Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 212, 15 July 1913 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELIXRAM. TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1913

rGC ri

The Richmond Palladium

AND BUN-TELEGRAM.

Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by i Palladium Printing Co. Masonic Building. Ninth and North A Streets. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr.

la Richmond, 10 centa a week- By Mail, in advance on year, 95.00; six months, 92.60; one month, 45 cents. Rural Routes, In advance one year. $2.00; six months. 5L25; one month 25 cents.

ICnUred at the Poet Offlco at Richmond. Indiana, as Secoad Clang Mall Matter.

courage to look present industrial conditions squarely in the face and term them, and correctly, anarchistic. It is time the church came over to the side of the people and used its mighty power to further the cause of human freedom. How splendid was Jesus Christ when he drove the money changers from the temple! And who were the money changers of that day but the monopolists from whose loins sprang the generations that have given us our present sanctimonious race of monopolists such as the Rothchilds or the Rockefellers!

YESTERDAY IN THE j ! SENATE AND HOUSE; ,

Are There Too Many Colleges?

HOUSE. . That there are too many colleges states circumstances demand that the

-ot in session, meets at noon to- in tn4. rcited States with inadeouate ' institutions he distributed in accord

day- 'equipment and support, attempting to ance with special needs. Thus there jgive full courses for the bachelor's de-. 'is an obvious advantage in the locaSEN ATE. Igree; that much duplication of work'tion of the Michigan College of Mines Met at 2 p-m. Received answer to is goins on and that there could De!and lne Missouri School of Mines in Tillman resolution asking information la profitable merging of existing in-) the mining districts of those states.

on armor plate from Secretary Dan- stitutions to the resultant benefit of Furthermore. Dr. Babcock frankly

LONG TRANSCRIPT FOk APPEAL CASE Court Reporter John Holiday of the Wayne Circuit court has just completed the transcript to be submitted to the appellate court in the appeal of the case of Earl Savage against Dr. Richard SchiHtnger and Dr. Charles Marvel. A decision was recently rendered Savage for $2,000 against the defend-

iels, urging investigation of cost ofthe institutions and the community. states that the waste due to duplica- J nt for alleged negligent on the part

be tion of faculty, equipment and build-;" inp p?i

THE CRAZE FOR BIGNESS

Industrial Anarchy That "industrial conditions of today are anarchistic," is a point upon which we can readily agree with the Rev. E. G. Howard, pastor of the First English Lutheran church. We can not agree with the Rev. Howard, however, when he declares that "competition is driving men down, .down, down." ' A little reflection on conditions about us and some study of underlying economic law will convince most anyone that not competition, but the lack of it is what is submerging men in the depths. There is practically no competition left in industry in the United States. Nearly every branch of industry is controlled by monopoly.

The railroads, lumber, agricultural machinery, steel and iron, tobacco, and so on through the countless units of our nation's industry, all are controlled by monopoly. Even money and credit, the very life blood of free industry, is con- ! trolled by the monopoly lords of Wall street. In many industrial centers of the country, men are walking the streets, searching unavailingry for employment. At the same time in places such as Richmond it is impossible at the present time to "secure enough laborers. And during the harvest season when men are out of .work in the big industrial centers the farmers see part of their crops lost for want of harvest hands. Labor is subjected to false competition that is, the desperately harid-up laborer is made the catspaw with which to lower the general average of wages. Only the sensible manufacturers and the labor unions stand between large bodies of laborers and a constantly fluctuating wage scale. And yet, bad as are present conditions they are better than they were in the past. And if the future did not hold the promise of the coming of nation-wide equality of opportunity, suicide as a means of escape from present day industrial intolerance and cruelty would be a God-sent right. If the people will only study and prepare themselves by a more thorough understanding of economic principles, then, if they will but stand shoulder to shoulder and unflinchingly face the enemy, the monopoly lords, they can. bring about a renewal of their industrial freedom. They need never expect economic freedom as a matter of course or that it will come to them as a gift. They will never obtain it until through study and knowledge they know 'what .' 'trial freedom is and how to obtain it. There'll come a day when only the shiftless ,will walk the streets jobless. Industrial employ-

ment will be so organized and systematized that every man willing to work will be guaranteed a job. They call it government non-employment insurance in England, where actual social reform is spreading like wildfire while we still mouth about the tariff and that divine inspiration that determined our national constitution to be so perfect that it should never, never be changed. There'll come a day when wage cutting will be a thing of the past. And sensible manufacturers, who realize now that every cut in wages means just that much lessening in the country's consumptive power, will find that they are protected from their short sighted, wage-cutting competitors by a minimum wage law. There'll come a day when all unnatural monopoly such as the steel and tobacco trusts will perish from our country. No longer able to beat a more efficient competitor through the power to buy the same raw material at a cheaper price simply through an unmoral system of rebating or discounting, they will have to justify their right to exist by producing under true and fair competitive conditions. They call the antirebate or non-discount system the uniform or equal price principle. The day for these things will come when the people awaken and help themselves. As long as they are supine, lazy minded, pleasure-bent with no thought for the morrow, they will continue to rot in present conditions of industrial anarchy. When they do awaken, as they will when they have been thoroughly enough oppressed and well nigh ridden to death by the monopoly hogs, they will overthrow the oppressive system. And they will find in that day of industrial and economic freedom that not private property, but the rebate or discount system has been the cause of all their suffering. And when every man will receive his share of the total private property of the nation that amount which his legitimate efforts alone can capitalize the hue and cry raised by the Socialists against profits, private property, etc., will disappear. More strength to the good right arms of the ministers like the Rev. Howard, who have the

From the Seattle Sun. Mere population does not make a city. American cities have gone crazy on the subject of big populations. The whole aim of the average city seems to be to have a bigger population than any other city in its class. It is a foolish mistake. It has resulted in overcrowding. It has ushered in all the hideous problems of the tenement district and has made the slum and its evils a vital and vexing fact in modern urban life. Chicago wants to be bigger than New York. St. Louis wants to be bigger than Chicago. In Cleveland, Buffalo, Kansas City, Atlanta, New Orleans, San Francisco, in every city of any size in America,

the fight all the time is for more people, which simply I

means more crowding, more idle men and women, more social and civic problems, more suffering, more deaths and a long chain of other kindred evils. There is sheer madness, and no small element of criminal inhumanity in this brutal rivalry between cities for larger population. We may fill the purses of our landlords by inducing more persons than we need, more than we can accommodate, to settle in our big cities; but we must continue to pay an awful price for it. It is a heavy burden upon our resources. It is a drain which helps to keep our treasuries empty. It is a cumulative tax upon our charities. It is overcrowding our public institutions. It helps to swell the annual budget. It means more policemen, more jail room, larger hospitals and asylums. It means an increased number of disease foci. It means increasing vigilance and increasing expense in our fight for sanitation and health. It is lengthening our list of degenerates and is creating new kinds of degeneracy to burden and blight the social organism. Cities fit for eminence and power in our industrial and commercial life must grow. And they will grow. No sudden whim of fortune, no fretful fit or circumstance can keep them back. But they should grow in a healthful way. Urban growth should be normal and wholesome. Idle men and women should not be crammed and jammed in our big cities merely to swell the number of names in the directory. Idle population is dead weight. It is parastic. It consumes part of the earnings of the industrious and thrifty. Increases in urban population should be along scientific lines. No city should have in its borders more people than it can comfortably and healthfully house, more people than it can profitably carry on its payrolls, for when we have an excess over our actual needs in these respects we simply impose upon the masses heavy burdens for the benefit and enrichment of a few persons who already have, in a material way, more than they need.

government armory factory

Senator McCumber (North Dakota) assailed agricultural schedule in a speech on tariff bill. Lobby investigating committee continued hearing Mulhall's testimony. Senator Owen spoke on necessity of curbing filibustering m the Senate.

rlearlv drawn frm thA f rr Un. is fr.nntlv vr Mmted ! mb The transcript i 1040 p4K9 lon

K. C. Babcock in the yearbook of the "There is no loss of economy or em-1

commissioner of education, just is-' ciency,' he savs. "in carrying on in sued. ' ! different places the work of the first

nrtr..!.riT ,t ! ea r. or the first two years, of a lib-

today.

at this time in the case of the state-i1 arls urM ur a u,w i"-'"'-fciirnnrrrf inHtittrms ianr nt ih. ry to Technological work, provided

Adjourned at 5:20 p. m. to 2 p. m. ' ta ha. ttoir . hi:h .' the facvultv and equipment of these

j cation centralized in the state uni-, two .v"ars are fully utilized.

I versity or agricultural college: but; "It is when specialized and techno-Tx-pnnnnn utavo T i 'n D'ne stats tnere ars three or more j logical work is begun in the second or j INCORPORATIONS j j state-supported and state-controlled , third year of the usual course, when ! institutions. the services of high salaried men and INDIANAPOLIS, July IS. Indiana-; It is in these states, particularly. I enormously expensive equipment are polis Business College, Indianapolis; ithat conditions are often found under j required, that the waste and efficiency capital, $10,000; to operate a business which "the distribution and sub-di-;of plant inevitably appear." college; directcrs, C. C. Cring, F. W. ! vision of what should be a unified! Considerable effort has recently Case. O. K. Butz. ! function of the state as a whole has j been put forth to prevent needless Farmers State Bank, Colfax; capital, led inevitably to waste, duplication, j duplication, both in the case of pub$25,000; to operate a state bank; di- , undesirable competition for anpropri- j lice and private institutions, but so rectors, C. Holloway, H. J. Coon, B. jations and campaigning for students! far little actual consolidation on the Bailey. tin order to get more appropriations." ; part of state institutions has taken

The Rock City Manufacturing Company, Wabash; capital, $15,000; to! manufacture and sell screen door ; hinges; directors, B. A. Houser, Geo. i Barcus, C. E. Smith. i The Files-Thompson Company, In-:

dianapolis; capital, $25,000; to deal in merchandise; directors. A. W. Thompson, A. F. Files, Henry Holt, Jr. Latham & Walters, Indianapolis: capital, $10,000; to do a general con-

The report concedes that some ; place.

The Theaters

very clever. Captain Williams, president of the Latin American Steamship company taken by Joseph Shafer is splendid. Mr. Shafer is becoming a favorite with many and each

Only a fair sized audience witness-: week improves over his former appeared the production of "Paid In Full" as : ance. Miss Pauline Leroy, a general

I presented last evening by the Francis ! favorite here, has the part of Beth

and is th longest made in the local court for a number of years.

struction business; directors, C. Latham, Jr., H. Waters. V. V. Wiese. Hyde Park Amusement Company, Indianapolis; capital, 4.500; to operate amusement places; directors, E. Linwood Hardy, H. S. Davidson, A. C. Ostermeyer. National Outing Club, Fort Wayne;

j Sayles players at the Murray theatre. t Harris and is interpreting her part in

j This may have been due to the fact a most excellent manner, j that the play has been seen in this Miss Leroy has a charming personality several times at the Gennett thea- ity and is a pleasing actress. Misa Me- : tre. The play was presented in a cred- ta Eyferth. as Mrs. Harris. Emma's

itable manner, each and every mem- Mother, is better than usual this week, ber of the cast lending themselves to Miss Eyferth has the habit of jttmbtheir various parts in a praiseworthy , ling her lines just a little. One has to manner T Vt .i ohaAnftii rf ft Wllonn rV.lt. -tu ht ntida)v i. nnld. im.Ur.

to operate a club; directors, Al Reber, t , , . . . ,, , . , . . . I more nonularlv known as Sammv gtand her fullv. Carl Adamson as Sato.

A. Tomkinson, Jr., T. F. Conroy. i

The Trinity Springs Hotel Company

Trinity Springs; capital, $5,000; to operate health resorts; directors, M. D. Kelly, M. H. Kelly, E. G. Gesell.

The Knott Manufacturing Company, I

i noticeable.

Captain William's Jap valet, gives a

of Fort Wayne has moved to Tell City, Indiana.

East St. Louis Bridge Company, 111. j

Francis Sayles was splendid last ev- j splendid interpretation of the part. Mr. ening in the part of "Jimmy Smith." , Adamson is able to adapt himself to Mr. Sayles is a good actor and is be- ; most any part assigned hiro.

coming very popular here. He has a j This is a good show and is being charming personality and enters into ' presented in an excellent manner. No his part in a most commendatory man-1 doubt the attraction will draw large ner. Carl G. Runyan as "Joe Brooks." houses throughout the week. The mat-

i n f . V. T . i CAnmk4n i ; T 1 V, . i T. . 1 .. TW .. ...

in Indiana. $5,000;' to manufacture ! company' des his P"1 fai?y WeU ,bul day and Saturday afternoons. This is steel bridges, etc.; directors. E. A. j 18 "ot nearly so good as he was last the eleventh week for the company

Doyle in "Alias Jimmy Valentine." The i cessful financially than the preceding

Curtis, George B. Curtis, R. P. Munger.

LONGINGS

Oh! that we two were Maying Down the stream of the soft spring breeze, Like the children with violets playing In the shade of the whispering trees. Oh! that we two sat dreaming On the sward of some sheep-trimmed down, Watching the white mist streaming Over river and mead and town. Oh! that we two lay sleeping In our nest in the churchyard sod; With our limbs at rest on the earth's quiet breast, vr ot:r pouIs at home with God. Charles Kingsley,

POINTED PARAGRAPHS

THEY MISSED SO MUCH. Springfield Republican. The sufferings of the ex-muckraking magazines must be intense.

Taking Big Chances. It is too great a risk to depend upon neighbors or sending for medicine in case of a sudden attack of bowel complaint. In almost every neighborhood someone has died from cholera morbus that could have easily been saved had the proper medicine been at hand. Then think of the suffering that must be endured until medicine can be obtained. The safe way is to keep at hand a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It has never been known to fail and has un

doubtedly saved the lives of many i

people. Buy it now. It only costs a quarter. For sale by all druggists. ( Advertisement)

part this week seems just a little foreign to him. Miss Worth, as "Emma." is better this week than at any previous time. She does her part in a

one. This is one of the most popular companies ever playing in this city for so long an engagement. Next week "Brown's In Town." ths funniest play ever written, will be pre-

reailstic manner and is indeed . sented.

E. R. T.

THE POWERFUL BUG

Lecture by Dennie

No. 9

Slides by Williams

Guide

HASN'T SHOWN UP YET. Atlanta Constitution. By this time the panic hunters should be convinced that "they ain't no sich animal."

WHILE IT MUST DELIVER. Memphis News-Scimitar. One hideous injustice of the silly season is that everybody can get away with an alibi except a baseball team.

DRASTIC REFORM IN WASHINGTON. Philadelphia North American. The best that could have been said of Washington Sunday was that it was dry as the Congressional Record.

At the Murray. Week of July 14. 'Paid in Full." Palace.

Broncho and Kay-Bee war dramas ,

have been popular since the day of ; their inception. In a class by them- ; i selves they are famous the world over :

Unlike most of the so-called Indian ; and war subjects the Broncho and Kay-1 Bee films have splendid stories, staged out in the great west on the desert ; and mountain side and presented by a j cast of real Indians, (Sioux) soldiers, j amonw them the most daring riders in ' the country and for the principals the best actors and actresses obtainable. ' The Palace is the only theatre in this city showing these feature subjects ' and presents today one of the best of : Broncho films "Heart Throbs," a splendid story nf the Civil War, in tw o ;

parts, also a Reliance, "The Wager."

Oh! See the pretty Girl. Isn't that a pret-ty little cap she is wear-ing?

Most n u rses are pretty. Do yon know why? It is be-cause they are doing a beautiful w o rk in helping- the sick to get well and in com-fort-ing the last moments of the dying. Doing beau-ti-ful deeds helps to make an ugly

girl look pretty. The girl you see in the pic-ture is one who devotes all her time to visit-ing homes where Mr. Tu-ber-cle Bac-cil-lus has bitten a boy or a girl or maybe a grown-up. She tells the patient how to burn the spit that contains so many mil-lion of the fatal germs. She coaxes the

(51))

other mem-bers of the fam-ily to keep the bed-room win-dows open all the year round.

She looks after the food the patient eats and she encourages him with ber bright smile. All the time she is in the house, she is talking about cheerful things like sun-s h i n e and fresh air and good health and clean bodies and clean rooms.

Sometimes she takes a rag and soap and water and helps to clean dirty homes. She is paid by funds raised through the sale of Red Cross seals and other money given by pub-lic spirited men and women. The Indiana Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuber culosis.

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BRITAIN FACES ONE MORE PERIL. Baltimore American. In addition to the other troubles of Great Britain, the divided equestrian skirt has now come to engage the thought of the empire.

HERE'S AN ATTRACTION Sioux City Journal. There should be room on the Chautauqua platform for Colonel Mnlhall with a talk on "Statesmen I Have Insidiously Influenced."

I MASONIC CALENDAR . Tuesday Richmond Lodge No. 196. F. & A. M. Called meeting. Work in Master Mason Degree. Refreshments. Wednesday Webb Lodge No. 24, F. fc A. M. Stated meeting. Friday King Solomon Chapter No. 4. R. A. M. Special meeting. Work in Mark Master Degree.

PROMINENT PUBLICISTS. Lamar (Mo.) Republican Sentinel. A little after sunrise every morning two or three citizens of Lamar can be seen on their way to the park. They take a seat near the west gate and there they stay until sunset and sometimes after dark. They talk what they call politics and what they call religion, and none of them knows anything about government or what true Christianity is.

HE'S QUITE A DOCTOR. Louisville Courier-Journal. District Attorney Whitman of New York, is a doctor of laws who has to his credit several surgical operations of a pruning nature in the police department.

OF COURSE SHE DOES. South Bend Tribune. It will probably be difficult to convince the Monticello, N. Y., mother who in the process of spanking her son upset an oil stove and started a 9100,000 fire that the youth wasn't worth it.

There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than ail other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Selene hss proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore, requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer on hundred dollars for any case it fail to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY, & CO.. Toledo, Ohio. Sold by drugsnsts, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. (Advertisement)

Tr&rTa'f- Xferalr 17'0MAN,S delicate Jtem requires IUIl I JUUUil TT more than ordinary care and at

tention more care and attention than it is given by the average woman. Neglect it and ills soon creep In, and the look of old ace. sometimes auicklv.

s 1 1 in i sometimes gradually follows. That backtche, so common am org women, brings with it th sunken chest, the headache, tired muscles, crow's-feet, and soon the youthful body is no more yoathful in appearance and all because of lack of attention. There is no reason why yon should be so nnfortnnate, when you have at year

disposal a remedy sncb aa Or. fierce s x avorite i reserlpUo:

Old Before Your Time

for over 40 jeavra as a remedy for ailments peculiar to women,

sands upon thousands of testimonials en Sic the accumulation of 40 yean testifying to its effectiveness. Neither narcotics nor alcohol are to be found in thai famous preecriptiop. Begulates irrefrolarities. Corr-eata die placemen to. Overcomes painful perioda. Tones np nerves. Brings about perfect health. Sold by dealers ia medicines, vn liquid or tablet form. Dr. Pimit'l Mmdlral Adriatr. nmrtm rs rioerf up-tm 4uit ditiom. ojwrers A oafs eeVftaafe cef 4o mbamt which ererv mommu, tinglm or married ought (e kmom.

recommended

We have thou-

Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription

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1

KNIGHTS TEMPLARS SPECIAL TO DENVER. COLO. Special train, consisting of high grade Pullman Standard Sleepers, through without change, will leave Richmond SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, NOON VIA C. & O. AND ROCK ISLAND LINES. $37.03 Round Trip $37.05 Tickets good returning until October 31st, 1913. Colorado Springs and Pueblo can be taken In on same rate, through Denver. Liberal stopovers allowed, going and returning. Special stops for meals en-route has been provided, and train scheduled to reach Denver, Monday. August 11th. 7:25 a. m. Low round trip rates, also on sale to Yellowstone Park. California, and North Pacific Coast, Via Denyer, with stopover privileges. The public Is cordially invited to join the "Knights Templars." on this Special through train which will be Personally conducted, and any one accompanying The Knights' will receive the same courteous treatment. Itinerary of trip will be gladly furnished by the undersigned Transportation Committee, also reservation made in sleepers, and full information given. PHIL H. WORRALL WILL R. WARD LEROY E. BROWN A. W. REESE RALPH CAIN CLIFFORD CALDWELL "Or C. A. BLAIR. City Ticket Agt. C. aV O. R'y, Heme TeL .2062.

lrt. Weary "It's been nothing but lug coal all day. for hot water to wash olrty clothes in! I'm worn out!" Anfy Drudgt "Foolish woman! Uaf Fels-Naptha Soap in cool water, let your fire go out and doni make yourself sick doing unnecsary work." The Fels-Naptha way of washing is as simple as it is easy. You wet the pieces to be washed, soap with Fels-Naptha, roll and soak for thirty minutes. -During this half hour Fels-Naptha Soap loosens the dirt. You are saved all the hard rubbing. A few rubs with your hands and the dirt rolls out. -No boiling and no swollen knuckles or aching back from strenuous washboard work. Taty 4iretlona ars oe c Ctd 0re Wrapper. r.ls Cs. FfcflsdeiotiU.

TTorllvc CI mncr-o

Try Our Coffee Roasted Today It Will Please You

5.

SPACE FOlfc . STORAGE OR MANUFACTURING PURPOSES. We are equipped to handle all kinds of storage. Space with plenty of light for manufacturing purposes. RICHMOND MFG. CO. West Third and Chestnut St. Telephone 3210.

PALACE TODAY Broncho Feature "HEARTTHROBS" in 2 Reels "THE WAGER" Reliance Drama

Murray ALL THIS WEEK - Francis Sayles Players In the Great American Play "PAID IN FULL" By Eugene Walter 100. Performance Friday Night. Silk Programs for the Ladles. PRICES Matinees Tuea. Thurs. & Sat. 10 and 20c Nights 10, 20, and 30c Next Week -Brown's In Town