Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 227, 1 August 1913 — Page 4
' 4 CHMONT)
PAGE FOUR THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1913
m -k ' J the ehambtas of failure, drowning the defenseless In seas 1 HE KICHMOND I ALLADlUlVl ot distress and suicide, aU in the name of progress and j business all this that his pagan wives and daughters may
AND SUN-TELEGRAM. I play the part of My Lady Disdain in a Republic!
What a
euucaiug LaiLC lu wo laugncu a u ouujc 'lav juci a.o vi
Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by j grow merry over the comedies of Aristophanes and Plan
Palladium Printing Co. Masonic Building. Ninth and North A Streets. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr.
tus. It is this inconsistency in human nature that perplexes us all. The dog that will bite when wagging his tail is unknown. The animal that will snap when showing signs of friendliness has not yet been discovered. Snakes hiss when about to strike. All animals give some sign of enmity toward you. Thus it seems that man alone is the
In Richmond. 10 cents a week. By Mall, in advanc
one year, $5.00; six months, 12.60; one month. 45 cent.
ivurai iwroiea, in advance on. year. i.w. arrh sham an(J hvpocrlte and to him alone was glvea $1.25: one month 25 cents. I, "..,.. i f ' ; language to conceal his thoughts. He alone can smLe
tnd smite at the same time. He alone can frown and
Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Second Class Mall Matter.
Our Foolish Road System The National road west from the city limits to the Center township line was recently macadamized under the three-mile gravel road law at an expense of over $15,000. At first it was a model highway. Today large cuts and holes are beginning to appear in the roadbed, and by next spring after the heavy winter travel over the soft, yielding surface, probably it will be difficult to recognize in this stretch of roadway what a year previous had been regarded as Wayne county's model road. Why will this be the case ? Was not the road well made? Apparently the road was satisfactorily constructed, but the trouble does not lie in that direction. The whole fault is that the highway system in this county and all over the state is founded on wrong principles, because there is no provision for the proper maintenance of roads. Consequently it is a waste of public money to improve highways as the National road west was, unless the improvements are to be permanent (brick paving.) The other day it was suggested to a county officer that it would be a good move for the
flatter and stab in the darft.
RICHMOND
IS
BIG
irible to keep the eye on half a dozen ! GREEKS VICTORIONS I HOW I MADE (animals at once, let alone twenty, and i "1t,E,rvo iwiviuo -rrvi - nvpn mil n artavc h maik uuu
RAILROAD ClIITEB: Th wcrld'8 greatest collection of I i wild animals will be seen in Richmond ;
Saturday, August 9, when the Hagen
M- Ti 1 rr nnr.nnr. beck-Wallace circus cornea.
niuic i nail iuu rdsicngci Trains and 100 Freight Trains Here Dailv.
(National Nwsi Association) ATHENS. Greece, Aug. 1. An official bulletin issued today by the war
Palace. In "The Higher Justice," a two-reel
Reliance feature being shown at the j
' Palate today, Forest Halsey has con
That Richmond is the greatest rail- tributed another drama in the charac-j road center in Indiana, considering teristic red-blooded style for which
the population, is readily admitted by he is noted. The story deals with two
Woman With Marvetously Beautiful Hair Gives Simple Home Prescription Which She Used With i Most Remarkable Results.
office stated -that after four days' ter-1 rifle fighting along the entire Bulgar- J I was greatly troubled with dandruff ian frontier, the Greek armies gaine 1 and falling hair. I trU-J many advt-r-victories at Hahoma and Petchova. ', Used hair preparations and various driving the Bulgarians back with ter- prescriptions, but they all signally fail-
rifle losses. The casualt Greeks also were heavy.
railroad men traveling through this sons of a wealthy and powerful man. city and who have occasion to be- One is the illegitimate son of a poor
Solomon said there were four wonderful things in the come familiar with figures of the bus- w oman tricked into mock marriage
world, past all understanding the way of a ship upon the j iness done at the Pennsylvania Union and the other is the legitimate son
NO LOOKING BACK ! RICHMOND
; greasy so it was impossible to comb it or do it up properly. I think that many j of the things 1 tried were positive'.v IV j injurious and from my own experiem a
I
sea, the way of an eagle in the air, the way of a serpent on a rock, and the way of a man with a maid. But still more wonderful is the way of the demagogue and political sham with t-he people. The slowest and most subtle of all processes i3 the evolution of human thought. A people or race passes through an intellectual, economic or social revolution with little more consciousness of that revolution than the newborn child has of its mother's travail. We are so passing. So is Europe. And all other races and nations are affected. From the first awakening of the European intellect, at the end of the dark ages down to our day, the masses knew or thought little of the mighty stream upon whose current they were being carried. A few have felt the current in every age. A few have caught the spirit, voiced it, and died martyrs to truth. Some felt it, spoke and died forgotten. These pioneers make up that "small minority which is always right" as Ibsen says. But even the most advanced mind of the fifteenth century could not have prophesied what fruits each succeeding century would reap from the gropings of the human intellect at the dawn after the long night of superstition. Who couldhave predicted this industrial, this wonderful machine age of ours, with machines that seem endowed with more intelligence than many men? Who could have foretold the splendid achievements of science, the advancement of surgery, and the emancipation of medicine from magic? As the years came and dissolved into memory, and the day grew to morning, and the sun peeped through the mists of ignorance and credulity, the more advanced minds tried to adjust themselves to new conditions. Every such attempt was met by that great enemy of human pro-
I err a c a t Vta atDrn al croor onrl t ho arlva n roH tVtirtlrora u'ara
county to inaugurate a policy of putting down ostra;,sed or put to dea'th. Tnes6 sneers and puni8hments Strips Of brick paving on the most traveled COUnty j Were administered by those who believed and still be-
hlghways the arteries Of the Community. lie lieve that the universe is a stationary engine whose fires
promptly replied that such a policy would be
too expensive, consequently out of the question. This official was merely considering the orig-
were banked on the morning of the seventh day of creation and 'have never been stirred up since. All great revolutions, all good and permanent revolutions have been born in the brain of man and fought out
inal COSt Of the road, and that, incidentally, would I in the arena of thought. They have been bloodless
not be so very much more than the macadamizing of a highway. He did not take into consideration the saving which would result from the elimination of our most extravagant and impractical system of road upkeep. He failed to take into consideration the fact that brick paving would stand for years under the heaviest travel without requiring a cent's worth of repairs. As to the three mile gravel road law there is considerable opposition to it all over the state because of the burden it is placing upon the taxpayers. This opposition is natural for the law, while providing a way for good roads, has no provision in it for scientific and economical conservation of the roads constructed under its terms.
cannot too strongly caution you
apainst using preparation containing wood alcohol and other poisonous sub-
New Evidence Constantly Being Pub- stances. 1 believe they injure th ishsd. roots of the hair. After my lon&Ht
of failures. I Sinally found a simpl
Since the long succession of Rich-
prescription which I can unhesitatini-
station. Indianapolia is rated as the 0f a wealthy woman. The subject is greatest inland railroad center in the delicately treated but with a force world and Logansport easily exceeds and cleverness tnat snould make the Richmond so far as the number of drama rank above the usual run of employes in the Pennsylvania rail- photo plays. With this a Maje6tic road shops is concerned. But it is comedy "Adventurous Girls." doubtful if Indianapolis has the num- j be'- of trains pulling into the Union j Tno Man From Home." station, according to the population of Those who have not paid the Mur-
tne city, that Richmond has. . ray a visit lhis w?ek t0 S(3e -Tne Man ; said in a most hearty and unmlstak
i- our divisions Ot tne tennslania yrom Home." are missine the best ner- i nhle wav Ra.l the exnerience of
railroad. Cincinnati, Logansport, formance of the season by the Francis . Mrs. J. Morris of 433 4 Main street: Louisville ajid Richmond, besides the Sayles players. "The Man From Home" I She says: "We hae used Doan s G. R. & I. railroad and C. & O. pull na8 Deen eeen here before at much ! Kidnev Pills in our family with sucinto Richmond and there are at least ' higher prices. However, this popular ce ss and it is just as much a pleasure 100 passenger trains which stop here , c.ompany gives the play an excellent to recommend them now as it was every 24 hours. j production and the theatre has been some vears ago. I suffered from kid-
v,!lvT .J; " .1 ;fairly vel1 fil,ed at aH Performances ney trouble and my back ached. I was j months and during that time it has not
uuutft llA ,uul"lut. mv "'irlnrinz thp wtvk. Thpr will bp an-
the local press there has been no look-; h. ' , -v.p
ing back. Richmond evidence con- ' Q Manv of mv friends have also tlnues to pour in. and-better still used it anJ Stained wonderful effects those whose reports were first pub- j therefrom. It not onlv is a powerful lished many years ago, verify all tly J stimulant to the croth of the hair
' ami for restoring gray hair to its naU
ural color, but it is equally good for removing dandruff, giving the hair lif and brilliancy, etc.. and for the purpose of keeping the scalp In first class condition. It also mak-s the hair easier to comb ami arrange in nice forra.
I have a friend who ujed it two
Bulgarian buttermilk can be had at Price's.
I MASONIC CALENDAR 4
Friday, August 1 King Solomons Chapter, Rcrval Arch Masons. Called
gree. Light refreshments.
r
THIS WORLD OF SHAMS
I
E
THE PARASITE By Edgar 1 1 iff.
VERY age has its supreme type. One age extols
the soldier, another the hermit-saint, another the miracle worker, another the scholar, who prates of Pythagoras and uses many words without say
ing anything. Our supreme type has been the captain of industry, the material creator, 'he promoter, the hustler, the gatherer of fortunes which far exceed the wildest dreams if the Arabian Nights' tales. This may be within a sociological law higher than our will. Each type passes away. So will ours. Perhaps the future will totally discredit the para-
1 -
Violence has only hindered them, not stopped them. The American revolution was begun in Europe long before the shot heard around the world was fired. War, bloodshed, and rapine are only symptoms of the progress of revolution the sores, the toils, the eruptions on the body politic. Nearly all of the literature of this age is saturated with social revolutions. We are shamming when we turn our eyes away and do not face it. Nearly all of the contemporary British novels are upon social, economic, industrial and sex questions. The American novelists are not free; they are commercialized; they do not give forth the call of, liberty; they serve Mammon. There are two notable exceptions, Margaret Deland, in her "Iron Wornpn," and Theodore Drelssern in his "Sister Carrie," "Jennie Gerhardt" and "The Financier." The best American novelists today are women. The woman of today is striving to adjust herself to new conditions. The primitive idea of "woman's proper sphere" has passed out of the minds of intelligent persons. Woman is in the labor market. She is already in
dustrialized. Like the plant in a dark cellar her tendrils grope toward the dim light at the window. She is dreaming of independence. She is reaching toward the sun almost unconsciously. She has a faint stirring in her soul that she should no longer be subjected to oriental and ancient creeds. The true woman longs to stand beside the man in his aims and labors just as the old German or Teuton man and wife stood heart to heart, soul to soul, brain to brain, shoulder to shoulder. The true woman hates the parasite. She hates with all her soul the parasite women who are the outgrowth of the mod-
t-igui. iruusiiiaum tmiuo i other matinee tomorrow.
and between 9:40 and 10:15 and 9:00 to 9:30 p. m. there is an unusually large number. Station Master Mayhew estimates that trains passing through Richmond daily and stopping at the Union station, carry 3,000 people and during these summer months because of the northern travel, this number is often exceeded daily. Between 700 and 800 tickets to different points are sold daily and considering that farmers cannot come to town and that the season is regarded as dull by the railroad management, this number is exceedingly large. Richmond is one cf the heaviest freight points for the Adams Express company In the state. From the trains stopping here ten men employed by the company take off from 80 to 100 truckloads of baggage. Baggagemaster August Paust says this does not include the BOO cans of cream which arrive from Newark, Ohio, Urbana, Ohio and Anderson, Indiana, shipped
to local ice cream dealers. On an average 10,000 pieces of baggage are handled monthly by the express men at the station.
restless and mornings felt very tired j oniy stopped the falling of his hair and land nervous. I got my supply of wonderfully increased Its growth, but j Doan s Kidney Pills from A. G. Luken . jt practically restored all of his hair ;& Co.'s Drug Store and they made to lts natural color. You can obtain ime well. Another number of my fam-1 the ingredients for making this wonI ily was completely relieved by this ! derful preparation from almost any
meeting. Work in the Royal Arch do- take no other
preparation. ' For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States.
Remember the name Doan s and
( A dvert!ement
1IW
OH JOY! OH GLADNESS! CIRCUS COMING TO TOWN
RICHMOND, IND., SATURDAY, AUGUST 9TH
At the Murray. Week of July 28 "The Man From Home."
Wallace-Hagenbeck Circus. Absolute obedience from animals is one of the great foundations of training the wild beasts. Without it, there would be no performing wild animals, and no trainer. It is a well known fact that trainers often spend hours and sometimes a whole day, insisting on an animal doing some little thing which he is reluctant to do. It is simply a matter of obedience and it must be insisted upon, no matter at what
sites, the rich beggars and drones who make
nothing with their hands or produce nothing from their brains, but live upon the blood, muscle anl brain of others. It may no longer be necessary to have white hands and over-much leisure to be called "intellectual." It may not be necessary to have a professional title, or to borrow one's ideas from the dead, to be called "cultured" and of the "upperclass." We do not know. We only hope and dream the noblest and best for those who work. Perhaps the current sham superstitions about "education" will be exploded. Those who have a hold upon society by pretense and the art of looking wise may be ex-
trouble.
ern domineering, over-rich people. Of course the para-, Herr Ernest Albers, one of the most site woman flourished among the philosophers and states-! daring trainers in the world, who men of Greece. Pericles had his Aspasia and Antony his j works a group of wild animals with Cleopatra. She made riotous and vulgar the regal feasts j the Hagenbeck-Wallace shows, nearly of Belshazzar, and corrupted nearly all of the royal house- lost hls life at one time because he hold of France and England, but she never in the history i had not insisted on an animal prompt
ly ooeying mm. nerr Aioers preiers
of the world was as common and as impertinent as today'. She has left the gilded palaces of the kings and dwells
only to train the most savage and dangerous beasts, but in this case he had
in tne Mouse or uoia. concluded that the animal was not The true woman knows in her heart if the parasite . feeling very well, and it is a strict with her barbaric luxuries, her diamonds, and jewelled j rule that no animal who is the least junk, the toy and plaything of man. is to be the permanent I sick is allowed to perform or be trainand final manifestation of female life on the globe then J ed- For this reason the animal was the death-knell of woman's power for good is sounded, i led off; but the next tlme he abso" . , ... ... , , ,. , .. lutely refused to do what was wanted She knows that this luxurious, parasite life Is resting up-! ... . , of him, and the fact of trying to make on the backs of laboring men and women and largely wj-, him do brought aDOut an attack As on under-paid working girls, just as all the glittering coun I it wag Herr Aibers got 0ff with a bad. life of Louis the Fourteenth and Charles the Second drewj iy torn hand and arm, and was in the its sustenance from the patient people who worked, were . hospital several weeks. loval to a sentiment, and tried to do justice, love mercy" i It is not the eye, though that may
posed by the searchlight of truth. Perhaps man will one ' ani walk humbly before God. That is the great historic I express the qualities or resoluteness
i . ... .... .... i II T Tl'arln&cc and natiflnfo tr ,c t ri
When you read or tne minions snowerea upon tne . " .
disreputable Madam Du Barry by Louis the Fifteenth youj, fc 'a .1UU?
feline species, there is an ever element of danger present, no matter
Ono : v. . 1 1 : s i i T?
, t .4 v iv ... .fc..vv- ...... . . , vt . . ... t " w.. I nun 1 i iiiiit-u 1 11 r v ill el v ut. tvprv
we shall qualify by saying that neither blouse, gown nor j is the woman who, under the form of marriage, trades her-! time a trainer turns his back in a cage robe is noble in itself, for man only can be noble. Hejsef for luxury, jewels and an indolent life; another who j he risks his life; not a great risk, to alone can confer nobility upon apparel or position. No of-lmakps the same bartrain without marriaee: the last is the ! be sure, but there is always a chance
fice gives dignity. Man gives dignity to office. mournful creature, that eternal priestess of humanity. "If there be not manhood written across your brow you j -who is in all ages blasted for the sins of the people. Each
do not deserve the respect of honest men," will be the ; one sells herself, sells her birthright, for a mess of pot-
day see tnat some or tne mucn exaitea "professions ' rest sham
upon the ignorance, credulity and fears of mankind the ! fear of death, the fear of the law, the fear of hell. i
Some day the blouse of the plowman may be as sacred" : couid call his own to confer upon leeches?
as the gown of the priest and the robe of the king only There are three marked tvpes of female parasite
gasp and ask, who produced all this wealth which a king
dictum to every king and ruler
The coming ages may not be conscious that any profession Is more honorable than any honest and useful work of the humblest hand and brain. All professions and all kinds of business that do not minister to the public good may utterly perish from the earth. He who does useful things, whether with broom, or brush, plow, pen, chisel, hammer, spade, rake or hoe, and does them with art and love of art, and with kinship to the plain people, will receive the crown. "The only path of escape known in all the worlds of God," said Emerson, "is performance." The stern terms of admission to the old Norse heaven were that you must do some useful work on earth. "What good thing did you do?" was asked by the door-keeper of heaven. Never once was the knocker at the door of Vahalla asked, "What do you believe?" But no age has ever finally disposed of that social and political eham, the demagogue; the blustering Falstarfian
soldier In one age; the pious crusader stealing lands and butchering children in the name of Christ; the hermitsaint, lining his cave with mendicant gold; the miracleworker fattening upon public credulity; the astrologer telling the future of dupes' by the stars; the alchemist claiming that he could enrich the world by turning mountains of iron into gold; then the captain of industry debauching courts and legislatures, driving the weak to
tage, and commits the unpardonable sin against nature and love. From these conditions there has grown gross intemperance at the two extremes of the social order the parasites drink to fill up the unutterable emptiness of their lives; the very poor and degraded plunge into the alcoholic river of Lettie to temporarily drown memory and forget the tragedies of their existence.
POINTED PARAGRAPHS
JUST LIKE NEW YORK, FOR INSTANCE Chicago News. When Chicago is grown up it will leave its partisan municipal politics on the dump.
A 1 II!
"2 AND 8 P. RAIN OR SHINE
I tea o:: 4 V 9
druggist. The prescription is as follows: Hay Rum, 6 oi.; Menthol Crystals. Vi drachm; Lavona de Composee. 2 oi. If you like it perfumed add a few drops of To-Kalon Perfume, which mixes perfectly with the other ingredients. This, however, is not necessary. Apply night and morning; rub thoroughly into the scalp. Advertisement) The Biggest Trade Ever. Thanks to old, and many new customers, our beer will be of the same high grade all the time. Phone 21S5. and
we will be pleased to forward your order. THE JUNG BREWING COMPANY S. 4th Street 435 to 439 31-1 1
Umbrellas and Parasols Repaired and Covered. .
WM. II. DUNING, 43 N. 8th St.
of death in a stroke. Yet it is impos-!
Only Circus This Season, Then Goodbye Till Next Year. WORLD'S GREATEST CIRCUS ORGANIZATION 3 Dinar Colossal, Steel-Girted Arena, n QfQQ lilllwS Royal Roman Hippodrome L uiQuS 3 GREAT HERDS OF PERFORMING ELEPHANTS 3 48 Champion Equestrians, the Greatest Bareback Riders the World Has Ever Seen, Including 4 Conners
M'LLE NADJE 6 VAN DIEMANS Human Birds, without Me- The most perfect formed chanical Assistance. woman in all the world. Champions of all champions She's a Circus Venus. 1,000 PEOPLE 1,000 3-RAILROAD TRAINS-3 600 HORSES 600 21 Acres of Tents 21 400 PERFORMERS 400 10,000 SEATS 10,000 FIFTY CLOWNS TASMAN1AN SISTERS With Many New and Up-to- Wtf'e.enin date Pantomime Novelties. costume.
"The Busiest, Blggeat Little Store In Town. ErlgMeiu Up With Some of Our Midsummer Jewelry FRED KENNEDY Jeweler 526 Main Street
1 - I palace"!
HAGEMBECK'S
Most Wonderful Trained Wild Animals. A Zoological Paradise.
GRAND FREE STREET PARADE Reserve seats on sale at Thistlethwslte's Drug Store, 6th and Main, at the same plices as charged on the show grounds.
TODAY 'The Higher Justice" Reliance Drama In 2 Reels By Forrest Halssy
Us
"Adventurous Girls" Majestic Comedy
THEN THEY SUCCUMB. Baltimore Sun. Millionaires can evade almost all species of husbandhunters except the professional nurse.
KIND OF 'EM TO WAIT THAT LONG. Cumberland News. Postmaster General Burleson gets up a 5 o'clock in the morning. No doubt the officeseekers begin to ring his bell about then.
GAS MANGE
Sold on Easy Monthly Payments We handle only the very best quality of ranges and sell them at the lowest possible prices. Come in aud let us convince you of this fact or phone 1267 and our representative will call and explain.
Richmond Light, Heat & Power Company
IVI u p ray ALL THIS WEEK Francis Sayles Players in Wm. Hodge's Big Success 'The Man From Home" By Booth Tarkington and Harry Leon Wilson PRICES Matinees Tues. Thurs. . Sat. 10 and 20c Nights at 8:1510, 20, and 30c Next Week "BREWSTER'S MILLIONS"
LOANS 2 Per Cent Per Month on household goods, pianos, teams, stock, etc, -without re movaL Loans made In all surrounding towns. Call, write or phone and our agent will call at your bouse. Private Reliable THE STATE INVESTMENT AND LOAN COMPANY
Room 40 Colonial Bide Phone 25 W. Take elevator t
Third Floor. Richmond. Indiana.
i)
