Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 14, 26 November 1912 — Page 7

VJIJ5 xiICUM02VT I'ALLADIUM AND SUN TELEGKAM, TUESDAY, NoV&BER 261912.

THERE'S THE OTHER FELLOW

Who May Like to Enjoy Himself, Too, in His Peculiar Fashion and Thinks He's Got Just as Good a : Jight as You Have.

mer.

BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE,

There are some things that seem strange. And yet aren't bo strange. One of them is this moral feeling. In instance we have a Chautauqua here In the summer-time. That is, on the fringes of the summer. It laps over Into September hut not to damage September. But, willy-nilly, we have our little Chautauqua. And we hold it in a public park. This is against the law. Therefore we get our canny legislator to run a bill through our sainted Assembly permitting us to hold our particular Chautauqua in our particular public park. Any kindergartner understands all about this. But we retain our faces and look pious and very, very virtuous. We do not countenance Sunday desecration in this town. No,, indeedy, deed. We only, give a sort of religious vaudeville in our public park roping off part of the public domain from those who haven't the inclination or the price to which w charge undoubted admission and receive tickets in exchange. On the inside we give Sunday concerts that are concerts all right even if they are labeled "sacred." Sometimes they aren't sacred at all. Last summer they played on bells and otherwise performed. But what's the odds didn't we open the thing with prayer? Qo to thou carping and impertinent critic. And then do we not divide the financial sheep from the goats and with a well directed throw land the former in the Y. M. C. A. treasury and the latter in the city hop? Sure we do. But we don't believe in Sunday desecration. ' . Nay, Nay! It gives us hideous shudders to think of it. We are strong Sabbatarians hereabouts! "Remember .the Sabbath-day to keep it holy" please pass the chewinggum, the cracker-jack and the hamburgers, to say nothing of the icecream-cones and the coco-cola (all of which you will find , down near the Main street entrance) the while I get my coat to go to hear the bell-ringers down in the tent. But hist.! Do 1 understand a song recital by a New York baritone is to be given on Sunday afternoon In a down town theatre? This is an outrageous infringement on the Sunday closing law.

Besides .ItTisTsetting a bad example, j trlbute charity

ii iae zrgpim.on pur j,iwu suouiu ucome cognizant of the fact that a Sunday songrecital is being given, anarchy wouWU reign. It would- "be but a short time when

all the business houses in town would be open;, aloons going full tilt, grocers selling eggs at a dollar a dozen and butchers slaying the defenceless ox in the shambles. And then think of the moving-picture shows! Perchance they might open! Civic infamy would have reached its lowest depth! . We would have one wild carousal of the movies and an orgy of beef-selling. Maybe-the people who don't care to go to the Chautauqua . might, enjoy themselves in their own way! This 001110" not be tolerated. Anybody who would prefer a moving picture drama to a Chautauqua vaudeville is a degenerate and should be thrown out root and branch. And anybody who can't afford to have a refrigerator has no right to eat meat on Suaday. Let 'em go without it. We have refrigerators and, if. other people don't we can't help that. We simply cannot have our virtue offended by the sight of a butcher shop open an hour on Sunday morning. . We will not stand for it. We will appeal to the police, or, mayhap, the Ministerial Association. We must be protected. Our religion is a frail thing at best and we must be sheltered in such attacks on its outposts. Now the strange thing about it was this. The Bong recital, was given. And what happened? Nothing at all. ,

I And, oddly enough, the butcher-

shops have since stopped keeping open on Sunday! And by agreement among themselves. And for the reason that their owners didn't want to work more than ten days a week.

Not because they had virtuous pangs

over selling meat on Sunday. Comes now the winter Chautauqua, or Lyceum Festival. . Whether or not such an institution can be held in Richmond on the heels of the regular, or summer, Chautauqua, is a question. But the fact remains that the Lyceum Festival is merely a winter Chautauqua. Except that, in this city, it was held under a wooden roof Instead of a canvas one. In fact several of the "attractions" had been here before including the Kaffir Boys' choir, Whitney and other people and aggregations of persons. The affair was not a financial success because, for one reason, it came too soon after the Chautauqua and because of other things that were patronized by the entertainment-going people. But, nonetheless, it was an excellent winter Chautauqua. Well, what of it? asked some-one. Only this. . That sundry of the righteous ones implored the management not to give the Sunday entertainment, made up of a sacred concert in the afternoon and a similar program with a dramatic reading in the evening. The Y. M. C. A. was to share in the profits of the Chautauqua if there be any. The Y. M. C. A. shares equally and publicly with the city in the profits of the summer Chautauqua. The -Y. M. C. A. objects to the Sunday entertainment of the winter Chau

tauqua but gives one with country-fair .

LADIES Have Lovely Hair If you want to make your hair so beautifully lustrous that people cannot help but exclaim "Oh what lovely hair!" bet a fifty cent bottle of PARISIAN SAGE to-day.

It's a mcsi ueiightful, refreshing hair dressing, daintily perfumed, and free from poisonous lead or other dye. The girl with the Auburn hair is on every carton and bottle of PARISIAN SAGE. Be sure and get the genuine. PARISIAN SAGE will banish dandruff, stop falling hair"ind scalp itch in two weeks, or your money back. That's a pretty square offer all fair minded people will say. Large bottle 50 cents at Leo II. Fihe'b and dealers everywhere.

association the Sunday closing law is Because they want one day of rest. If they find any one of the fraternity violating the law, they themselves, go

after him. j It doesn't matter how long you have

The bar-tenders unions have strict been tortured with Rheumatism, regulations about hours of work and RHEUM A will start to drive the poisSunday isn't included In their reper-1 onous matter that causes it, from your

VICTIMS OF RHEUMATISM FOR TWENTY YEARS

system the second day's treatment. It acts quickly, does wonderful RHEUMA. The uric acid begins to leave your system through the kidneys and bowels almost at once and the immediate relief is so pronounced that

on some other basis than a precedent i uu "uulu uu lUB rlu ul established by the Y. M. C. A. Rheumatism; YOU'LL KNOW IT. .

As for the picture-shows well they . n . . - . ' ,

haven t started up as yet. I . . ' . . . .

at unijr ou trnu a uouie, ami uo 10 o.uAnd if they did it is the opinion of ihorized to refund the purchase price the writer, personally, that it would be j to anr pereon not satisfied, a good thing. j Tnla means that any reader of the The moving-picture entertainment is, , Richmond Palladium suffering from

conducted as it is in this town, about : Rheumatism, swollen, twisted joints.

one.of the most harmless

ments imaginable.

toire. As to the theaters in this city that is to laugh. Mr. Murray wouldn't bother to open his vaudeville house. Besides if he

wanted to do so he'd probably operate

entertain- Sciatica. Arthritis. Oout or Lumbacro

can try RHEUMA on money-back plan. It acts on Kidneys, Stomach, Liver and

place, Bladder and when RHEUMA goes in.

Rheumatism goes out That's why people come for miles to get RHEUMA from Leo H. Flhe.

but when we can get in free why that's quite, quite another matter! The patent and unblushing hypocricy of this whole thing is only equalled by Us general humour. If there's a moral in. the thing if there is a moral point at issue if, says this column, and presumably there is from the virtuous spasms the good ones throw why the moral is in the attendance and not the gate receipts, or lack of the latter. If a Sunday concert is wrong it's

'just as wrong free as with an admis

sion. If a thing's wrong, it's wrong. And the sublimated nerve of the godly in punching the down and out manager to the wall on the only day when he might have taken in something, and bullyragging him into giving two en-

And it would give a number of per

sons who wanted to go some

some place to go.

The trouble of the whole local situ

ation is this:

The Parisian Aristocrat of Today. 1 once heard a mischievous Englishman." says Miss Maude Anuesley In her book. "My Parisian Year.", "ask a duchesse of the old school tf she were groin g to a garden party at the president's palace. Her bead went up Into the air and she answered haughtily. "1 am sending my janitor! " The writer adds that learly all these Faubourcoois are Royalists and nearly all religious; that they live in a world of their own. Ignore the republic as much as possible and keep up as well as they can the old pomp. "It always seems to me that they are waiting. Tbey and their ancestors have seen republics come and go. 'Will It last fereverT they seem to ask."

Notice of Election The members of St. John's Lutheran Church 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.

The Chautauqua people want to do

just as they please and intend to do just as they please If they have to get

special legislation to do so.

And this Isn't saying that the sum

mer Chautauqua isn't good thing

far from it. It's Sunday features are, in fact, one

of its best recommendations.

But on the other hand they aren't going to let anybody else do as they please. That is, enjoy themselves as the latter like. There's no use dancing round the

point of a needle. No use denying It. Such puritanic hypocrisy Is ridiculous if it weren't disgusting. And, in the end; it's funny.

Preferred tho Ache. Mr. Frankleigh I have a nervoos headache tonight. Miss Queeler I've heard that music will cure anything of a nervous origin. Shall I sing for you? Mr. Franklelgh-Oh. it doesn't ache as bad as thatMusical Courier.

TRIPLETS BORN TO , 460 POUND WOMAN

twenty-nice pounds more than she weighed immediately before the birth of the first child. She weighs 46) pounds. The first boy was born last

Wednesday and the last two Saturday. Mother and bays are doing well.

(National Ktwi Association) CHICAGO, Nov. 26 Despite the fact that Mrs. A. V. Grotout is the mother of triplets, all boys, one of whom preceded his comrades into the world by three days, she weighs

OH! "You Mealtime"1 Do you look forward to mealtime with real pleasure or do you have that "don't care sort of feeling? Then, by all means, try a bottle of Hostetter's Stomach Sitters It coaxes the Appetite, aids Digestion, prevents Constipation, Biliousness, Colds, Grippe and Ma)ar lal Disorders.

s

1 THAT 1

Blue" Feeling

Wheat yom feel disco waged and all the world seems to be

against yos that's your system's way

of telegraphing you that something Is WRONG and needs HELP. g It mu be that your liver ia tired and refuses to work, or your 8

irgans nave naa too rouca to ao ana oa cars, icnupi

vou have been eating the wrong kind of food, and your blood ia too

rich or imDoverished. What you need Is m. tonlo.

and circus-day attachments in the sum- tertainments, for which he has to pay

several hundred dollars, without mon-

dear, you musn't give a Sunday enter- i VT

tainment in the Coliseum!

Because its against the law, you know. How against the law? Why, paid admissions, you know. Didn't you charge admission to the summer Chautauqua? Why, of course we did what'd you take us for? That's our biggest day! Welt, what's the "difference? So the manager of the winter Chau-

jtauqua pushed up against the wall,

having engaged his people and being obliged to fulfill his contract, says that he will not charge admission.

But that anybody, that wants Jto con-

can do so ; at the

door. Consequence? Sunday afternoon concert although a nasty, slushy afternoon is one of the biggest of the entire series. You .see, we're too "dem" godly to pay admission to a Sunday concert

business and then all attending his

entertainment well it's enough to make the gods grin. Now the bogey these wag whenever a Sunday concert is mentioned is the general loosening up of everything. If they were really sincere, however, they'd go after the things that are open, and flagrantly so. The tobacco dispensaries where would-be wicked youths fritter away their weekly allowances by the route of little pieces of paste-board and who pay their losses or gains by signing checks. Then there's the livery stables and the drug-stores. - Pshaw! This bogey is but a bogey mad-a up of a paper lantern and a one-cent candle. So far as the saloon-keepers are concerned they are their own censors. Through the operations of their own

LOTS OF BEAUTIFUL, GLOSSY Hi,

NO DANDRUFF 25 GENT

UANUthlHt

SEE toper

For

your Thanksgiving Supplies.

TURKEYS Chickens and Ducks.

OYSTERS In Can and Bulk.

Fresh Vegetables All Kinds.

Fancy Table Fruit

Store Closed All Day Thursday.

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Within ten minutes after an application of Danderine you cannot find a single trace of Dandruff or a loose or falling hair and your scalp will not itch, but what v ill please you most will be after a few weeks' use, when you will actually see new hair, fine and downy at first yes but really new hair -growing all" over the scalp. A little danderine will immediately double the beauty of your hair. No difference how dull, faded, brittle and scraggy, just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small

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Dr. Pierce's Cniden Medical Discovery

will give the required aid. Tones the entire system. The weak stomach ia made strong. The liver vibrates with new life. Tha blood ia cleansed of all impurities and carries renewed health to every vein and nerve and muscle and

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Tnnixt on aettina

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0 more attacks of omea worth while " S? . JT 1 place of despair. rCKCrVKJLHjT r Dr. Pierce'

I Wayne

reduce Co,

Specials For Thanksgiving

Fresh Country Butter 30c Fresh Country Eggs 38c Pure Clover Honey 15c Pet Milk, 10c size, 3 for 25c Fancy Dill Pickles ....10c Crisco, 25c size 20c Home Made Mince Meat 20c lb. Pure Apple Butter 15c lb. We have the largest and best stock of LIVE AND DRESSED POULTRY in the city at the right prices. Also a full line of Fresh and Cured Meats. CORNER 5TH AND SOUTH A. PHONE 1377.

Do YOU Know

that there are nearly 200 "PREMIER" Electric Vacuum Cleaners in use in Richmond homes? Every user satisfied.

The "PREMIER" is recognized as the STANDARD Household EBecSric Oeamier We will demonstrate it and leave it in your home for trial if you are interested It is Sold for CASH, $30.00 MONTHLY PAYMENTS, $34.00 Telephone: Clem A. Gaar, 2278 or Edwin Scott, 1822v

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7J1

We Announce Our Annual

SO O

all

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November 27, 29. 3 0 Closed Thur-oday- November 20 TRVJLY A SEASONABLE BARGAIN EVENT! Winter has just begun, but for three days we offer our entire stock of Underwear for Men, Women and Children at "Season End Prices." If you need underwear, buy It now at this sale and save the change ot use it for something else. Our stock consists of about 200 different styles of Underwear hi full range of sizes. More than ten thousand garments in stock. If you want to be sure of a comfortable fit, you must come to our, underwear department. A General EDiccoixnt of 10 Many Garments at 'Extra Special" Pricoo

Men's Medium weight Cotton Union Suits, superior brand, $1.50 value, Sale price $1.35 Men's heavy fleeced Union Suits, wool back, Wright's make. $2.00 value. Sale price $1.80 Men's Natural Color Merino Ribbed Union Suits, $2.50 grade, Sale Price $225 Men's Royal ' Silk Plush Union Suits, $3 grade. Sale price $2.70

Boys' Vellaatic Grey

sizes 4-12. .

Union Suits.

le price 45c

Boys Fleeced Shirts and Drawers,. Sale price 23c each Men's Heavy Ribbed Fleeced Shirts and Drawers. Sate 45c each Men's Ribbed Cotton Union Soits, Richmond Brand, $1.50 value. Sale price $1.35

Ladies Ribbed Cotton Fleeced Vests and Pants, . Sale, 23c each Ladies' White Fleeced Cotton Union Salts, low neck, elbow sleeves, ankle length.

lie 68c

Ladies' White and Color Merino Union Suits, 60 wool, $1.50 value. Sale $1.35 Ladies' White and Natural Color Union Suits, $2 grade Sale $1.80 Ladies' Silk and Cotton Union Suits, low neck, 12-inch sleeves, ankle length, $2.00 value. Sale $1.80 Ladies' White All Wool Union Suits, $3.00 suit. Sale, $2.70 Ladles' Fleeced Cotton Union Suits. "M erode" make. $1 value, Sale 90c

mi' If

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