Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 99, 6 March 1913 — Page 4
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUXTELEGRA3I, THURSD A Y.MARCH G, 1913.
PAGE FOUR.
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New York Representatives Fayne ft Young. 90-34 West J 3d Street, and 29-35 West 32nd Street. New York. N. Y. Chicago Representativea Payne & Young, 747-748 Marquette Building. Chicago. III.
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The Aasocintioi mi
i iceua Advertieare ha w
unsBwd and crtitteal te tke aircaUtioB mi this pejb-
licaiiesw Thm figmrM ef drcalaUM contained in tkm Aaaaciaiion's report only ara guaranteed. Assodatioii of America Advertisers
Ct. ,WhlUhaJI Wi. . V. City
EDITORIAL VIEWS.
MUZZLING THE PRE8S. (Fort Wayne, Ind., News.)
It is interesting to note that certain
tender-skinned , state senators have caused to be inserted in the new corrupt practices act a section declaring it an offense punishable by fine and
imprisonment for a newspaper to criti
! else or ridicule by word or cartoon any
candidate for office or to endeavor to influence votes for or against any measure pending before the legislator. ' And while it is interesting to note this refreshing amendment, it is illumining to observe that the men who 'put it over were Tray lor and Zearing, the same chaps who fathered the bills providing for Sunday theaters, open saloons on holidays and the reduction of the penalty of burglary. What other vicious legislation they have backed the News is unable to say, but it naturally infers that they have stood for all that was bad and steadfastly opposed all that was good. It is not remarkable that men like these are opposed to newspaper publicity, for it would, indeed, magnificently serve their ends if the press could be prevented from exposing candidates who are unworthy or attacking legislative bills that are directed against the public policy. They would enjoy nothing better than the opportunity to do what they wish to do without interference from decent newspapers. It would protect them from annoyance and humi'iation, and would enable them the better to promote the abandoned sort of legislation they appear to cherish and to champion. The house has accepted this absurd amendment that strikes so impudently at the liberty of the press, but in spite of that fact the new statue will hardly terrify or coerce any reputable news-
President Wilson 's Cabinet. One gains the impression in glancing over the list of members of the president's official family that he has selected quite a progressive cabinet a decided improvement over the collection of stalwart reactionaries associated with Mr. Taft when he assumed the presidency four years ago.
The premier of the new Wilson cabinet, William Jennings
Bryan, is the leading apostle of progress in the Democratic party.
He should make an excellent secretary of state and the American people can always depend upon him supporting Mr. Wilson with his great influence for any cause beneficial to the masses. William Gibbs McAdoo, secretary of the treasury, is a successful business man and has always been a staunch champion of the rights of the people, a characteristic not common to the typical American capitalist.
lie before us in his pages charm and . Charles O. D. Roberts is a story-teller, soothe and please. For him Nature is chiefly interesting Selborne will put one in the very j as a source of literary material, best mood for reading Richard Jef- j Bradford Torrey is always fresh and
fries. This Englishman is also among the immortals, a man who literally gave all, and suffered all, that he might be the faithful minister and interpreter of his loved moors and cliffs. While torttured by the most abject poverty and caught in the rack of a
original. "Nature's Invitation" and "The Clerk of the Woods." to hit upon two at random, are crisp and original for he always steers rlear of the hackneyed and thread bare themes. If one seeks an intimate acquaintance with the birds let him go to Olive Thome
slow death he penned essays that will Miller; to her he is always "The Bird.
Our Brother." But of all these later and more popular writers my favorite, by long odda, is Dallas Lore Sharpe. Don't miss his
never die. His "Pageant of Summer'
is itself a pageant of almost every splendor of the English language. The essays collected in "Wild Life Near
London," "
"Life of the Fields' are delightful to every one. And "The Story of My Heart." what a marvelous book that is, every page palpitates with the hu-
YESTERDAY IN THE ASSEMBLY
GOVERNOR'S ACTION. Stotsenburg bill providing for use of convict labor on roads and Bra na man clerks' fees bills sent to secretary of state to become laws without Governor's signature.
Seven bills signed by Governor. j SENATE. j Lyday bill legalizing sheriffs "in and out" fees passed.
Shotfirtr's bill killed on divided re-
Banks of the Wabash" the official state song, passed. Gardner and Fleming introduce new women's work bill, providing ten hours a day or fifty-four a week. Gelts trading stamp bill passed without amendment. Morning and afternoon sessions held. Thirteen bills passed; two killed; three new ones introduced.
book touches a man.'
Of quite a different character is our own Thoreau. I can think of no book which has given me more pleasure than "Walden"; I believe I have read
it near a dozen times. To read it is the tests or genuine literature ana are to climb a rugged mountain straight real masterpieces of English. Espeeinto the highest, purest ozone of the i"y 8 thiB trw of "Roof and human soul. Underneath one is the Meadow." Ah! That indeed is a solid granite of a genuinely original book! It lives, it sings, it is full of philosophy and about one is the fresh- sweet smells and salty freshness. If ly revealed beauty of open air there is anything anywhere better for America. "Walden" is Thoreau. In it its kind than that chapter on the seahe "celebrates himself." He needed marshes, tell me at once, my friends, the vast background of nature to set where I can find it! himself forth. In his pages his own An(j now abideth all these with the subjective life so blends into Nature greatest reraaineth. In Maurice Maetthat one can scarcely distinguish each erlinsck, Nature writing has entered a
from other. And this doubtless is
man sDlrit: on it mieht be Inscribed
It is disappointing that Col. Goethals, the builder of the Pan-; old Walt's words, who touches this
ama canal, was not rewarded for his splendid services to the nation by being offered the portfolio of war, which not only has supervision over the army, but also over Panama and other United States possessions. Col. Goethals is an officer of the regular army, which fact, combined with his intimate knowledge of the Panama canal, would have made him an excellent secretary of war. However, Lindley M. Garrison, who was appointed to this portfolio, is one of New Jersey's ablest jurists and comes well recommended and will no doubt fill his position in a satisfactory manner. The new secretary of the treasury is a vigorous, broad-minded, talented man, James Clark McReynolds, and has had much experience in the legal service of the federal government, having been assistant attorney-general under President Roosevelt and retained by President Taft to represent the government in several anti-trust cases. Being thoroughly acquainted with the affairs of the department of justice he should make an admirable head of that department. Albert S. Burleson, postmaster general, has represented a Texas district in congress for a number of years and there is a suspicion that his appointment to the cabinet is in the nature of a reward for his valuable services to his party. Josephus Daniels of North Carolina is to preside over the destinies of the navy, which arm of the military service the Democratic party has been consistently crippling since it was swept into power two years ago. Mr. Daniels is a newspaper man and an ardent Bryan follower. Franklin Knight Lane, secretary of the interior, is said to be
an advocate of federal conservation of natural resources and who, it is predicted, will carry out the Pinchot policies. As a member of the Interstate Commerce Commission he has given the country
most valuable services. His appointment was a very wise move; an egg with the same devoted and On the part of President Wilson. j minute patience that an astronomer T- -j T- i i- tt a j. j. . ,. . .. studies the stars. And yet he is inDavid Franklin Houston, secretary of agriculture, is well tnsly spiritual, in the sense that he equipped for this portfolio and should be able to administer the j expresses the spirit of things. How affairs of that department in a satisfactory manner now that thei" the opu ,Tor,d bis J8, T! r.i i i . . .... . . lThy are granitic, seamed, geologic;
vv iiey-ivicaue leuu xias oeen orougni to a ciose Dy ine retirement; j old ageB wait in them
of those two bureau chiefs. William Pnv RoHfiolrl
' fugion and with the came insousiance member of congress from New York, is a tariff expert and in thor- j that marks the falling from some cliff ough sympathy with the Democratic tariff policy, so he should be of hue rock fragments. They seem
n K1 o.,;n r..;,3 jt 4.u: i.: M- nave lain in ms pages ior ages
Labor organizations will, undoubtedly, be highly gratified over the selection of such a man as William B. Wilson of Pennsylvania to preside over the newly created department of labor. Mr.
Wilson was formerly a miner and was instrumental in organizing , sound as a bell
the United Mine Workers of America. He has served in congress I R,WRys thi"k of Burrousbs aa the , , , . , , j link between the more subjective msmce 1907 and has always worked for the best interests of labor, ' terpreters of Nature and the scientific It is interesting; to note that Mr. Wilson introduced trip hill rrpnr- students and essayists. One who finds
ing a department of labor.
T ???? A&1" n- .the i treat. After having read the "Face of 1 port cf committee.
the Fields" you will feel as if you j Conferees on Har'.an "Mue sky bui had never been out doors before, and agree. "Wild Life Near Home" will surprise j Senate "slaps" Keegan by killing his
you with its revelations. You will fall mil against misleading aarenisms.
in love with Nature because you will fall in love with Sharpe. He has the knack of imbuing everything he touches with something of his own personality, one of charm and magnetism. And his books measure up to
new world. I hesitate to express my
the eecret of the book's undying feelings lest I be accused of exaggera-
charm. As Burroughs has observed, he has given us no new Nature facts but he has imparted to his readers the priceless gift of seeing Nature as he saw her. Walden Pond and the Concord woods may change and pass but they cannot die; they have immortality in the soul of this man. Not to
know "Walden" is not to know one of the very greatest books in any language. 4 And then, of course., comes Burroughs; he is indispensable. His essays are redolent with healthy scents and always smell of the sod, or tingle with ruggedness. They have the preserving salt in them. Always genuine-. ly original in expression, he is at the ' same time scientifically accurate in his observations. He studies the
crumbling of a rock or the hatching of
tions. but who can exaggerate in speaking of "The Life of the Bee," "The Double-Garden" or "The Intelligence of the Flowers." These books are pure genius. Nature drops out as a dry catalog of lifeless facts and reenters as a living spirit. One finds the familiar hills and streams, the deep sky and the outspread earth fuse and melt into a mystic transparency through which sh'nes the Eternal Being.
McCormick-HuRhes loan shark bill
passed, 36 to 1. Stahl bill from House for state high school inspector passed. Twenty-five bills passed; one killed; two new ones introduced. Grube bill to provide commission fcr investigation of women's hours of work and report to 1915 session passed. Bill to give Marion County voters right to vote on sale of court house passed.
Chronic Stomach Trouble Cured. There is nothing more discouraging than a chronic disorder of the stomach. It Is not surprising that many suffer for years with such an ailment when a permanent cure is within their reach and may be had for a trifle? "About one year ago." says P. II. Btck, of Wakelee. Mich., -I bought a package of Chamberlain's Tablets, and since using them I have fe't perfectly well. I had previously used any number of different medicines, but none of them were of any lasting benefit." For sale by all dealers.
HOUSE. Weidler garnishee till is passed, 52 to 46. after acrimonious debate in which defeat of Democratic party was predicted if bill passed. Koenig workmen's compensation bill passed, 77 to 20. Curtis Senate bill, making "On the
German English. An enterprising buslue&s boue ta a German city sends circulars advertising its wares to guests at the various hotels which are patronized by Americaus One of the printed documents contains this paragraph: "English Is spoken and fluent understood by ready lady and men sellers, and the stranger visitor to inspect our many ware we frieudly invite. The honored clients out of America can here find In the lowest fix prices most desiring articles for taking home."
volcanic forces
stir in them, keen winds blow in them. His sentences fall in the same con-
And yet all his essays are very human and all attractive; "Pepacton," "Rlverby," "Wake-robin," "Time and Change,' how good they all are. Strike
him where you will, he is clear and
Habits of Gams Birds. I was riding along the shore of Great Bear lake, -in Utah, one afternoon and, coming suddenly over a rise of irround. surprised a grebe In the
edge of the tules. She swam Into the lake, turuiug and calling repeatedly. Then two little grebes apjeared. and. swimming low, with only their heads and beaks visible, hurried after their mother. As they overtook her. each one reached out and, catching the feathers of ber back in their beaks, they drew themselves alongside and quickly huddled under her wing, completely hidden. Had I not been a spectator to the act I should never have susX''ted her of carrying two little "stowaways" ns she hurried off. J. Alden Loring in Outing.
NATURE BOOKS BEST READING NOW
BY. REV. H. L. HAYWOOD. Last week's mail brought a packet of polychromed seed catalogs delicately scented with Volatile suggestions of
paper. For the provision is manifestly i roses and pansies and full of the most unconstitutional and will be calmly 'fascinating reading; this morning's
Time and Change" an interest will
6urely read more erudite and technical studies with keen relish. There is Grant Allen, "delightful though dangerous" as a friends recently expressed it, who was unable to write a dull line; sciene fuses iDto poetry under his wizardry. Then there is Lubbock, known more popularly by his "Pleasures of Life"; every reader will find
Skillful Flattery. "How well you look!" "Do you think so?" "Yes, indeed. 1 do. I never saw yoo looking better in my life." "I'm so glad to hear you say so. 1 hope you mean it." "I really do. Only the other night 1 was saying to my husband that there are a lot of women 1 know who nren'l half so old as vou that don't look nearly so young." Detroit Free Presa
ignored. A newspaper is guaranteed by our constitution the right to discuss not only men but measures, and this right is one that will be successfully defended. For any legislature to
dawn brought the sweet lifting call of
the red-bird, a call which seemed like through the warm medium of some arthe august spirit of the Winter crying . dent and poetic soul. Whn Nature to the young Spring still embryonic shines through a personality endowed in earth s womb, "The time will soon , witn the maeic words she bPrR fn.it
menace with fine and imprisonment ; be here, the time will soon be here!" I in nature books the 'iterarv nuivnlfnt
tue eunor uu utues aitactt a Daa can- me b uitaoi tu ueart ui 0f ner fruits and flowers
tiidate or ridicule a weak one is so the rarmer boy leaped up and I began
little sisters and brothers of the open. To the scientist facts are an end in
themselves but to the literary inter- his "Ants, Bees and Wasps," veritable
preter of nature they are a means to an end, and that end is the love of the living earth. Real nature writing is the reflection of nature facts
mines of suggestion, while Fruits, Flowers and Bees" will give one a peep into botanic evolution. And Darwin cannot be missed. Who can read
Business "rinciplsk.
Dollv So Simnkins. the enshier o!
the bank, proposed to you Inut niaht? Polly - Yea, and 1 promised to ninrrj him. "Did he ask your father's permis slon?" "Yes; he said he would ask papa t indorse my promissory note."
manifest an infraction of our nation's j once more to feel the divine tug of the d rthnlhuliA fundamental law that it provokes noth- outdoors ; as on an ir:stant Berg-1 theXuc?rmTL"einis
Ing more substantial from those BUU jiuiuiumjub ma-, . . . . 4fc. .' .l "vnv- . " l!wt mm. Iter Bmk
threatened than mlte nf nltrinr nn lory lost tneir appeal ana my nngers : --' "Dt""v-- ""6 "i i"e airara, iui, wuire uo umlauts nun cold. Relieve Fererishne,Conit!pttoti,Teethfnar mreaienea man a smne ot pitying con-, - ... , . nnpn wnriH cr. innr v, i .v, j .i v, i, niidm.itiivhm)!inwilTnhi. iwk.
sougnt instinctively ior me aear vol- ----- -e, nci mcii; mu mm, it &uUnD un. m Mothers for Mveiirt. THsnTOHEks NEVER umes fragrant with the life of the a book rsner or more charming than mate- and personal description, and fail Sold by n Dm store, tsc. ikm'tmt
Generous. "Ton said that when we were mar-
bis volume on the earth-worm without i rled you would refuse me nothing." loving the dirt? And who can read "I'll be still more generous. I'll not Fabre without loving spiders? Of that j even refne you nothing. I'll give It bo heroic Frenchman Maeterlinck said, j you. "He is the insect's Homer," praise j enough we would suppose, for any j ' At the other side of Burghs' CHILDREN WHO ARE SICKLY , . , Mothers woo vmlne tbelr own comfort and the Stands the more popular writers. . welfare of their children, ehonld never be without
J. Long will SUrelV survive Roosevelt's ox or Mother Gray' Sweet Powder, for Children,
tempt. And it is even more ridiculous to provide that newspapers shall not attempt to influence pending legislation that they shall not have the right to denounce corrupt bills or to promote those they deem of public value. The whole proposition is in the nature of a whining squeal from undesirable public servants who have been
woods, and the fields and the nrankish . nis eorgics, a delightful classic
brooks. If the currents of your being, , now available to moderns in the adekind fellow Richmondite, do not turn quate translation published in the toward the wide-spread earth and the , "Everyman's Library"? Maeterlinck, fresh sky these days when all the little wntinS J the Nineteenth Century grass seeds grow electric in the sod ; with the generations of scientists to and the brothers and sisters of the assist him in his researches, and with open feel the first, faint stir of new a sovereign literary genius, could not Ufa Q rrn a i n O" f Vi n Tn frnm thilr ivtnfAi ' dvA lift n mnrp pvupt a mnrA tmfimntA
flayed and lashed by the newspapers ong hibrnatlon pray tnat the gods or a more faithful portrayal of the real sLX untrthrefsgaon seTk take frm 5U TOUr heaft f 8tDe 'ness and beauty of the Spirit of tonlay even and Jo S 1,2 and give you in8tekd a hart of flesh' the m is found in the Georgic, to play even and to provide immunity He is not qulte numan who does not devoted to the bees.
ior ruture evil machinations by muz- j hunger these threshold days for the iling the press. They will not succeed j first taste of spring. And he is almost in that. But there is one thing their j equally unfortunate who has not found pernicious activity really may accom-; a few bosom friends among the nature ;
push, and that is the vitiating of the ; books.
writes a style of rare literary charm.
any tubttituU. Sample mailed FREE. Address,
a. a. umutea, i tioj, n. x.
whole corrupt practices act.
MRS. BACON'S BILL PASSED. (Evansville, Ind., Courier.) Evansville feels a special satisfaction in the passage of the housing law. It is the result of the labor for more than five years of a brave little woman of this city. She aroused the people of a whole state to the need of better housing laws, she drafted the bill and she induced an apathetic legislature to pass it. In accomplishing this she has been practically single-handed. When one observes how slowly reforms are brought about it is almost inconceivable how a mild-mannered, soft-spoken gentlewoman could achieve so signal a success in even four or five years. In the first place no city was aware that it had slums or the making of slums. The people of Indiana had no idea that such things existed until Mrs. Bacon brought it to their notice. In the second place no one cared very much except Mrs. Bacon. The owner was against any changes and the tenants were the most helpless beings in society. But Mrs. Bacon brought knowledge of the conditions home to the public then aroused a sentiment to better them and finally secured recognition from the legislature. All honor to Mrs. l3con for her aoble work.
There are plenty of them. Of their making there is no end. And since we are entering an out-of-door age they will continue to increase in number.
Another pre-scientific naturalist secure in fame and a source of undying delight is the Englishman, Gilbert White, whose "History of Selborne" is a pure distillation of sunlight and meadow. In this day of drug-store literature, after we have grown weary of our neurotic and too-rich modern style.
Nature writing is not a sub-division of is a relief to turn to White; he is science, it is an art. In the wider refreshing as a summer shower; every sense nature study isn't the counting paragraph is as clear and tender as of a spider's legs nor the measuring of the evening sky. The undulating a sparrow's wing, it is the learning of downs, the beech-crowned hills and the intimate art of appreciating the the unworried life of Selborne as they
Nose and Head Stopped Up From Cold or Catarrh, Open at once
My Cleansing. Healing Balm Instantly Clears Nose, Head and Throat Stops Nasty Catarrhal Discharges. Dull Headache Goes.
Try ' Ely's Cream Balm." Get a small bottle anyway, ju6t to try it Apply a little in the nostrils and instantly your clogged nose and stopped-up, air passages of the head will open; you will breathe freely; dullness and headache disappear. By morning! the catarrh, cold-in-head or catarrhal sore throat will be gone. End such misery now! Get the small bottle of "Ely's Cream Balm" at any drug ore.Thi8 sweet, fragrant balm
dissolves by the heat of the nostrils; penetrates and heals the inflamed, swollen membrane which lines the nose, head and throat; clears the) air passages; stops nasty discharges and a feeling of cleansing, soothing relief comes immediately. Don't lay awake tonight struggling for breath, with the head stuffed; nostrils closed, hawking and blowing. Catarrh or a cold, with its running nose, foul mucous dropping into the throat, and raw dryness is distressing but truly needless. Put your faith just once in "Ely's Cream Balm" and your cold or catarrh will surely disappear. "
Health and Beauty Helps By Mrs. Mae Martyn
Mrs. B.: "Stringy," unmanageable hair is caused by grease and dirt which, if neglected, will produce dandruff, the worst of all hair dangers. Keep the head perfectly clean with an occasional shampoo with canthrox. You "will be delighted with the result. Get a package of canthrox from any druggist and dissolve a teaspoonful in a cup of hot water. This massaged into the scalp creates a rich, bland lather which gently and thoroughly cleanses the hair. After rinsing and drying, the scalp is left sweet and pliant and the hair is fluffy, beautiful and easy to arrange.
B. A.: It is an easy matter to reduce your weight if the parnotic treatment is used. This is harmless and quickly dissolves fat-tissues, without leaving the skin flabby or wrinkled Prepare it at home by getting four ounces parnocis from the druggist and dissolve Jn lfc pints hot water, strain and take a tablespoonful before each meal. Use regularly until the proper weight is reached. When the parnotis treatment is employed the symmetrical lines of the body soon return and no ill effect follows its use.
ounce of kardene and dissolve it in one-half pint alcohol (not whiskey): then add one-half cupful sugar and enough hot water to make a quart of tonic. Take a tablespoonful before each meal and it will soon rid your system of poisonous accumulations and
make you strong, bringing the glow of
perfect health to your cheeks.
Miss J.: Annoying, itchy scalp can
be overcome if you use a tonic made
by dissolving an ounce of quinzoin in
a half-pint alcohol, then adding a half
pint water. Massaging the scalp with
this tonic twice a week stops the itching and rouses the hair follicles to
healthy action and using it regularly
cures dandruff and soon induces an
abundant growth of brilliant, fluffy
hair.
Ira: To regain the velvety softness
and healthy, youthful glow to the skin, yeu should discard powders and rouge
and use the following simple lotion
Get four ounces of spurmax from your druggist and dissolve in a half-pint hot
water, then all two teaspoonfuls gly
cerine. Apply this freely with the palms of the hands to the face. necK and arms. Using the spurmax lotion
i clears and tones the skin, overcomes coarseness, sallowness and wrinkles as well as protects the complexion . from tan, freckles and inclement daily two or three drops of a fine, j weather. strengthening tonic made by dissolv-j ing an ounce of crystos in a pint of! p. x.: It is not necessary to use
" - - Vv.Uu.v .ci) nuutmusituj electric needle, because with a
and by using it rcgularlv vou will
make your eyes strong, clear and bril liant.
Marion: You 'can cure the imDuri-
ties in the blood hich manifest them- i
selves in pimples, and "muddy" complexion with this blood purifier which you should make at home. Get an
single application of delatone you can rid your cheek of every .trace of hair. Just make a paste with a little delatone and water; apply to hairy stirface and in to or three minutes remove, wash the skin and it will be smooth and hairless. This is s quick, harmless way to banish hair from the face, neck and arms. -
Abootuiejy Puro The only Baking Powder mado from Roy at Grape Cream of Tartar NO ALUM, NO UME PHOSPHATE
" et-Stf.? t- l , " .'e-. X.
C. BuWick '& Son For Best Grades of Pocahontas, Winifred and Kentucky
529 S. 5th
Phone 1235
On FLEC0
nn
is Appetizing. Wholesome. Brain-Producing, and really makes a welcome change in diet from meat. Let us supply your Friday fish wants at the following attractive prices: Watch for our big special meat sale next Saturday. Our prices will be so low that if we cut any deeper we would have to give you the goods.
Halibut Steak, per lb., 15c Channel Cat, .per lb., 13? Trout, per lb 15c Herring:, per lb 9 Salmon Steak, per lb..l4 White Fish, per lb. . .13c
Red Snapper, per lb. 13 H Dried Herring:, box. . .25c Smoked Salmon, lb., 18c Smoked White Fish, per lb 17 Oysters, solid meat, per quart 35 C
op m
Phone 2555. 1022 Main Street, Richmond, Ind.
(AdrertiaemenU
