA Ratals O. Led Editor BUBSCHIPTION TERMS In Richmond $5 00 per year (In advance) or 10c per week. RURAL. ROUTES One year. In advance '? 52 Klx months. In advance l.g One month. In advance 26 Address changed as often as desired; both new and old addresses must be Tlven. . Subscribers will pleane remit with order, which should be given for a specified term; name will not be entered until payment l received. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS One year. In advance Six months. In advance t'J One month, In advance

Rntered at Richmond. Indiana, post office as second class mall matter. New York Representatives Payne Younir, 80-34 West 33d struct, and 2935 West 32nd street. New York, N. Y. Chicago Representatives Payne A Young. 747-748 Marquette Uuildlng, Chicago, 111. Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copyright, 1908, by Edwin A.Nye loss or POWER. A large percentage of the energy that is In coal Is toat. It goes up the chimney In emoke. Much of the working power of machinery la lost by friction or by transmission. The same Is true of humans. Man as designed Is a perfect machine, but because of loss of energy or friction or transmission much of his power la wasted. One writer calls a human being an aglne. which Is a fine figure. Do you suppose the engineer of a locomotlTe would treat bis engine as some of us treat ourselves? If be knows bis business the engineer will Keep bis engine clean. He will get Just enough fuel In the firebox to make steam and no more. Be will use nothing but water to generate steam pure water, which will not coat the tubes of the boiler. Other liquids will not do. Before be starts bis engine he will look carefully orer the working parts to be sure everything Is In good order. He will start on time and If possible will keep on time, so as to arrive at the terminal on schedule. Now, do we run our engines-Kur-elTeethat way? Do we keep mind and body strictly clean 7 Do we use Just enough and not too much food fuel? Do we use only water to get up tbe necessary steam? ' And Do we go carefully orer our human machines before each day's run to determine their capacity to do tbe work, or are we "too busy?" And are the working parts of our mental and physical engines In such shape that we can keep them going from 1 to 5 as from 8 to 12? Do we do the last part of the day's run as easily as tbe first? Are you losing power? Something Is wrong. Illness aside, you should work up to your full capacity, whether It Is ten horsepower or a hundred. And you can do so If If you will cut out unnecessary friction and waste of energy, if you will keep your engines clean and workable. If you will run on schedule time and tf you will take as good care of yourself aa the average engineer does of his engine. Approximately Chicago sells 100.000 pianos each year, valued at $50,000.000 which is about one-third of the country's total product. Ihls Is My 51st Birthday WILLIAM J. POCHE. Dr. William J. Poche, who holda the post of secretary of state in the Borden ministry, was born in Clandeboye, Ontario, November 30. 1860. He attended Trinity Medical college, Toronto, for three years, and took his final year In medicine at the Western university, London, Ont., being the first gradaute in medicine of that university. In 1883 he moved to Minnedosa, Manitoba, where he has since feen engaged in the practice of his profession. Dr. Poche was an unsuccessful candidate for the Manitoba legislature In 1892. but he was successful In his candidature for the house of commons in the Conservative interest in 1896, and since then has bevn reelected at each succeeding general election. He took a prominent part in the debates in the house of commons and in the party organization, and in 1901 was elected Conservative whip for the West. MASONIC CALENDAR Friday, Dec 1. 1911. King Solomon's chapter. No. 4, R. A. M. Called convocation. Work In Most Excellent Master degree. 8tarday. Dec 2. 1911. Loyal Chapter, No. 49, O. E. S. Stated meeting ahd manual election of officers.

jffXS, 1ke Association of Amer- , i fSlilSI laa AdTertisers baa ex- , Vy unImI and certified to i X ihaaircalaUoaafthlspabUcatioa. Tha Figaros of circalstioa i oonUiMd in tkm Aasociatioa's ro ' port oaly ore guaranteed. Assstfctiea tf Aaerkai Aivertisers i No. 169- Wsittkall IIJ. N. T. City

Clearing Up.

Some fifty or sixty newspapers that come our way have already bravely attacked the subject of Thanksgiving. A great many of them enumerate the many blessings which we are all supposed to have (and a very great many of these blessings still remain to all of us to be thankful for). Among the things enumerated are: the joy of the air, the soil and the rain (which of course may be equally transposed into winter wind, the barren November fields and the snow and sleet.) But of course most of us are thankful enough that we are alive and quite conscious that the normal precipitation of moisture wafted on air currents to this particular latitude and longitude has been going on for some little time in very much the same way. These things were here when Richard LaRue settled down around Klkhorn and mayhap on Thanksgiving Day he thanked his Maker for the benefits of creation and did not consider the divine Providence as having singled him out in particular but thanked God that he was alive and could work. By his work he had felled the virgin forest. Thus he built a home. By his work he had planted maize which had turned yellow in the clearing. And he gathered it. He owed no man favor or homage and thus could safely attribute everything either to the blessings of creation or to the use to which be put his faculties. He was accountable to God through his conscience and no man kept tally on him: his barns were the automatic bookkeepers of his industry. It was either nis own efforts of which he could be proud or the Thanksgiving for the bounty of the place he had picked in the then wilderness.

But of late years it has become directly.

If a man makes a million dollars on the stock market, the route is a trifle circuitous by which he can trace this bounty back to Master of the Universe. Also if accident has visited him it is a trifle hard to think that he was chastened by a divine instrumentality when as a matter of fact a faulty mechanism purely man made is still being used by a large corporation which has paid attorneys to influence legislators so that the practice may continue. Formerly thrift and industry were held to have their God-given origin and reward and hence were appropriate occasions ior Thanksgiving. But when a very few men have taken hold of a great industry, and at the same time raise the prices at which the commodity is sold, and there remains a great difference in percentage between this increase in price and the wages paid so that they may pocket that difference It seems that thrift and industry are somewhat alienated from their divine reward.

We may thank the Creator for the bountiful rains but our Richmond City Water works now has the privilege of cutting off the supply of those rains when our supply of money gives out. And that supply of money may or may not be the measure of thrift and industry. So after reviewing the attempts of the sixty newspapers to tell us what we should be thankful for we find that there is a considerable disparity between the things which are carried in their editorial columns and their market page or the front page. Mayor Shank of Indianapolis, we see is selling turkeys at a price nt which people can afford to buy them. We may admire this either as a good publicity stunt for a man in politics or we may take it as a very benevolent and wise thing for the head of a municipality to do. But why this disparity between the normal wage and the normal price? Is this then to be ignored in our Thanksgiving thoughts? Thereforo we shall not dwell this year on the things which appear In the Thanksgiving proclamations and prayers. Till work shall have Its fair relation to pay it will be rather hard to tell a man about the blessings of work and the joy that man should have in emulatitig in an infinitesimal way the Creator to whom he gives thanks.

So let us give thanks that on this day more men in Richmond are seeing clearly the things which have been interposed between him and his Maker and give thanks that these things being creations of Incarnate Wickedness and Greed may be done away with so that in time he may lift up his head and face the work of life with an equal chance. When this world has grasped that indictment of Carlyle that it is "impossible that an Industry, national or personal, carried on under 'constant invocation of the Devil' can be a blessed or a happy one in any fiber of it" we shall then be able to see clearly the beauties of life and from irresistible impulse give hearty thanks for them.

COOED LOVE TO EACH QTrjER THIRTY YEARS (Nat lor ft News Association) SPOKANE, Nov. 30 Blanche L. Cole, 48 years of age, a life long resident of Middleboro, Mass., and Wyman E. Brocklebank, a bachelor-farmer of 50 years at Quincy, Wash., were married in Spokane on November 24, after a courtship of 30 years. They will make their home at Quincy, where the bridegroom has a large ranch. The bride, who made the journy across the continent unaccompan "THIS DATE

NOVEMBER 30. 1667 Jonathan Swift, author of "Gulliver's Travels," born. Died Oct. 19, 1745. 1782 The American commissioners signed a preliminary treaty of peace with Great Britain, ending the Revolutionary war. 1819 Cyrus W. Field, projector of ocean telegraph, born in Stockbridge, Mass. Died in Ardsley, N. Y., July 12, 1892. 1829 Welland Canal opened for navigation. 1835 Samuel L. Clements ("Mark Twain") born in Florida, Mo. Died in Redding. Conn., April 21, 1910. 1840 Remains of Napoleon I. landed at Cherbourg. 1861 Jefferson Davis elected President o fthe Confederate States of America. 1862 James Sheridan Knowles, celebrated dramatist, died. Born at Cork in 1784. 1885 Hostilities ceased between Servia and Bulgaria. 1900 Royal Canadian troops reviewed at Windsor by Queen Victoria.

was say ice. Altar n for abont

lahh was never batter.

Dr. Piercefs Favorite Prescription

1 e positive cure tor weakness and disease of tbe feminine orgeniem. It allays inflammation, heels ulceattioo and soothes pais. Tones and builds ap tbe nerves. Do not permit e dishonest dealer to substitute for this medicine which has a record ol 40 years of cures. " No, thank yoa, I want what 1 ask for."

0 nerve's Pleasaat Pelets Jaeece sslW

more and more hard to thank God

ied, arrived here the morning of November 24, and within an, hour she was Mrs. Brocklebank, the service being read in the presence of a few witnesses in the parlors of a local hotel. Afterward they visited the fourth National Apple show and then attended a reception in honor of the princesses of the empire, where they met a large number of acquaintances. The happy bridegroom said that he and his bride became acquainted in New England more than 35 years ago, when they were schoolmates in Plymouth county, Mass. IN HISTORY' Backache

Is only os of many symptoms wiych some women endure through weakness or displacement of the womanly organs. Mrs. Lizzie White of Memphis, Ten., wrote Dr. R. V. Pierce, as follows : At tines I was hardly able to be on my feet. I ;blieve I hod every pain and aehe a woman onld have. Had a vary bad case. Internal rasas were very maols diseased and my back

raa eery weak. I suffered a treat deal witn

condition whan I wrote to yon for taking yoar " r aTonte rresenpthree months can say that my maturml sower

Add To Your Personal Adornments

BY THE USE OF NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE. A pretty woman may enhance her beauty and a plain woman become good looking by the proper care of her hair. Nice hair, pretty hair, growing on the head it adorns, is one of nature's greatest beautifiers. The kind of hair which always makes us look the second time, folJows the use of Newbro's Herpicide, and is possible for every woman. Regular applications of Herpicide kill the hair-destroying dandruff germ, keep the haid from coming out and add to it that luxuriance, snap and luster which are essential to hair beauty. Newbro's Herpicide is the Original scalp prophylactic. All other hair remedies claiming to kill the dandruff germ are simply trying to trade upon the reputation of genuine Herpicide. Applications may be obtained at good barber shops and hair dressesrs. Send 10c in postage to The Herpicide Co., Dept. R., Detroit, Mich., for sample and booklet. One dollar size bottles sold by all druggists under an absolute guarantee. A. G. Luken & Co., Special Agents. PLAYED A SHELL GAME. A Parliamentary Joke by a New South Wales 8olon. Australia once bad a great public Joke, which was played openly in tbe New South Wales state parliament by a member who afterward became attorney general. A bill bad been Introduced to protect native flowers from ruthless destruction. Tbe honorable member uprose and sympathized. He Informed the Introducer of the bill a somewhat pompous gentleman that he heartily approved. But why these invidious distinctions? Tbe bill protected and be quoted all the botanical names in tbe bill. But why were other flowers equally deserving neglected? Why were and here be reeled off a long list of tbe Latin names for cockles, mussels, oysters, etc. why were these sweet flowers to be blighted in their bloom by being plucked by any prowling excursionist who wanted something in his buttonhole? Tbe introducer of tbe bill promptly offered to extend tbe list to Include these. So half the shellfish on tbe coast, including the periwinkle, were added to the flowers worthy of protection. The officials of the house discovered tbe boax next day and set it right But the joke was too good to be kept quiet, and all Australia chuckled at tbe expense of the pompous legislator. London Answer? Where They Verted. Meyerbeer and Rossini. In spite of all their rivalries, were tbe warmest of friends. Rossini once said. "Meyerbeer and I can never agree." Wben some one in surprise asked why be replied. "Meyerbeer likes sauerkraut better than he does macaroni." One Method. "Do you always keep n-smlllng about your dally duties?" "Naw; 1 look grouchy. Then 1 ain't asked to do no extra work." 'Washington Herald. Who overcomes by force hath overcome but half bis foe.- Milton. OCO days This is

WMtte Star

Telephones 2747-1S20

FORUMOFTHE PEOPLE Articles Contributed for This Column Must Not Be in Excess of 400 Words. The Identity of All Contributors y Be Known to the Editor. rticles Will Be Printed in the Order tm.ed.

Editor, The Palladium: In your issue of the 25th Evangelist Kennedy is reported to have "attacked" Christian Science declaring that Christian Science is powerless "to save," that it "denies the divinity of Christ and the doctrine of God and Sin, which is virtually denying salvation." Such statements evidence the fact that our critic was not well inluimtu before essaying judgment, so in justice to him as well as to Christian Science we ask space to state authoritatively what Christian Science does teach on the points cited. First of all we will waive the point of pro-! priety of such militant and uncharita- j ble attitude toward a sister denomiua-; tion, leaving your readers to judge rel- i ative thereto. j On page 497 of Mrs. Eddy's text-: book on Christian Science, "Science and Health with Key to the Scrip- j tures," will be found, by any sufficient-1 ly interested to look up an authority j on the points at issue, the "religious j tenets of Christian Science." These j effectually refute our critic's allega-j tions. Departing from our regular cus- j torn, I quote herewith for publication ; the fourth of these six "tenets," which reads as follows: "4. We acknowledge Jesus' atonement as the evidence of divine, efficacious love, unfolding man's unity with God through Christ Jesus the Wayshower; and we acknowledge that man is saved through Christ, through truth, Life, and Love as demonstrated by the and overcoming sin and death." (Science and Health, pp. 497.) We are inclined to believe that our critic makes the customary error of failing to discriminate between the human, corporeal or fleshy Jesus and our Lord's true, spiritual, divine nature, the Christ. The first was the son of a virgin, the latter was and is the Son of God. Our Saviour, himself, repeatedly made this distinction throughout His earth ministry. As Paul significantly words it "Christ Jesus thought it not robbery to be equal with God but took upon himself the form of a servant and was made in the likeness of men." It will be noted here that our Lord's real and permanent "nature" was that of his divine sonship known as the Christ, but that his human "form" was in the likeness of mortals until eliminated by spiritual growth. It is was temporal and transitory yet tangible to mortals and therefore po

The Effects of Opiates. THAT INFANTS are peculiarly susceptible to opium and ita 'various preparations, all of which are narcotic, is well Known. Even in the smallest doses, if continued, these opiates cause changes in the functions and growth of the cells which are likely to become permanent, causing imbecility, mental perversion, s craving: for alcohol or narcotics in later life. Nervous diseases, such as intractable nervous dyspepsia and lack of staying powers are a result of dosing with opiates or narcotics to keep children quiet in their infancy. The rule among physicians is that children should ner receive opiates in the smallest doses for more than a day at a time, and only then if unavoidable. The administration of Anodynes, Drops, Cordials, Soothing Syrups and other narcotics to children by any but a physician cannot be too strongly decried, and the druggist should not be party to it. Children who are ill need the attention of a physician, and it is nothing less than a crime to dose them willfully with narcotics.

Castoria contains no narcotics if signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. Genuine Castoria always bears the

SUNSET

IT TT1TTTri?in.

The new fast train of the Southern Parifir Sunset Route

from New Orleans to Los make its initial trip December e tnereatter. train is limited to six cars and

schedules. It is run through a land

no hindrance from snow and ice. It will afford every comfort known to modern travel. A maid, a manicurist, a hairdresser, and commodious dressing-rooms. A barber, shower bath, valet service, and stenographer. An excess fare of $10 will be charged. The Winter Route to California The trains will be of the latest design, and all steel compartment-drawing-room sleepers and observation-buffet car. Vacuum cleaners will do away with the offensive brushing up of dirt in the cars. At each terminal the "Sunset Limited" will be given telephone connections.

The Sunset Route

the route of lowest altitude, and takes

San Antonio, to Los Angeles in 56 hours hours and 30 minutes.

The roadbed is oiled, oil-burning engines arc employed; the dining car service is the best in the world. For descriptive booklets write to

W. H. S3 Fourth PHOEMIXC -YUMA

McsscefliCF and Beflnvery Scwiice

Special Rates to

tent to salvation as example or as "the way" to life eternal. If we are not mistaken. Rev. Kennedy's own denominational creed makes such distinction. It was the Christ mind exemplified in our Lord's characteristic declaration "not my will, O God. but thine be done," that made Jesus the world's saviour, for it enabled him to effectually and successively overcome and eliminate all phases of human depravity.

from the hour of his birth to the final ; consummation of his effort at flesh ' elimination known as His Ascension, including victory over the grave. Af- j ter all of this, however, it should be ! remembered that he commanded universally "He that believeth on me. the works that I do shall he do also." This would indicate that his work of redemption was wrought through example, and that emulation of, as well as faith in, his work would alone effect salvation. Our Lord designated works of healing or "signs following," not mere profession, as the only legitimate evidence of discipliueship. That Christian Science teaching includes th? idea of the one infinite and true God as its very basis is evidenced in the foregoing and Indeed on every hand. The Christian Science teacbing as to sin is scriptural and perfectly reasonable if understood. Our Saviour designated all forms of co-called eviil including sickness as well as sin, the "works of the devil" and then declared this devil "a liar and the father of it," while He boldly affimed that He was come to "destroy the works of the i devil." Our critic has doubtless conceived the idea that the Christian Science sense of evil as not actually existent, as entity, on the basis of the above scriptural reasoning, is followed by a dangerous ignoring of evil. Such is not a reasonable deduction, because to come to see a lie as a lie, is to instantly cease being deceived thereby. In other words when a lie is seen as such, it ceases to have power and disappears. Actual facts cannot be made to disappear, cannot be stroyed. Our Lord steadfastly substituted on every hand truth for error, health for sickness, life for death, declaring at the same time that his sense was the Divine sense, and this correct Divine sense of all things resulted in the elimination of the finite, erring, human sense, as naturally and as necessarily as light eliminates darkness an dthe sun dispells a mist. On the basis of such reasoning Christian Science is today eliminating sin and suffering from human consciousness, and therein is effectually working toward eventual salvation and eternal Life. It is but reasonable to I urge that it be permitted to retain its place among the other forces for good in the earth without let or hindrance, in as much as the world needs all the good it can get. Very sincerely, R. Stanhope Easterday. it bears the f .-Jfr A J7 signature of CaKsvrVT CccJUC

jl.jlatj.jl jl Aiixur

Angeles and San Francisco, will

4th, and on Mondays and Thurs-

will cut thirty hours from previous

of perpetual summer; will

you from New Orleans, via El Paso and

and 15 minutes, to San Francisco Connor, Gen. Agent Ave., E., Cincinnati, O. .0, Business Houses

Cff.ee Rear Ecalefeert's Hew QjStcre

THE HOUSE OF COMMONS. In Pitt's Day the Speaker Kant Himself Stimulated With Porter. The speaker of the English bouse of commons holds an enviable position today, but It was not until comparatively modern tunes that the speaker . ceased to be a partisan, nor was his position always one of its preeent dignity. In tbe time of Pitt the speaker was accustomed to solace himself with a draft of porter: Like sad Prometheus fastened to the rock. In vain he looks for pity to the clock. In vain the e Reels of strengthening porter tries And nods to Belamy for fresh supplies. Maimers were somewhat looser in those days than they are now. Pitt himself on one occasion showed signs of n too copious libation to tbe gods, and this gave rise to the celebrated couplet: I cannot see the speaker. Hat. Can you? What ! Cannot see the speaker? 1 see two. It is said that on one occasion Mr. Disraeli arrived at the house somewhat "under the Influence" and was so Indiscreet as to attack Mr. Gladstone, then prime minister, upon some point of foreign policy. Mr. Gladstone replied witberiugly that "tbe right honorable gentleman evidently has sources of Inspiration from which her majesty's ministers are debarred." Argonaut

FIGHTING EVIL. The most truly religious thing that a man can do is to fight his way through habits and dehcirnce and back to pure, manlike elements ol his nature, which are the ineffaceable traces of the divine workmanship and alone really worth fighting for. W TORIC LENSES Many nervous people who have trouble with ordinary lenses wear Toric Lenses with Perfect Ease. Let us fit you with a pair Special Prescription Ground. MISS C. M. SWEITZER Optometrist. PHONE 1099 9274 MAIN ST. 'vm suffer in 7 V V