Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 291, 15 October 1913 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 13, 1913
The Richmond Palladium
AND BUN-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.
anything. And the very fact that the chief stockholder of the company should have said, as he did say, that the expenses of selling, installation and repairs had been so great that the company had not yet paid a dollar on its dividends, shows that not much weight can be given to the stories of its reliability and economy. Nor should the fact that the devices have been successful in many places, at least appar-
In Richmond, 10 cents a week. By Mail, In advance 1 ently successful, weigh as against the possibility one year, $5.00; six months, 2.6: one month. 45 centa j 0f manipulating them. To condemn them utter-
is enough besides to entertain charmingly the regular theatre goers."
Rural Routes, in advance one year, $1.25: odo month 25 cents.
$2.00; six months,
At the Murray. Week of October 13 "The Confession."
At the Gennett Tonight "T'ncle Tom's Cabin." Oct. 16 "The Rose Maid." Oct. 18. "The Divorce Question. Oct. 20 Minstrel show.
Kntered at th
Post Offie at Richmond, ond Cla Mall Matter.
Indiana, as Sec-
4 'A Man is Not Good Unless Good For Something. "
DANIEL SURFACE Born in 18.36; Died in 1913.
The Tuberculosis Hospital. In two masterly addresses before the Commercial club Monday night, Prof. Severance Burragc and W. D. Thurber, pled the case for a Wayne county tuberculosis hospital. It is a pity one single citizen was compelled to miss the presentation of this urgent cause. But sooner or later another kind of pleading will reach every person in the community even if such well informed authorities as these two can reach but i few and that will be the facts of the case. Slowly it is being borne in upon us that tuberculosis is both preventable and curable. It may be wiped out of existence as smallpox has and it may be cured or arrested, if taken in time, as certainly as the grippe. And now since a method for coping with the several hundred cases in this county has been explained and, in other places, demonstrated, there is little excuse for the county if adequate preparations are not made for wiping the white plague out of the community. If, as one of the speakers said, forty smallpox victims were to rush out on the street every thoroughfare would soon be cleared of pedestrians. And yet tuberculosis is as contagious as smallpox and as deadly. Afflicted persons go r.bout unwittingly infecting others and spreading the malady in geometric ratio. To prevent this widespread contagion would be one of the prime functions of a hospital. It would serve the further purpose of educating the community in the care and prevention of it through those recovering under its care and returning to their families indoctrinated in its theories and methods of living. And in the long run it would save the county hundreds of thousands of dollars, the interest on which would go on compounding, not in money only, but in human life and human happiness to the end of time. As prevalent as tuberculosis is in this community, as surely as it may be prevented and cured, it is to be hoped the project will not long be delayed.
cf office as postmaster he quit active work. He spent
-Hrrr !Vf a'l-.Jnoc Onrp Movp ' the remainder of his life in gratifying a refined literary
i taste in reading the books he loved, but which indulgThe Empire Voting Machine company has j ence had not before been permitted him in his busy life, not yet desisted its efforts to install its devices As an editor he was on the right side of every moral in Wayne COUnty election booths. A small num-1 question. He wrote bravely, clearly and concisely, was
r,f cnom r V tfr-rr.irPr! to VmvP thp never prolix; his editorials were widely copied by
machines whether or no; the company itself
Palace. In today's bill the Palace presents the Keystone farce comedy, "Snitz. the Tailor." a rollicking subject, full of laugh producing situations, and featuring those two clever comedians. Kurd Sterling and Mabel Normaml. In-
I ' iwif a m tne mil is the American.
"Taming a Cowboy," a western comedy love story full of action and incidents, by Ed Coxen and Winifred Greenwood. Also is shown the KayBee drama. "The Revelation " Thursday the Domino two-part drama, "The God of Chance."
ly it is only sufficient to show they have once been made the tools of political boodlers. If they
have once been manipulated they may be again, j
anywhere, if the occasion warrants. They might operate with perfect satisfaction in this county for twenty years and then they might furnish the very next year a crooked political gang the opportunity for upsetting a vital election. If a man knows that only one out of ten loaves of bread contains strychnine he will not eat a single loaf. If voting machines may be manipulated in Los Angeles, Chicago and New Jersey, they may be manipulated in Wayne county. It is an excellent thing for the Commercial club to investigate, to discuss, and to recommend important municipal activities; in performing such functions it has many times contributed invaluable services to the community. But the Commercial club, as a perusal of its committee
members will show, represents the business class "The Divorce Question."
ti, v, J4- V,,cr,rr1o f -n rro 1 n( Oivoree Question," a hu
U1 J-muusii u me n.wcwo ""-I man interest play by William Anthony
earners and miscellaneous voters have no voice. ; McGmre. under the direction of wing
., I nelil and Ridings, will be seen at the
Why snouidn t they be taken into consideration.' and why shouldn't the fifteen thousand citizens of the county outside of Richmond also be permitted a hearing? Business interests naturally will jump for something that looks like economy, and that is well, but there are other considerations besides economy and they should have an equal hearing.
'House of a Thousand Candles." The "House of a Thousand Candies" will be given a massive production at the Murray theatre all next week by the Francis Payles" Players. Evans' Minstrels
I George Evans has composed sevt ral I new songs for his new program of minstrelsy which will be introduced at the tGnnett theatre Monday, Ot t- ; ober 20. i It Is a well known fact that the j little minstrel star has been the arthtir "f a score or more of oncs. For this season's production be has j written "The Moony. Moony Man." ("When You Ht-ar Item Church Hells Chime." and "This is Dianah's WVdI ding I ay."
will appear at the Gennett theatre tonight. Kible and Martin have successfully solved the problem of combining the old ami the new "Cncle Tom's (.'abin' into a big spectacular play that leaves nothing out worth retaining of e:t!u-r the straight method or the circus method.
NOTICE. All v. ho w ere imited to take part in t'.e Musical Comedy "Mr. Hob": The met ting which was to be held on Wedtieoday evening at the K. of C Hall has been postponed until Thursday evening. October l"th. 1-Vlt Knights of Columbus.
Pimply? Well Don't Be! People Notice it. Drive Them Oft With Or. Edwards' Olive Tablets.
Living Melodies in Of all the new
"The Rose Maid."' optl at. hit i nduced
from Europe "The Uo-o Maid' is said to contain more good music that promises to live Ions after the production is forgotten than any of its sister pieces new before the public. This prettily named opera is i omnia to tile Gennett theatre cm Thursday. October Iti. It is now on its second tour visiting those cities where it was impossible to appear last ear.
.MASONIC CALENDAR Wednesday. Oct 1". -Webb Idge. No "1. I". and A M Slated meeting Thuri-day. October Iti Ya tie Council. No. lit. H ai.d S. M Special a semblj. oi k in the degre es. Saturday October Is l.ayI Chapter. No. 1".. O. 1". S. Stated meeting.
Murrette. Tho"Fianoe and the Fairy", one of the pictures offered at the Murrette today, has a beautiful fairy story for a background and a love story of more than ordinary interest. '"The Smugglers," and "A Willful Colleen's Way" are shown.
'Uncle Tom's Cabin.' Kible ami Martin's world's ; production of "'L'ncle Tom's
rea test Cabin"
CHALLENGE TO DEBATE WASHINGTON, Oct 15Kepre se:.':iiive Richmond 1. Hobson of Alabama, today challenged Representative O W. I'mierwood, his rival for seii.aori.il honors, to a joint dbate in Alabama This is the sequel to the wordy combat bet w em the two in the house jesterday.
A pimply face will not embrrss ou much longer if you get a package of Dr. Kd wards" Oltre Tablets. The skin should begin to clear after yea have taken the tablets a few nights. Cleanse the blood, the bowels and the lHer with Olive Tablets. lr. Kdwards" Olive Tablet are the successful substitute for calomel there's never any sickness or pain after taking them. nr. Ki wards' Olire Tablet do that which calomel does, and just as effectively, but their action is gentle at.d safe instead of severe and irritating. N'o one who takes Olive Tablets is ever cursed with "a dark brown taste." , bad breath, a dull listless. "ro rood" feeling, constipation, torrid 'ier. bad disposition or pimply face Or. Kd wards' Oliv Tablets are a purely vegetable compound tnlied with olive oil. you will know them by their olive color. Ir. Kdwards spent years among patients afflicted with liver and bowel complaints and Olive Tablets are the immensely effective result. Take one or two nightly for a week. See ho much better you feel and look 10c and 25c per boi. The OUe Tablet Company. Columbus. O. t Advrrllarmant )
Had he been more aggressive he must have attained eminence in metropolitan journalism. He had a liberal education obtained by his great industry and thrift; he was of sound judgment, eminently practical, yet so diffident that he permitted men who were not nearly his equals in attainments and moral worth to pass him in the race of life. During the Civil War he represented the old Cincinnati Gazette in the Departments of the Cumberland and of the Potomac and associated with the most famous war correspondents at the front. He was for a time stationed at Charleston, South Carolina and finally had charge of the Gazette offices at the national capitol. In this work he gained a deserved reputation for energy, courage and reliability. When the war ended he returned to Cincinnati and was assigned to the position of correspondent on the staff of the Gazette. Soon thereafter he married. He was fond of his home and family, and growing tired of the unsettled life he had lived, purchased an interest in the Richmond Telegram then being published by Mr. E. C. Martin and the late James M. Coe. With his honorable business career here as journalist, manufacturer, postmaster and member of the school board, the people are familiar. At the close of his term
Gennette theatre on Saturday. October lMh, matinee and night. The solution of our present day martial troubles is not making divorce easy or obtainable, but in making marriage more difficult. The marriage ties are not suffclent- ' ly binding, with the existence of the present, day divorce laws and the union frequently becomes more of a moral tie than a legal one. j
The Confession. 1 P. McGinnes, Priest Chaplain of the 1 Convent of the Sisters of Providence, Montreal, has the following to say about "The Confession." '"Having witnessed 'The Confession' as a Catholic priest. I wish the whole world could see it, and let me add that outside the beautiful and loyal defense of the confessional of our church there
SALTS IF BACKACHY
The Remedy of Greatest Value In the Family Medicine Chest Is
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey
It is nn absolutely pure distillation of carefully selected, clean grain, thoroughly malted, and should be in every borne as a safeguard in emergencies requiring a stimulant. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey corrects the defective digestion of the food, increases the appetite, strengthens the heart, gives force to the circulation, relieves throat and lung; troubles, and insomnia, and brings restfulness to the brain and nervous forces. It is pre
scribed by doctors and
recognized as a leading familv medicine. BUY A S0TTLC TODAY, BUT EE SURE YOU GET DUFFY'S CAUTION When you ask your drusgitt. grocer or dealer for Duffy's Pure Malt WhisVeybe iure you get tho genuine. It In t) only absolutely pure medicinal malt whiskey, and is sold In scaled bottles only; never in bulk. Price 11 00. Look for the "Old Chemist" on tho label, and make sure the seal over the cork is unbroken. Write Medical Dept., The Puffy Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester N. Y.. tor illustrated medical booklet and free advice.
111 f
AND KIDNEYS HURT i IF
Drink Lots of Water and Stop Eating Meat for a While if Your Bladder Troubles You.
seems to have made up its mind to place its out-
his editorials were widely copied by the
press, his opinions treated witu marked respect; the influence of the paper he conducted was most wholesome.
When you wake up with backache7 and dull misery in the kidney region it generally means you have been eating too much meat, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kidneys get sluggish and clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels; removing all the body's urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizxy spells; , your stom.-ich sours, tongue is coated,1 and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. Hither consult a good, reliable physician at once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of .lad Salts; take a teaspoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia. and has ben used for generations to clean and stimulate slug-:
He passed away ripe in age before he felt its infirni-1 gih kidneys, also to neutralize acids
He had ceased to strive; his last days were marked with easy dignity and unaffected courtesy. He crowned "a youth of labor with an age of ease." D. W. Comstock.
THE LITANY OF WAR.
fit here sooner or later and at any cost. And SO j ties, and while still alert and interested in current events
long as this big trust with millions behind it continues to hire local representatives, Wayne county voters will be in constant danger and must maintain ceaseless vigilance. The very manner in which the Empire company has endeavored to force its devices on local voters in itself makes great caution necessary. After the question had to all intents and purposes been buried the community awoke one morning to discover its county council had voted to appropriate $21,000. One would have supposed such a deal, involving as it does the protection of the franchise, the average man's most precious possession, would have been given publicity, would have been referred in some way or other to the rank and file, to the community at large. But not so; a mine was laid and suddenly exploded and scarcely a man knew what was up until the whole thing was over. This concern has been doing this same sort of business almost everywhere. It seems to be afraid of the citizenship and will work for years, as was the case in St. Joseph county, secretly preparing the way. After it has quietly won over a few influential men it suddenly springs an appropriation and gets the deal put through before the majority of citizens know anything about it. Surely if voting machines are all they are claimed to be, agents and company have no need to use such questionable means for selling them. And evidences seem to show that they will not stop with mere secrecy but will go even farther. Before the Butts investigating committee at Chicago a written contract was produced in which the representative of the Empire company had agreed to give three Ottumwa, Iowa, men $1,500 for getting things "fixed right" in Chicago. Twice it was testified before the committe e that this same representative.
By C. Alfred Noyes. I. Sandalphon', whose white wings to heaven upbear The weight of human prayer. Stood silent in the still eternal Light Of God, one dreadful night. His Wings were clogged with blood and foul with mire, His body scared with fire, 'Hast thou no word for me?" the master said, The anjrcl sank his head: II. "Word from the nations of the East and West," Me moim-d "that blood is best. The patriot prayers of either half of earth, Hear thou, and judge their worth. Out of the obscene seas of slaughter hear, First, the first nation's prayer: 0 God. deliver thy people. Let thy sword Destroy our enemies, Lord! III. 'Pure as the first, as passionate in trust That their own cause is just; 1 tippets as fond in those dark hands of greed; As fervent in their creed; As blindly moved, as utterly betrayed, As urgent for thine aid; Out of the obscene seas of slaughter, hear O God, deliver thy people. Let thy sword Destroy our enemies, Lord. IV. "Over their slaughtered children, one great cry From either enemy! From either host, thigh-deep in filth and shame, One prayer, one and the same; Out of the obscene seas of slaughter, hear From East and West, one prayer: O God. deliver thy people. Let thy sword Destroy our enemies, Lord." V.
in the unne so it no longer irritates,
thus ending bladder weakness. .Tad Salts is a life saver for regular meat eaters. Tt is inexpensive, can not injure and makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink. t Advertisement)
PALACE TODAY Keystone Laugh-Maker "SUIT2, THE TAILOR. "TAMING A COWBOY" American Comedy ALSO A GOOD DRAMA
J
Gennett Theatre
Wingfield & Riding's Submit for the Consideration of a Thinking Public WM. ANTHONY McGUIRE'S Play On Conditions of Today
LRU
Don't Get Married Until You See This Play
PRESENTED BY A NOTABLE COMPANY And Superb Scenic Investiture
1 07 TIMES
in CHICAGO
Don't Get Divorced Until You See This Play
Prices 25, 50, 75, $1.00. Seat Sale Murray Theatre, Thursday, 10 A. M.
ESSE!
Mr. Barr, had himself said, "It cost us $200,000 ! 1 hen on the cross of lus creatlve Pain ' I'll 3 1 " - 1 .
uuu uuweu ins ueau again.
"And yet " Sandalphon whispered, "men deny The Eternal Calvarv!"
Tn r,.-irM iiiii'ii I ill i .1 11 n i-iiiirtiv
, . Then. East and West, over all seas and lands.
iul iui unc mutiny ic c inMuuuuiig mat I Outstretched his pierced hands,
the estimable gentlemen who locally represent the concern would be guilty of any such collu
sion, we are far from believing they. would, but:
it does appear that a community should be con-iNew vfXLT"" F ERRANCY Btantly on its guard in dealing with such a busi-j At Iast Nebraska Democratll are shocked at Secretarv liess concern. A Concern Which would do What Bryan. He has appointed a Republican as his private was in Chicago accused of doing is liable to do j secretary.
tftm
Skims
o n
iLiKe
A Safie PirevemaSve
MEMMY
WAR
MURRETTE TODAY 1 "THE SMUGGLER" Pathe-Play The Fiancee and the Fairy Lubin A Wilful Coleen's Way Edison COMING SOON Lost Memories
GENNETT THEATRE Thursday, October 16th THE BEAUTY OPERA
we
60 People. .2 Carloads of Seenery. Special Orchestra of 12 Musicians. Seat Sale Now, Murray Theatre PRICES 25c to $1.50
Gennett Theatre WEDNESDAY, OCT 15 MATINEE AND NIGHT Kibble and Martin's UNCLE TOM'S CABIN 50 PEOPLE 50 20 COLORED PEOPLE 20 2 Bands White and Colored 2 PRICES 25c, 35c, 50c; Matinee Adults 25c; Children 10c.
LYE
Don't waif until the cholera breaks out, until it kills the best of your hogs.
Beat Misfortune By Using
LYE
CT7 -U O
Wlaeflaim
THE FEED MAN 31-33 South 6th Street
MURRAY ALL THIS WEEK Francis Sayles Players In th New York Bijou Theatre Success THE CONFESSION By James Ilaleck Reid PRICES Matinees Tues., Thuri. and 8aL 10c and 20c. Nights 10c, 20c, and SOc Next Week -The House ef a Thousand Candles"
Telephone 1679
LOANS
II 2 Per Cent Per Month
on household goods, pianos, teams, stock, etc, without removal Loans made it all surrounding towns. Call, write or phone and our agent will call at your bouse.
Private THE 8TATE
ReUable
INVESTMENT
AND LOAN COMPANY Room 0 Colonial Bldg. Phone 2560. Take elevater t Third Floor. Richmond. Indian.
T5
