Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 280, 2 October 1913 — Page 4

I'AGE FOITR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, OCT. 2Li9lJ

The Richmond Palladium AND SUN-TELEGRAM.

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

In Richmond. 10 cento a week. By Mail, in advanceone year, $5.00; six months, 2.60; one month, 45 cents. Rural Routes, in advance one year, $2.00; six months, $1.25; one month 25 cents.

Kntered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Second Class Moil Matter.

families will gather about hearths and tables to recall the world old story of their race.

Previous to the exile which occurred some i

six hundred years before Christ, the Israelites kept their calendar New Year festival in the autumn. Long contact with the Babylonians,

however, introduced new customs and caused them to change their calendar year in such a way as to bring New Years in the spring. But the old season kept so firm a grip on them they compromised by keeping the church festival of the New Year at the old date. We extend all best wishes to our local Jewish citizens and wish them many prosperous New Years yet to come.

Heart to Heart Talks

By CHARLES N. LU&IE

Wins His Bride Via Air Route

One Effect of the Fall Festival A generation or two ago the majority of us

lived in villages. These were so isolated as al

most to be independent of each other. No telephones, telegraphs, railways, traction lines,

postal service, newspapers or passable highways

functionpd to knit senarated communities into

orsranic unitv. The village was a little world,

complete, insulated, and self-sufficient. Com

munitv activities were housed beneath the

church roof or in a town hall.

Under such circumstances competition was

keen between rivals in business. There was only a definitely limited amount of trade in sight and

every merchant had to get his share or go bank

rupt. As a result men in the same profession or trade were usually not on speaking terms, but considered each other as born enemies. Individual stores or individual men were the units in the game of competition. Today, how different! It is almost impossible to tell where a town leaves off or the country begins. Communities are merged into each other and a countryside has become a compact organism with telephone and telegraph lines, railways, tractions and good roads as the arteries supplying a constant circulation of life through all parts. Nobody can trace the limits of trade nor can a single merchant say : This particular territory or that belongs by right to me and to no other. This is but to say that cities, and not individuals, have now become the competing units. It is no longer a question as to whether this merchant or that gets the business, but whether Richmond can hold its own against Dayton or Indianapolis. Merchants are no longer enemies, but partners in the same common enterprise. What benefits one benefits the other. For this reason we rejoice because of the Fall Festival. It teaches us to realize our municipal solidarity. It causes us to know who our real competitors are. And in bringing men of -'the same business into committees to work in

conjunction with each other it serves to destroy the leftover delusion still harbored in some quarters that our business rival is our enemy. It teaches us that when we work together the city will prosper and a prosperous city means prosperity for- us all.

STARS AND STRIPES

New York American. The futurist politician is the latest thing in the freak line. Women are so persistent. Soon they'll be demanding that their votes be counted. Scientists imported eighty billions malignant germs from South America into Baltimore. "O. K." cried the customs officers, "We won't count 'em." Girls in West Virginia are not to be permitted to wear jewels during working hours class legislation, of course, in favor of the safe deposit and trust companies. Nadikane Q. Oele, Jr., an African prince, says he will marry here to save thirty cows, the cost of a Zulu wife. Cowskins are cheaper than sealskins, Nadi, much cheaper.

Sam Houston s portrait has come down from the Texas State House and Joe Bailey's has taken its place. It is to be hoped a certificate of deposit accompanied the exchange. "Walk in! Walk in! Do not pr-ress upon the r-ropes! This being Sunday, the peerless Secretary of State delivers his won-der-r-ful lecture, free, gratis, for nothing!" An old showman's trick to drum up business for weekdays.

A STALK OF CORN.

Amid the purlieus of the grim East Side, Where beauty seems a thing that ne'er was born, Upon a balcony rears, in bannered pride, A slender stalk of corn. Alien to every sight and every sound, Its leaves beneath the transient noon glow bright, And the white stars, upon their punctual round, Touch it with tender light. What is its dream: of fields that sweep and sway Beneath autumnal breezes breathing low? What does it bring? To one, an exile gray Visions of long ago: Visions of youth and hope, of the far hills Of home where a lone wanderer was born. Ah, what a boon amid life's griefs and ills, This slender stalk of corn! Clinton Scollard.

MAKING OF A CHAMPION. Maurice E. McLousrhlin of California, a young man, is the lawn tennis champion of the United States and one of the best players in the world. His recent playing has aroused the players and followers of the game, many thousands In number, to enthusiasm. Wlnnintr th championship after

three months of the hardest lawn tennis that an American ever attempted, McLouffhlin proved that his condition was perfect, that he could have undergone greater stress if need were. The reason? It is found in the statement of a "porting writer that the powers of endurance fought and won for McLoughlin. He "stood up" under the strain. When the time came for the supreme effort ho had the stamina to meet the call upon him. If he had been content with the brilliance of play which is naturally his. If he had relied upon his service and

his stroke, his power of outguessing the other fellow, McLoughlin in all probability would not have won the championship. The long strain of the campaigns in England and America would have told, and at the end he would have gone to pieces. It is stamina that tells in lawn tennis, in bnseball, in footbal!, in all the affairs of life. When athletes wish to praise a man highly they say he "has the stuff in him." That means he is fit for a long siege if necessary It means that be does not rely altogether on his brains, his nerve and his knowledge of the game. It means that he can last. Stamina, "the stuff," does not come to a man naturally. It must be developed. It must be acquired by degrees. It cannot be gained In an hour, a day or a week. In a 6ense men and women are all encased in a sort of championship

game. The prizes go most often to )

those who train faithfully and patiently and wait their time. True, sometimes the man or woman of genius arises who needs no training. It is the exceptional case. Most of us are not geniuses. The rest of us, in whatever walk of life we find ourselves or In whatever fields we pursue our ends and ideals, need the sort of stamina that is developed by long preparation, by careful training, by observance of the rule of

I physical, mental and moral health. j The wisest and most successful athI lete is the one who knows the rules

and follows them closely. The winner l the game of life likewise follows the rules. They are not numerous. They are simple and easily learned. But they must be observed If success is to be won.

mm

BANK ROBBERS GET

$15,000 IN HAUL FT. SMITH. Ark.. Oct. 2. The

Pint State bank at Dardanelle, Ark..

was robbed of about $15,000 enxly today by. a gan of etht TK. ho in

vaded the town at 1 o clock, cut all

the wires, surrounded the bank and

took over an hour to open the doors

of the vault and safe, which required

sixteen explosions of nitroglycerine.

A posse of citizens enraged In an

hour's gun battle with the robbers, one of the latter being carried away by his comrades.

Jack Vilas, the rich young aviator, whose engagement to Miss Suzane Wharton, a pretty young New York heiress, has just been announced.

Vilas Is said to have popped the question while he was piloting his fair fiancee through the clouds, five thousand feet above Paterson. N. J.

fashion, the fun begins and continues ! and the theatre was crowded at both

in one Dig long laugtt. With this is shown a beautiful story of Bonnie Scotland. "The Highland Romance," a fascinating subject brimming with life and action, and presented in two reels by the Domino company. On account of the Fall Festival, this theatre will open at 9 a. m.

performances yesterday.

During the balance of the week matinees will be given daily. However, the curtain will not go up until after the parade each day.

Broadway Jones. In his latest play, "Broadway Jones." which comes to the Gennett nest

Tuesday. George M. Cohan, the brilliant young playwright, has taken a young New Yorker, known as Broadway Jones, for his central character. Jones is a man-about-town. and when

POINTED PARAGRAPHS

MIGHT LOOK LIKE SOME JUDGES. Baltimore Sun. It must be an awful strain on some of those Tammany senators to look like judges.

Dog and Pony Show. Jfiss Colorado Grant's dog and pony 6how, featuring Topsy, the Canadian mare, in high school work, at the Gennett theatre this week, is drawing

goi crowds. The Shetland ponies in the first act opens he is just returning miltary drills, and the riding dogs j from one of his frequent hilarious

coitinue to please the children. The j sessions, which do not permit an early shiw haa a few wild west features. home-coming. Although he Is popularMis Grant is seen in a marvelous jy supposed to be very wealthy, he shioting act, and Bill Miller, lasso has really come to the end of his

Klg of Mexico, are good. Master , Btring, and is not only penniless, but

Hairy is seen in a contortion act. The cliwn and trick pony, Hindo" Is good.

Another Myth Gone Every myth has its day. But alas for it when a Yankee scientist gets on its trail. Ozone has been about the most advertised atmospheric element; has become notorious, in fact,, and almost won a Chautauqua reputation. Health resorts have staked their name on their supply of it, "the genuine, freshly distilled from pine forests"; sanitaria have used it as a lead in their advertisements ; patent medicines have been concocted to furnish it in liquid form, and experimenters have patented all manner of devices for giving us ozone in our sleeping chambers. It has been supposed fatal to germs, beneficial to the lungs, and a natural toner up of the system generally.

And now along come Profs. Jordan and Carlson of Chicago University, and gently lift its scalp. Alas for ozone ; its reputation is gone forever. It will not kill germs, they assert, except in quantities which would be harmful to human tissues; it has no value as a disinfectant; it is n. g. as a deodorizer ; a delusion and a snare generally, it seems. All this, at least, is set forth by The Journal of the American Medical Association, a publication not much given to exaggeration. And the same authority elsewhere emphasizes the danger of positive harm which may result from the use of ozone as a "purifier" of the atmosphere. It doesn't really purify foul air, at all, it declares, but gives the impression of such

by smothering other smells with its own pecu

liar odor and by deadening the nostrils.

The moral of which is pointed by the Journal

as follows:

"Modern mechanical devices for purifying the air. as well as elaborate systems for artificial

ventilation are, in the main, delusions and snares

If you want good air and everybody does if they can get it go outdoors and get it or let

the outdoors in through an open window."

All of which is very disappointing to us. We have been privately hatching a plan for using a little ozone in purifying municipal conditions,

but now it appears we have but one remedy to

open the windows and let in a little light.

GENTLE HINT TO MR. NILES. Little Arthur Echo. If beefsteak goes to $1 a pound, watch us collect that overdue subscription from Butcher Niles.

JUST LIKE EVERYTHING ELSE. Knoxvllle Sentinel. As we understand the situation at Washington, the caucus is a very objectionable institution when it does something you don't want done.

CURE FOR TIPPING EVIL. Louisville Courier-Journal. "Oh for a place where we should not be required to tip," says a contemporary. Try a canoe. It'll do the tipping.

COULDN'T HAVE DONE IT OTHERWISE. Charleston News and Courier.

"First Astor an advertiser." So we had always sup

posed, in view of the size of the fortune which he left behind him.

STRONG LEGISLATIVE DEPARTMENT.

Kansas City Journal.

We never had a more industrious Congress than Mr.

Wilson is.

IN JOB LOTS. Pittsburg Post. "In West Virginia six autoists were injured in one accident, which would indicate there are not accidents enough to go around.

AVOID SEDATIVE MEDICINES. If you want to contribute directly to the occurrence of capillary bronchitis and pneumonia, use cough medicines that contain codine, morphine, hpmln nnri nthr Kprlativps whpn vmi

have a cough or cold. An expectorant j in Richmond

like Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is what is needed. That cleans out the culture beds or breeding places for the germs of pneumonia and other germ diseases. That is why pneumonia never results from a cold when Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is used. It has a world wide reputation for its cures. It contains no morphine or other sedative. For sale by all

dealers.

(Advertisement)

Murretta. "On the Steps of th Throne." a fcor-part Pasnuale feature, engaged especially for Richmond Fall Festival visitors, will be presented at the Murrette tonight. "Dyed but Not Dead," a Olograph comedy; "The False Friend" aid "A Mexican Tragedy" constitute about the strongest bill ever present-

A Woman'i Way. Fall Festival visitors are being well entertained this week at the Murray, where the Francis Sayles players are presenting Grace George's delightful comedy success, "A Woman's Way,"

heavily in debt.

IntaodR

Sarsaparilla Cures all humors, catarrh and rheumatism, relieves that tired feeling, restores the appetite, cures paleness, nervousness, builds up the whole system. Get it today In usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called SarsatabS.

Week of an's Way."

At the Murray. September 29 "A Wo

At the Gennett Oct. 7 "Broadway Jones." Soon "The Rose Maid."

UNEXPECTED TRIUMPH Baltimore Sun. Congressmen complain that they are being worked too hard. Another achievement for the administration!

WAY TO CURE 'EM. Cincinnati Enquirer. That woman who tells the girls the turkey trot makes them look old and ugly is on the right track.

Beverly of Graustark. George Barr McCutcheon's greatat romantic play, "Beverly of Graustait," will be presented by the Frauds Sayles players at the Murray all nst week, starting Monday night. Mr. Sayles. who has been out of tie cast for two weeks, will return next week in the part of the Prince. The costumes and scenery will be cornet? in every detail.

win

all

mnnow and

NITRO CLUB

Steel Lined

SHOT SHELLS

Will Boost Your Shooting Average

fhm taafaffon Cab forgu tht Mmml lining

SOMETHING TO GUESS AT STILL. Philadelphia Inquirer. About the only thing the present style of female dress conceals these days is a woman's inmost thoughts.

The Jewish New Year Tomorrow and next day our Jewish friends will celebrate their New Year festival. In Jewish synagogues and temples the world over, solemn assemblies will meet and in Jewish homes

THAW HAS LEARNED SOMETHING. Springfield Republican. A New York moving-picture firm is advertising the facsimile of a telegram, signed by H. K. Thaw, which reads: "The only moving pictures taken of me in my cell at Sherbrooke or anywhere up to date were taken by you. I authorize you, if you so desire, without cost or prejudicf to me, to legally punish or enjoin any and all persons wb show any moving pictures claiming they are of me Inst any prison." Assuming that the dispatch is genuine, & Thaw's association with lawyers seems to have made hi; wise in the law. "Without cost or prejudice to me" If j good legal phrase. So is "to legally punish and enjoin including the split infinitive. He has at least profited" 1 this extent by his experiences. t

Palace. "Mother's Boy," a screamingly fcnny Keystone farce, tops the bill ofthe wek at the Palace today. The bject is made for laughs, and is the best the Keystone company hai of

fered in months. The story ceiters about "Fatty," the popular phog- J rapher, in the role of the " boy." je loves Mabel, and another girl bves j Fatty, and when the disappointedone , starts to woo him in the stone age

Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot j reach the diseaFed portion of th ear. There is only one way to cure feaf. : ness. and that is by constitutional 1 remedies. Deafness is caused by m in. ; flamed condition of the mucous feing ; of the Eustachian Tube. Whei this i tube is inflamed you have a rubbling j sound or imperfect hearing, anlvbeu! it is entirely closed, Deafness isike re- j suit, and unless the inflamat'm can j be taken out and this tube restared to J ita normal condition, hearing fll be j destroyed forever; nine cases out of j feiair caused by Catarrh, iich is j

i" ""Jn. but an inflamed condition of V Cocoas surfaces. " ; e'will give One Hundred hollars ?.t" wjycase of Deafness (caed by t) that cannot be cured Hall's t -Afrh Cure. Send for c&tuiars.

t- CHENEY. & CO.. Tolej Ohio. 'AXIzld by Druggists, 75c : "ike HaU's Family PiUs for constiI AdTrtismU' J

'"TRY the Speed Shells this season; they get the A load to your bird quicker than any other shells you ever used. You take a shorter lead angles bother you less you get more birds. The speed of these shells is due to the steel lining to the way it compresses the smokeless powder and keeps all the punch of the explosion right behind the shot, where it belongs. G Remington-UMC Steel Lined Speed Shells of th livert dealer in your section. See that the Red Ball mark u on every box of ahella and metallic you buy. Remington Arms-Union Metallic Cartridge Co. 299 Broadway 7 New Yrk

Fall

Festival

The Quigley Drug Stores carry everything for the Amateur Photographer. The full Eastman line of Supplies is carried. Come in and make known your damera needs. We do Developing and Printing. Te are sure to please you A trial is convincing.

! Quigley Drug Stores 4th and Main 821 North

:

Mrs. Sufferer "Just look at ma

sitting here arl ail the work piled up! My ffcet are so sore and swollen I ant stand on them. Somebody told me to use Fels-Naptka Soap and take a foot bath with it erery day. Do you Ittow anything about it?"

Anty Drudge "! heard from

several of my iends that it it good to use a a foot bath, rd try it. But I do know it does all kinds of work in the easiest and diickeat way. You wouldn't save to stand on your feet so bng- and make them sore If yu would dm Fels-Naptha Sot p. I always keep a box on hand." Fels-Naptha Soap and cool or lukewarm j v a t e r will quickly a'nd easily dqthe largest wast without hard -rubbing or boi ing the clothe. FelsNaptna makes dirt disappear, dissolves grease and taies out all kinds it stains. It gives ured women time d rest and a chanc to grow strom and well. Jult as good for al kinds of houslwork as it

is fol washing.

Better

Bar 4i

Oreen

ky it y the om or mt(m.

tiene mre en tme Rem

Fat Oa PUIaMphU.

ALACE

TODAY

SPJCIAL

FESTIVAL

PROGRAM :ytone Laugh Maker "

"MOTHER'S BOY"

DOMINO

Hiland Romance in 2 Reels

i

URRETTE

TODAY !

yed But Not Dead

Biograph Comedy. "The False Friend"

A Mexican Tragedy"

n the Steps of the Throne"

pecial 4 Reel Feature

rogram Specially Ar

ranged for Fall Festival

Visitors.

MURRAY ;4 ALL. THIS WEEK

Francis Sayles' Players In Grace George's Delightful

Comedy

A WOMAN'S W AY Matinee Every Day. Prices Matinee. 10e and 20c. Night, 10c 20c and 30c Next Weeek "Beverly of Gray. Urk.

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