Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 34, 14 December 1911 — Page 10
PAGE TEX.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1911.
CHURCH PEOPLE ARE ADDRESSEDBY LUIID Socialist Mayor of Schenectady Expounds Principles of His Party NEW YORK, Dec. 14. One of the strangest meetings ever held in a
Brooklyn Episcopal church with the sanction of the pastor took place in Holy Trinity church, Montague and Clinton streets, when the Rev. Dr. George R. Lund, mayor-elect of Schenectady on the Socialist ticket and formerly a Brooklyn minister, addressed a large audience on the principles of socialism. Such meetings are usually held in the gymnasium of the Trinity club, next door to the church. Dr. Mellish, pastor of the church, announced that, owing to the large assemblage, he felt that every foot of seating and standing room of the gymnasium would be taken up by the combined audience, so invited those in the gymnasium to listen to Dr. Lund in the church. Upon being introduced Dr. Lund received a round of applause. He said In part: "It sounds strange to hear applause in an edifice of this kind. To open the doors of a church, however, for the purposes of discussion, I think is a good thing, for if the churches do not begin to realize that their doors should be thrown open to the discussion of problems that affect whole whole communities, with things as they are today, it will be only a short time before they will not have to open their doors at all. The time has come when they will not get the interest of the educated classes unless they do." Dr. Lund then spoke of the social problems of the day, particularly the question of dealing with the pauper situation, the labor question and the fair distribution of the earnings of labor. "There are thirty or forty thousand men on the streets of Brooklyn today
who are unemployed, who are unfit'
for employment and would not be able to work If they had it offered to them," he continued. "They are willing to live on 6 cents a day, and will take that five cents and spend it in a saloon and get jusT enough to sustain life in their bodies. Such conditions as this should not exist. There is a way to stop it and I think the Socialist system will do it. This kind of type can not be changed in a day or months it will take years. "Probably some of you good people have taken some poor family to the country and when questioned about it will say: 'Why, as soon as I turned, they made right back to the city, not caring to stay where there were beautiful trees, pastures, etc' Certainly the sounds of the country would drive them crazy, just as the sights and
aounds of the slums would drive you crazy. They are a type and that is all there is to it." Dr. Lund, in finishing his address, before inviting to audience to ask questions, said: "Dr. Beecher said at one time that there was never a convert made in a Gothic church. Well, probably there never wag. The meeting tonight is in a Gothic church, but we must understand the times now are different from those of Dr. Beecher, and I hope I will have made, before I leave a number of converts." General questions were asked the minister as to how the Socialists -would handle different questions that would arise, and is was the last question that was asked him that referred to the McNauiara case. "To my mind the confessions came very Inopportunely," he said. "It seems too bad that this thing should have happened at so critical a time. I believed in the absolute innocence of the McNamaras, or I would not have expressed myself as I have. Millions besides myself believed the same thing. "I do believe, however, that the business interests in Los Angeles had something to do with the present situation. I also feel that advantage should not have been taken of the nituation as it was. Considerable hatred has been occasioned between capital and labor by the past situation, and I feel that labor will be the better by the weeding out of such tnen as the McNamaras. It will mean cleaner unionism and a cleaner body of men who advise them, which will lead to a much higher understanding on their part."
ECONOMY IN MEAT. Aveid Waste by the Judicious Use of Odds and Ends. The cook who broils the tough end of a porterhouse steak, roasts the ribs j In a roast, throws away the bones and juices left on the platter by the carver ' and discards as unfit for use the meat from which the soup stock is made i9 guilty of wicked waste. i The end of a porterhouse steak is j unfit to serve when broiled. It should j
be cut off. This, together with the i signs her artistic product "E. S. Cabone and Juice left on the platter, a j thell," has just issued her annual
Christmas card which is on sale at Nicholson & Bro. and otherwhere.
MRS. CAIHELL DESIGNS CHRISTMAS CARD
This Artist's Work Is Attracting ' Wide Attention. Joseph Pulitzer, Greatest 'Journalist, Endowed Orchestral Music.
PRANKS ALARM TOWN College Students Play Practical Jokes.
BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. Mrs. J. E. Cathell, of this city, who
bay leaf, three or four cloves, an on
ion, a carrot and some parsley, will
make several cups of bouillon. The ribs j ana- which is an attractive example ot
decorative art. Mrs. Cathell's Christmas and Easter
should be cut out of a roast when pre
paring it for the oven. These, with the leftover gravy, may be used in a similar way for stock. In making stock the long, slow process of gentle boiling extracts the fla
vor from the meat and coagulates the
albumen. Only a little of the latter
extracted. Therefore the meat loses but little of its nourishing properties. There are numerous ways In which such meat can be made appetizing. Combined with rice and tomatoes a delicious luncheon dish may be made. Butter a baking dish and line with hot boiled rice. Fill the center with bits of meat well seasoned with salt, pepper and onion juice. Cover with rice. Bake twenty minutes in the oven.
Turn out on a platter and pour over
try regulations, he Jumped from the boat and swam ashore dodging the officials by "the skin of his teeth." And he died a multi-millionaire, the owner of one of the greatest newspapers in the world, the New York World. Pulitzer was, of course, a genius.
With equal opportunity very few
the ages and reached their apogee in j
mm. I Pulitzer was one of the greatest ! journalists, one of the canniest, farseeingest, most original who has ever lived. He revolutionized newspaper methods. And his slogan cry was "accuracy."
This was one of his obsessions. I CAMBRIDGE. Mass.. Dec. 14. Civil
One he pointed his reporters to. One i ians in the college district were starthe insisted upon. With lack of which j led when a hobo ran through Harvard he had no patience. Seen in the be- square closely pursued by a police-
quest in his will for the establishment j man who was howling: "He is a mur-
of a prize for the example of report-1 derer! He killed a woman." Women er's work which will show "accuracy, ; became uneasy. "Catch him! Catch
terseness and the accomplishment of
some public good.
President A. Lawrence Lowell of Har-J Tard. The young man was in rag and tatters, with a red bandanna around his neck, a tin can slung from his shoulder by a string, and a dilapfc dated hat on his head. The cop was L. Saltonstall, of Boston. 1914.
cards put out within the past two 'could have accomplished so dizzy a years have attracted wide attention ! climax.
and have been in demand in Boston, New York and other eastern cities, as
What rjin Ha dnna hv nml-iitirtn . . 1 1 1 -.H
uiWe" ,,VhiVecUoHn- hf Pecuar;to brilliant mentality and comple-
.uu. uu-. v. :--imented by god-like energy. to this phase of decorative expression ; . ' ...
. 1 11 I J . .. " .v.. ......
mosi aamiraoiy. This year's card varies pronouncedly from those of former seasons in Its
But first of all he put "accuracy.'
He knew this was the basis of all news-gathering. It was the crucible through which the life of the world was fused each day into the printed
But nonetheless it is a showing of naee.
There are some people who can t succeed.
They may seemingly possess every
attractive motive and form, . the j qualification that makes for success
green and red or the holly, its leaves and its berries, being used in conventionalized effects, a swirl of the leaves accented by the red of the berries, appearing in squares in each corner, these, with panels of more ornamental
it a well seasoned tomato sauce. It austerity enclosing the lettering a
Is a toothsome morsel. National Food Magazine. HISTORIC FIRES.
The Most Fateful of All, Perhaps, Was the Burning of Moicew. I A list of great cities burned would be a list of nearly all the great capi-j tals of the world. Persepolis, the splendid residence of a long series of rulers whose tributary provinces extended from the Indus to the Hellespont, was burned, with all its palaces and temples. Babylon and Carthage were so utterly destroyed that their very location has become a matter of doubt. Rome was burned eight rimes. Jerusalem four times, and. though they rose from their ashes The stcond temple Is not like the first. Athens, Syracuse. Bagdad. Alexandria and Antioch now exhibit only a shadow of their former grandeur. The
sentiment from Phillips Brooks
'The World has grown old with its burden of care but at Christmas it is always young." The initial letter, pictorially charming, and the word "Christmas," are in the holly color, the rest in that of the leaves. On the inside of the folder is a Christmas greeting. Mrs. Cathell, whose art has recently expressed itself in decorative forms, produces in other media, being a landscapist of charm in both oil and water-color although very little of the latter has been seen in exhibition here. Her instant success with the more decorative aspects of art in her initial examples, and the demand created for it on the part of the public, presages further brilliant achievement.
And yet prove miserable failures. "Failures" as the world measures success. Thoreau, in instance, was looked upon with pity, patronage and. indeed, with a certain contempt, by his townsmen. Still his name is one of the greatest in the literature of this country.
Whatever the decorative accessories of verbiage and narrative, there must be the foundation of fact. It was this love for and insistence upon accuracy that served as a lever to help build his great newspaper fortune. The bequest for a half million dollars for the maintainance of orchestral music in the metropolis, stanus almost alone. Money has been left to endow art museums and, occasionally, some institution of musical instruction. But for the single purpose of putting an orchestra on a basis of independence of uncertain public support this is un-
"l've got the
him!" yelled the cop
evidence!" Several staid citizens, evidently unfamiliar with college affairs, joined the policeman in his chase. An electric car came into the square and shifted trolleys. The "murderer" took refuge on this car and was pursued thither by the "cop," to the puzzle of the passengers. "Lynch him!" cried the indignant pursuers, now that the quarry had been landed; but when the policeman told them the affair was a college initiation they subsided. The hobo was J. H. Lowell, of Boston, class of 1914, and a nephew of
Vary Realistic I First Parts Artist Vy you put tatj salt wid e paint? Second Artist Eer j Is for a marine picture. I make zej paint salt: sen when ze English put' zair fingers to sair lips say say: "Eet Is wonderful; almost taste ze salt on xe ocean. Zan zay buy. Satire.
A Question of Depth. "Beauty." said the ready made philosopher. "is only skin deep." "I can't agree with you." said tea positive man. "If beauty were measured by that standard the rhinoceros would be one of the most charminc animals." Exchange.
The Retort Matrimonial. She You can't ever accuse ma of helping you to make a fool of yourself. Re I don't know about that. You said yes when I asked you te marry me. Baltimore American. ,
In his philosophy the mess of ac
cumulated things in which everyone 1(lu. is more or less engulfed, was to him It is something which
should be
unimportant and, in a way, amusing. A cabin with a table, chair and cot was all he wanted or needed.
done in every town of any considerable size in this country. Abroad orchestral organizations are fostered by
This, however, is not the "failure," i the government, in many instances, which cannot succeed. ! especially in Germany. Each German The latter is governed by the fates, j principality has a musical organizaOr by an admixture of heredity and tion under its patronage, environment which holds its victim ! In this ccuntry where the arts must
inevorably in the shackles of circumstance. Struggle he never so fiercely he
subsist on the pleasure of the people, uncertainty restricts achievement. In our own town an impetus to mu-
cannot free himself from its meshes. 1 sical culture incalculable would at
Joseph Pulitzer, millionaire editor,
l-noemcians. use tne spartans ana as-: . ft ... Vl.ith an10 ..., honilpat
Syrians, disappeared with the ruin of ; x mon their cap tals. but the most fateful, for niaiutainance of arconflagration recorded in the history ... , ... , . , . . ., ' chestral music in New York. of the world is perhaps that of Moscow 1 A second half million to the Metro"They talk as if the fnte of Europe! Plitau MlIseum of Art in that cit" h.i f v..iri,,o" nvl A million to Columbia university,
says
De Bourlenne in his memoirs of the first empire. "If Napoleon had beateu
for the School of Journalism for which he had previously given a mil-
Wellineton and Blucher a dozen times ! lion dollars.
It could not have retrieved the reverses A prize for "the novel of the year of the three preceding years. The 'which shall best preserve the wholetruth is that the French Caesar and j some atmosphere of American life and his fortune were ruined by the burn- j the highest standard of American
ing of Moscow. That city was the fu-; manners and manhood
neral pile of the great nation." Ex
change
Effort after effort is made to shake off the encumbering mystery that keeps him from accomplishment. Finally he succumbs. He bows his head to the fate that pursues him. He recognizes there is some unknown force he cannot combat. Something malignant, relentless, personal that dogs his steps. ' Moralists and materialists laugh this down. They say everything lies within yourself. That you are the molder of your own fortunes. That you make or mar your own life. That you are your own fate. Your own worst enemy or best friend. That heredity and environment have absolutely nothing to do with the direction of your own life. They frown on "fatalism." There is no "such thing" as fate. The moralists call it "God." The materialists deny its existence.
And all the time they know that,
tend the endowment of the Richmond j Symphony orchestra. j An endowment which would not ne-1 cessarily need to be excessive. En-j ou&h ' to insure its continuance j through a feeling of security that its j
organization would not end in nullity. That its artistic spirit could be accentuated through independence.
I
Not For Ten Times as Much.
Marks So ymj saw ttie woman who;
dropped the purs. t n 1 lost tier in the crowd': Did you advertise for herV Parks- Yes: I put this in: "If the very homely woman of forty, wearing a dress of last year's style aod a most unbecoming bat. who lost ber purse con raining ntf.fio on I '.oy Is ton street Saturday will apply to her property will he returned." I've had no answer, though. Marks I should say not: Do you think any woman would own up to that description for ?3.f0?
A prize for the "play which shall best represent the educational value
.1 a. 1 . 1 : ,1 . .1 . . V. knfintn a? tVtincrc i
uiiu puwt-r ui me giage oj ntiaiug me way uuwu m me uuitum . , Rosfon Triiriscrint
The Collar of Homer. standard of good morals, good taste there is this terrible, cruel, myster- j Among the curiosities preserved in ana- g00(i manners." j ious, inexorable force riding down the j .
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France, is the famous "collar of Homer." Invented and worn by the great Italian poet Alfleri. This distinguished man began the study of Greek when more than forty-seven years old and made such rapid progress in that language as to astonish all who knew him. eWe proclaimed himself "cheva
lier of the order of Homer'
peared with a collar on which were engraved the names of twenty-three poets, ancient and modern, and to which
was suspended a cameo portrait or 1
Another prize for the "best piece-; human entity in its way without mer-, nf ronnrtpr's wnrlr urhioh cliall ohnw i fv
accuracy, terseness, the accomplish- i Pulitzer was "the darling of the : KJ
ment of some public good." ! gods."
Still another prize for the "best j His energy was innate. j newspaper editorial which shall show j His ambition was part of his en- j clearness of style, moral purpose, I dowment. I sound reasoning, and power to in-! The fortunate fates cleared his .
aim up- 1 j.Mi.i.i c :!.. j Tr
uirecuon. : naiea tne amicumes. oeemiugij i. 1
Joseph Pulitzer was an example of ! was Pulitzer who whipped aside every what can be accomplished in a coun-! hindrance. It was, in fact, Pulitzer's try where freedom of opportunity and ! lucky star. The kindly fate that en-
ooooosooccgccoocccc:
0 a
s
Homer. On the reverse side of this j democratic institutions prevail.
veloped and overhadowed him. He
preserved relic Is an Italian distich I He came to the United States a 1 was spurred on by that witnm nimseii. composed by Alfleri, which translated j poor emigrant without a penny. I But it was within himself through the!
says. "Alfleri himself In creating this order of the chevalier of Homer has invented an order more divine than that of any king."
The Pipe of Peace.The North American Indian usually made his pipes out cf a kind of stone known as red pipe stone, of which there were large deposits in the old Sioux country, and the Great Spirit is said to have given his Indorsement to this particular material, which might have been a Sioux monopoly, in these words: "This stone Is red. It is your flesh. It belongs to you all. Out of It make no more tomahawks, war hatchets nor scalping knives. Use it only to make the pipe of peace and smoke therefrom when you would propitiate me and do my will."
So poor was he that, to avoid the en- combinations of life that came down
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You will find that druggists everywhere speak well of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. They know from long experience in the sale of it that in ases of coughs and colds it can always be depended upon, and that it is pleasunt and safe to take. For sale by all dealers.
Crude Mining Methods. Mica mining In the Nellore district. India, though a highly profitable Industry. Is carried on practically aa It was by the natives a hundred years ago. The mica vein Is followed up by underhand stoping which results in the production of tortuous, wormlike boles some times extending to a depth of 300 feet below the surface. The mica excavated is brought to the surface by a string of coolies working band over hand on rudely constructed bamboo ladders. On account of the accumu- ' lation of water during tbe night when Work ceases all sinking operations are delayed each morning for an hour or more while the water is being dipped out with buckets by coolies.
Diving Animals. One thing that none of the land Wring animals does Is to dive. No matter how hard pressed a swimming deer, rabbit, squirrel or other purely terrestrial animal may be. it will remain above water. But tbe muskrat. beaver, ice bear, and otter dive immediately.
His Bearing. "Is he a man of military bearing?" "Well, he likes to soldier. "New York Press.
DR. B. McWHINNEY Physician and Surgeon Office Gennett Theater Building North A Street Residence. The Arden. S. 14th ft A 4 Phones Office, 29S7: Res. 2936
BE A SANTA CLAUS To Your Family. We Will Furnish the Goods. A Northwestern Policy
H. F. PARD1ECK, District MgT. Rooms, 6 and 7 Kelly Block. Phone 1965.
Ti
Flower Shop
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o o o o o o o o
8 o 8 8 O to o
TEEHffg. Open Every Night Until Xmas.
mam
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Fancy Dress Slippers for Society Girls, la all fairies tsdleaCicrs, $2 $0 to $4.0
at
Fur Trimmed House Slippers for the Home Bodies, at $1.00 to $1.75 Easy Slippers for Dad
50c to $2.50
RED TOP BOOTS for the kiddies. . .$1.75 to $2. Something appropriate for every foot at reasonable prices. We guarantee satisfaction on all Christmas i purchases at this store. Red Goose Contest Ends Dec 21
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