Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 8, 19 November 1912 — Page 6
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f AGE SIX THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AXli SCN-TELEGRA j. TUESDAY, XOVE3IBER 19, 1912.
I he Richmond Palladium asd Son-Telegram Published kud awood y tho Issued Every Bventn -Joot Of Mce Corner North Sthnd A streets. Palladium and 8un-Teleram Phone--Uutlness OMica. iM; Nowa DopartWnt KICHMOffD. IMDUNA
SUBSCRIPTION TJ6BM in nichmona $.0f par yeax tm ' vance) or lOo pr woaaV KUKAli ROCrriaa) "ne year, in advanoo ......-......'I? Mix months, in advanoo ........ ? Ono month. In advaaoo . ' . Address chanced aa otaa aa a'r' botb new and old addr ae saoa o Subscribers will pieaaa ramt w order, which should bo Blveo. IOT ' pacified tern; nam will not d until patent la recalvem. MAIL SUBSCBIPTIOm One year. In advance . Six montba. in advance .......... - Ono month, lo advance .......... Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post office aa second class mull matter. New York Representatives Payne Youns, 39-34 West 3d street, and J 15 West 2nd street. New York. N. Y. Culcaco Representatives Payne -J Young, 747-14 Marquette Building. Chicago. 111. The Association of Amof A ieaa , Advertisers baa aunsnod and certinea to tho oircalatioa of this pub lication. Tho fisvrea of circnlauoa oontaioo4 in the Aasociation'a report only are guaranteed. Association of American Advertisers No. lce- Whitthall BIa. N. T. City Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. SEEING THINGS. Oculists tell us we can see but 50 per cent of the things at which we look. If so how much smaller percentago we really see. Because No two people see the same thing in the same sense that is to say: Suppose two men and a woman walk down the street together. One man Is Interested in buildings and gives particular attention to architecture. The other one thinks of buying an automobile, and his eyes follow every machine that passes. The woman is interested in dress, and she carefully notes costumes. Now Ask the man interested in buildings about the automobiles or the automobile seer about buildings or ask the woman about the buildings or machines or the men about dresses. Each sees what he wants to see. Seeing only what he wants to see, he passes over the others and does not really see them. As Stevenson says: " Two men looked out from prison bars. Una saw mud, another stars. One saw mud because he looked for mud. the other stars because he looked for stars. ' Besides, there is the element of subjective vision. For instance, your pet dog may appear to me to be a very bomely sort of animal,' but to you he ia a handsome dog. There's a light in the dog's eyes I cannot see. Your wife is beautiful to you; to me she may lack many of the elements of comeliness. I cannot see that your sweetheart Is particularly pretty; she Is handsome in your eyes. Your home may appear poor to the stranger; to you it Is beautiful because It is home. And no one appreciates the furnishings of your own room, enriched by the gifts and purchases of years. We cannot see alike. Each of us sees ft different world. Which should, teach us tolerance and charity. Though your neighbor cannot see as you do, he is as honest as you are. He thinks you are wrong; you know he Is wrong. Possibly both of you are wrong. Do not make tip your mind until you hay seen all sides, because The man who sees things from a single standpoint is apt to be narrow, provincial, conceited, possibly prejudiced. Ho lacks the sweep of the broader viHon, the horizon of the wider view. Notice of Election The members of St. John's Lutheran Chureh are herewith notified that an election will be held at said church on the 28th of November, 1912, at 7 p. m. to elect Trustees and other church officers. George Schnieder, Sec'y. Advertisement 19-26. A Diplomatic Husband. 'Mrs. Max Cant afford to let me go to the seashore. Why not? My board there wouldn't cost much more than it does here. Mr. Max I admit that, my love, but think of all the money I'd have to spend entertaining myself in your absence. Boston Transcript. Inherited. ' . "Sadie." said a mother to ber small daughter, "why is it that you and your little brother are always quarreling' I don't know," replied Sadie, "unless 1 take after you and he takes after papa." Chicago News. Much In the world may be done by severity, more by love and most of all ; by discernment and impartial Justice. -toethe. Sound Sleep is usually impossible to the bilious. But biliousness yields and headaches, sour stomach, indigestion go when the bowels are regulated and the liver and kidneys stimulated by
Minimum Wages for Women. Richmond, although a small city, is as much concerned in the question of improving the condition of the working women as cities the size of New York, Chicago, St Louis and Indianapolis. It is a question every American citizen must bend his energies to solve, for the condition of the working woman, who number a legion, is a disgrace to the nation and if continued will have a demoralizing influence on the race. The government has conducted an Investigation for the purpose of giving publicity to the hopeless existence led by the average girl employed In factories or in stores, and the government has found that the average wage of this class of working women is $6.64 per week. The girl who is "adrift," that is one who has no home but lives in lodging houses or,wlth private families, must deduct from her weekly wage of $6.64 the sum of $3.67 a week for food and shelter; her average car fare is 47 cents a week and her average weekly contribution to needy relatives amounts to $2.14. Her average weekly expenditures, therefore, amount to $6.28, leaving her a balance of 36 cents which she can use to purchase clothes, pay for medical attention, enjoy modest recreation and buy incidentals. Truly a lordly sum. There are thousands of smug, short-sighted people who imagine that the hundreds of working girls who "go wrong" do so just because they are inclined to be fast and seek the company of fast people. It is high time to utterly destroy this falacy and give the widest publicity to the fact that it is an economical cause which drives hosts of young women to liveB of shame. Once their reputations are lost they are doomed to a living death because prudish society, blaming the girls and not the economic conditions we have made possible, refuses to extend the helping hand to restore to the girl her good name and her self respect. A condition of business which denies working girls living wages is cruel to them and a menace to the whole country. As soon as the government takes steps to eradicate the cause which is driving thousands of girls into the depths of the underworld where they can procure enough money to live on and clothe themselves the detestible trade of the white slaver, will be come less lucrative and the slums of the city will be less thickly populated. To the credit of American womanhood the great bulk of the sex who toil in factories and great department stores live virtuous lives despite the temptations and handicaps placed upon them by their dollar-chasing employers. But these obscure heroines of trade and commerce soon break down under the strain of their hopeless, uneven fight for a bare existence. There is one excellent remedy to relieve the underpaid working women of the burden they carry. That is the minimum wage law. It should be placed upon the federal statute books without further delay, and it will be if congress has the Gourage to resist the great business interests which will light such legislation with every weapon at their command.
The Extra Session.
Governor Wilson has taken the course that nearly everybody expected of him, and that was plainly indicated for him by all the facts surrounding his situation. He has announced that he will call an extra session of Congress in April, with the end of having the tariff revision passed early, and thus relieving business, so far as possible, of apprehensions based on uncertainty. The decision might not have been announced so soon but for the fact that many members of Congress desired to know what they might expect, and to adjust their living arrangements in Washington to it. It may be presumed that we will hear a good deal about tariff during the short session, but that it will be heard from the Ways and Means Committee rather than from the final legislative bodies themselves. The committee has a difficult task ahead of it. For one thing, the bills that it prepared last session must be reorganized into such form that a Democratic Administration, controlling all branches of the Government, shall be willing to assume responsibility for them. That means that some decided changes will be made from the text measures that the House passed last winter. The extent and character of these changes will suggest to what degree the bills of last session were intended for buncombe and to what degree they were in good faith. For instance, the free sugar proposition served last session to prevent any revision of the sugar schedule. It will hardly be permitted to serve that same purpose again, simply because there is going to be no chance next time of dividing responsibility. On wool and sugar we shall see some fine fighting, for there is a powerful sentiment in favor of removing the tariff from both these articles. It is hardly within belief that such measures will finally pass. Extremists who insist on such schedules will contribute most to the embarrassment of the party program, and President Wilson will find himself confronted with the necessity for using all his tact and diplomacy in preventing a deadlock between his two houses. The huge Democratic majority in the lower body at times ran over the House leadership last session. It will be still more unmanageable next year. On the other hand, the Senate will hardly be much more tenderly disposed toward tariff radicalism than it was last July. It does not need the prophetic eye to discern breakers ahead, with the very real possibility of just such a tie-up as developed last session, except that this time the Senate instead of the White House may be exercising the veto power. Washington Times.
Married Woman In Quebeo. It Is said that there is no married woman's property act in Quebec. If a woman marries without a contract, and this often happens, ber husband owns all she has, all she earns and all she may Inherit What long nerve-racking days of constant torture what sleepless nights of terrible agony itch itch itch, constant itcn, until it seemed that I must tear off my very akin then Instant relief my skin cooled, soothed and healed! The very first drops of D.D.D. Prescription for Eczema stopped that awful Itch instantly: yes, the very moment D.D.D. touched the burning skin the torture ceased. A 25c bottle proves it. D.D.D. has been known for years as the only absolutely reliable eczema Thlstlethw
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Unreasonable. "Sure, a penny saved is a penny earned." "Why don't you practice that?" "Say, you don't expect a man to live up to every quotation be makes, do yon?" Cleveland Plain Dealer.
remedy, for It washes away the disease germs and leaves the skin as clear and healthy as that of a child. All other druggists have D.D.D. Pre scription go to them it you can't come ' to us but don't accept some big profit j substitute. j But if you come to our store, wo arc ' so certain of what D.D.D. will do for you , that we offer you a full also bottle on this guarantee: If you do not find that , it takes away the itch AT ONCE, It costs you not a cent. I site's Drug Stores.
A brightly lighted store gets trade because it gets ATTENTION. It is conspicuous, being a BLAZE OF LIGHT it can never be overlooked, forgotten or passed by.
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BREAKS A COLD IN A FEW HOURS-PAPE'S
First Dose of Pape's Cold Compound Relieves All Grippe Misery. After the very first dose of "Pape's Compound you distinctly feel the cold breaking and all the disagreeable grippe symptoms leaving. It is a positive fact that a dose of Pape's Cold Compound taken every two hours until three consecutive doses-are taken will cure Grippe or break up the most severe cold, either in the head, chest, back, stomach or limbs. It promptly ends the most miserable headache, dulness, head and nose stuffed up, feverishness, sneezing, sore throat, running of the nose, mucous catarrhal discharges, soreness, stiffness and rheumatic twinges. Take this wonderful compound with the knowledge that there is nothing else in the world which will cure your cold or end Grippe misery as promptly and without any other assistance or bad after effects, as a 25-cent package of Pape's Cold Compound, which any druggist can supply it contains no quinine he sure you get what you ask for accept no substitute belongs in every home. Tastes nice acts gently. (Advertisement) COURT NEWS A demand for a Jury was filed by the 1 plaintiff in the case of Maurice Longfellow, by his next friend, Howard Longfellow, versus the C. C. C. & St. L. raHroad company in the Wayne circuit court this morning. The plain- , tiff demands $20,000 damages for per- ; sonal Injuries. ! The defendants in the case of Oliver H. Bogue versus Isabelle C. Game and Benton D. Game, complaint on notes and to for- -e mortgage, faulted in appearance in circuit court today. "There could be no better medicine than Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. My children were all sick with whooping cough. One of them was in bed, had a high fever and was coughing up blood. One doctor gave them Chamberlain's Cough Remedy .and the first dose eased them, and three bottles cured them," says Mrs. R. A. Donaldson, of Lexington. Miss. For sale by all dealers. Advertisement. The Masonic Calendar L i ucbucijf , . v. ...iwiiU Lodge No. 196, F. & A. M. Called meeting. Work in Master Mason Degree. Refreshments. Wednesday, Nov. 20. Webb Lodge No. 24, F. & A. M., Stated meeting. Saturday, Nov. 23. Loyal Chapter, No. 49, 'O. E. S., called meeting, initiation of.candidates and work in the Floral degree. (Q Sarsaparilla Acts directly and peculiarly on the blood; purifies, enriches and revitalizes it, and in this way builds up the whole system. Take it. Get it today. In usual liquid form or in chocolate coated tM.i called Sarsatabo. Glasses miter Features Differ . but we can supply the shape of lens, the kind of lens, and the proper clip to suit your individual need. If not satisfied with the glasses you are wearing today let us tell you how we can change and improve them. MISS C. M. SWEITZER OPTOMETRIST Phone 1099 9274 Main St.
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ALL G. R. & I. CARS WILL BEJ STEEL Pennsylvania Company to Soon Use Steel Cars All Over Its System.
The Pennsylvania railroad announced today that it will shortly have available for use on the lines of its system a total of 2872 solid steel pas senger equipment cars, probably more than one-half of the all-steel passenger equipment in the United States, and representing an expenditure of approximately $40,000,000. These steel passenger cars have been added to the company's equipment since June, 1906, when it was announced that all future additions to passenger equipment on the Pennsyl- ! vania system would be of all-steel coni structlon. The Lines of the Pennsylvania system, on all of which steel cars will bo operated, include the Pennsylvania railroad lines East and West of Pittsburg and Erie, the Long Island railroad, the Cumberland Valley railroad, the New York, Philadelphia and Norfolk railroad, the Vandalia railroad, and the Grand Rapids and In- : diana railway. ! The Pullman company for several ; years has been constructing stt-el sleeping and parlor cars to equip the entire Pennsylvania system. Already I there are in service 362 sleeping cars, 121 parlor cars, and 37 combination baggage and . parlor cars, all of solid ; steel construction. These 520 cars are painted the standard Pennsylvania red; there are additional steel Pullman cars operated on the Pennsylvaj nia in connection with the Southern j roads. These are not included in the above number. j The steel passenger cars on the Pennsylvania system have been called "dreadnaught" cars by reason of their construction. They weigh" some 118,500 pounds as against 85,000 pounds in the standard vestibule wooden coach. This increase in weight ; very greatly reduces the vibration of the car, thereby adding to the comfort of passengers. The car is noncollapsiBreak it up. Clear your head. Stopablormal nasal discharges. Relieve your ca tarrhal deafness, sore throat and sneezing. ' jet a 25c or 50c tube of Kondon's, the origiuai ana genuine Catarrhal Jelly. All drugzibis sen ic or can get it tor you or order iirect. Sample FREE. KONDON MFGU CO- MINNEAPOLIS. MINN. SEE OUR FIXTURES, DOMES, SHOWERS Varied assortment from which to choose. No old stock. CRANE ELECTRIC CO. 12 North Fifth. Phone 1061. li i-'-r-.:-.:.-: Cat oot iWi mt tfca olPlcti ine $4.00 X w ustiM j 4 a T X7Xa5 are maps and fm color plates, T TlSe C3 CO t nmm r wwvmvmj IX wnSTIUM IT toT4 mmTMmn
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ble. its principal feature being a central box girder twenty-four inches wide by nineteen deep extending throughout the entire length of the coach; this girder, in collisions, prevents telescoping. The car is ire proof containing only about 125 pounds of wood, which is used for window frames and arm rests in the seats. In the steel equipment now in service, there are 1538 coaches and combination passenger and baggage cars,
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ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT ANHflajbUrrrpawlonCrAs simi!atin$ tteFbodandlfrguti ting U Stocncte mdBowe&i Promotes Digestionflmfa ncss and RestJContains nciarr Opium -Morphine norfcacrjL rOT Narcotic MMaBatlOMBSBrf hw W(VW Ajar. Aperfeft Remedy for Consflsfr tion , Sour Storoadi.Dlarrtua Worms f omnlsions jnrnsfr ness andLoss or Sleep. lac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. 82ff Guaranteed under the Foodejj Exact Copy of Wrapper.
Double Barrel and Repeating Shot Guns at 50 ets. Per Day JO WES HARDWARE GO.
Low Round Trip Winter Tourist Tickets On Sale. Daily via C. &. O. Ry.
To Jacksonville, Fla $36.05 To Daytona, Fla, $42.65 To DeLand. Fla $42.15 To Key West. Fla $69.15 To Miami. Fla, $58.05 Homo Tel. 2062.
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RICHMOND PALLADIUM NOVEMBER 19. :
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X educational charts and the latest United States Census. t at this office 90S. CumeuiUia Dictionary Coopooa
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68 dining cars. 144 baggage. 15$ postal, f 34 baggage and mail. 11 Long Island railroad parlor cars, 4 miscellaneous t cars, and 520 Pullman cars. In addlton to these there are on order or un- -der construction at the present time. 296 steel coaches. IS steel dining cars. 25 passenger and baggage cars, 2 baggage. 4 postal. 3S baggage and mail. 10 Long Island railroad parlor cars, and one office car.
mm For Infanta and Children. . The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Palm Beach, Fla. ........ $54.55 St Augustine, Fla, $3&55 St. Petersburg. Fla. $47.65 Tampa, Fla. $47.65 Havana. Cuba $7$40 C. A. BLAIR, City Ticket Agent. pnHsi. EXfQOE from day to day.) ine original puotheir successor. gold on back and by three- I . fa?es of I p , Present aq. and tko J JOC Ts ia fjim ina. etaaipi 'as iTti asd black t ten. bat aa oi tbe col. I t, ,,' red plates BaMe feted. SCC I
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For Over Thirty Years Vac eeeiene eenwt. ara err.
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