Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 188, 18 June 1914 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1914
The Richmond Palladium AND SUN-TELEGRAM. Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Masonic Building. Ninth and North A Streeta R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr.
la Richmond. 10 cent a week. By Mail, in advance one year, $5.00; aix months, $2.60; one month, 45 cents. Rural Routes, in advance one year, $2.00; six months, 11.25; one month 25 cents.
Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Second Class Mall Matter.
Earlham College This is stock taking season for Earlham College. The management is endeavoring to measure the progress made in the past year, to estimate its present strength, and to lay plans for the future. While this is going on, it might be a good thing for the community to take stock of the college and to make as careful an estimate of what it possesses in the institution. The mere opportunity of being able to send our sons and daughters to college in our own community is in itself a very great advantage. A large number of young persons have been able
new educational ideas, as many other schools have, but this is itself more a matter for commendation than for criticism. An institution which depends on private subscription for its support has no moral right to waste any of its hard won money in dubious educational experiments. They can be left to the more liberally endowed institutions. But Earlham is not reactionary. Its policy might be described as conservatively progressive. A student who cannot complete his course there, with the full equipment of that which it is a college's business to supply, would fare no better though he had attended the biggest schools in the country. Earlham has meant great things for Richmond and for Wayne County in the past. That it will mean even greater things for the community in the future, the Palladium believes its faculty recently announced, guarantees.
A Need to Apply Brakes One of these days Richmond will be shocked by an automobile accident that will destroy human life. With straight and level streets not often crowded with pedestrians or vehicles, the temptation to speed up seems to be irresistible to a number of local drivers. Within the past few days, a dozen or more have been noted rushing over cross streets at such a speed as would make stopping impossible if another machine going at
to get a college education, because the college was j equal speed chanced to pass across at the same
at home, who couldn't have afforded to have gone ! time.
of great charm with its old mansions and beautifully shaded streets. Public-spirited citizens have presented it with a fine library buildlnK, In which is housed the volumes of the famous Workingmen's Institute and bibliographical treasures to be found nowhere else. Harmonious mural paintings decorate its walls, done by a native of the town, now an art student in one of the country's great art schools. A building seating 800 people, with an endowment of $100,001), was given by this same citizen, so that New Harmony gets entertainment the very best
in the United States. This same man also gave to the village a park, a miniature Glen Miller, and endowed it for its upkeep. Aristocratic and old-school manners and extreme sophistication are characteristic of the town's society, with a cordial hospitality that takes its color from the southern atmosphere which tinges this part of Indiana. New Harmony, in fact, Is one of the
BIG FOUR TO ADD PASSENGER COACH Officials Propose Carrier Service Between Connersville and Hagerstown.
HAGEKSTOWN, Ind., June 18. The officials of the Big Four railroad, including the superintendent of the division from Cincinnati to Hagerstown met with a committee from the Hagerstown Commercial club and the city council Monday evening and conferred
with them in regard to placing a passenger train on the road from Connersville here. They stated that the
"show places" of the state, and Indiana i expense of repairing the road for a is honored in its past history as well passenger train would be to great, but as forthunate in its present existence. ; they would add a passenger coach to the regular freight train. There also Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar- has been some talk of the Big Four rhbea Remedy. selling the track for an interurban, This remedy always wins the good i but this rumor cannot be confirmed, opinion, if not the praise, of all who ' Richard Cordell is building a moduse it. Mrs. F. A. Hood, Burrows, Ind., ern residence on his lot on West Walwrites: "I have found Chamberlain's !
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy
nut street to be occupied by himself and family. Mrs. Alice Brown and Misses Lulu and Leona Brown spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Carver Pollard, near Walnut Level. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Farlow returned to Richmond Wednesday after a visit
with relatives Here, i
Mrs. Clay Lester and baby, of Mill-iacre8,
ville, spent Wednesnay with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Thalls. Mrs. Edith F. Smith spent Wednesday in Kichmond. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Crull returned yesterday from a visit at Portland.
Mrs. E. G. Heiner. of Bloomneld, is j visiting among friends here. i The Anti-Can't Sunday school class; will have their regular meeting at the j church Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Gordon have ,
returned from Latonia, Ky., where they attended the Derby races. Mrs. Alva Cook, of Greensfork. is visiting with her daughter, Mrs. Hollace Hoover.
FARMERS IN FIELD
TOPEKA. Kan., June 18. Fair weather let the farmers Into their fields today for the harvest. Many have arranged for double 6hifts of men and will work eighteen nouns a day .until the wheat is cut. A bright sun
! ia atraivhtonlne: 11 D the thOUSAndS OI
flattened out by rive mcnes m
rain Monday, and the whole crop iu be saved.
The American typewriter adopted in Bengalese.
has been
The Order of the Jesuits was foundeu by Ignatius Loyola, who was burn in 1491. He was at first an officer in the French army, and was badly wounded in 1521. He decided to renounce the vanity of the world and gave up his life to piety.
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No matter
what the building
or where
RU-3ER-0ID
KA-LQT-ciD
or
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a positive cure tor cramps and summer complaint." For sale by all 1
dealers.
(Advtrtlemfnt)
Lines of Verse
a ni
Humeri
elsewhere. To this economic advantage of having a local college must be added the still more important advantage that a great deal of the moral danger attending college life is eliminated when the student is able to live at home while getting his education. It is also of inestimable value to the community to have living in its midst the splendid set of men who compose Earlham's faculty. "Taking all things into consideration, Earlham has the best faculty of any college in the state," said an Indiana educational authority some time since, and a study of the list of professors appointed lor the coming year fully justifies this complimentary remark. Some may be inclined to under-estimate the importance and standing of the school because of its comparatively small size. But it is coming to be understood that this is in no sense as much of a disadvantage as is popularly supposed. In many ways, it is far better for a pupil to be in a small school than in a large one. He receives a share of individual attention which would be quite impossible in the great institutions, and comes under the personal influence of the professors to an extent which the extremely heavy attendance of the universities often make quite impossible. Earlham has not attempted to experiment in
Equally bad is the habit of passing street cars that have stopped to discharge passengers. A passenger is obliged to alight when and where the car stops and is not in a position to see that an auto is not bearing down on him. That is the automobilist's business but many seem to ignore it, judging by the way they whiz past. But worse than either of these cases is the danger of speeding through Glen Miller. On last Sunday afternoon, scores of cars shot around the curves and down the hills at a speed to make one dizzy. This is fearfully dangerous and absolutely inexcusable. What motorist can tell when a child may run out from behind a clump of bushes straight across the track? How many autos and how much pleasure in this wooden-head game of speeding would be equivalent to one baby's life? Many of these drivers who seem to delight in taking other lives as well as their own into their hands for mere sport's sake probably have given no thought to the matter and might use more judgment if called to time. For the others, incorrigible sinners who take a perverted delight in seeing to what extremes they can go, a stiff jail sentence would be the best remedy. To pay a fine is in itself a kind of sport with them, but to live in jail for thirty days that is a different matter! If such a dose could be administered to two or three, it would probably cure all.
BILL STOUT. Bill Stout was out the other night When every thing was still. He was over in (ioosetown and Played for a quadrille. Hen Williams he was with him And say he wasn't slow, But oh the sweetest music Was the tiddle and the bow. Bill Stout was an old soldier And a brave one we all know, But oh the sweetest music was The fiddle and the bow. Bill Stout and Hen Williams Were cronies years ago, But oh the sweetest music was The fiddle and the bow. John Dolan.
MASONIC CALENDAR
Friday King Solomon'a Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M. Called convocation; work in Mark Master's degree.
Teh newest Alpine sport is coasting down mountain railways on especially designed cars which sometimes exceed the speed of eigthy miles an hour.
HISTORY GIVES CITY
fContinued from Page 1.) Df a various character, notably George Lockwood's "The New Harmony Movement," which appeared several years But, at the centennial, for the first time, the history of the Rappites, from whom Robert Owen bought the land upon which New Harmony now stands, was given authentic publicity, through their last legal representative, John Dusk. Duss Prominent Figure.
Dusa was one of the figures of
celebration. For it wasn't so much ivhat Duss said as Puss himself that centered attention. With a vivid and dramatic manner, an ideal of artistic ;perfection. a certain sardonic humor, a vast amount of unlabeled erudition, and a desire for an absolute exposition of the truth, Duss is a strikiug personality, and to be ranked with the great misunderstood. Duss is we'll known to the general public as a band and orchestra leader, having toured the country at one time with his own organization and achieved reputation as an interpretative musician of distinction. Defends Rappites. Among other things, he is an entertaining raconteur. But his impatience with the misconceptions existent concerning the tenets of the Rappites and their "habits and customs" was as apparent, both on the platform and off, as it. was justified. "Strangely enough," says Lock wood.
ITCHING ECZEMA IS DRIED RIGHT UP WITH SULPHUR
"the successor to Rapp is a married man. This, Duss, stated to the writer, was the popular misconception of the Rappites toward marriage. While celibacy was advocated and practiced, it was not compulsory, said Mr. Duss. There were always occasional marriages among the members of the community. On the train returning from New Harmony the writer heard a high school boy say to a couple of school girls: "You know they didn't believe in marriage." Just who he meant by "they" and what he meant by "didn't believe in marriage" it is difficult to say. But this remark epitomizes the
vague attitude the public sustains to-
ward the history of New the its parlipr nhpoa
Many persons think the Rappites advocated celibacy, and Robert Owen and his associates what is curiously termed "free love." But the fact is that neither state was advocated autocratically by either regime. Rapp is Genius. The Rappites conducted a community upon some of the principles of the modern Socialistic propaganda. But the success of this community was al
most wholly owing to the organizing genii's at its head. And this, says Duss, was Frederick Rapp, the adopted son of the founder of the community. Frederick Rapp was a sort of composite Fieipunt Morgan and William Mortis. He was at once a great financier and a great artist. And he made a success of his father's communistic
idea. An idea based, primarily, upon i a religious ideal. ;
The removal from Harmonv. as thev I Plven
termed the village, Robert. Owen later
called Now Harmony, to Kconomv. Pa
that convention which framed the first constitution of Indiana, and, later, was sent to the state legislature, goes to confirm his contention. In any event, the Rappites contributed to the history of New Harmony and Indiana one of the former's most significant and important pages, and the perusal of the pamphlet, containing
Mr. Duss' speech, is not only neces-' sary reading to the student of the i history of the state, but also should j prove absorbing to all Socialists. ! Pageant Illuminating. j The pageant which brought the centennial to so brilliant a finale, was a dramatic exposition of the events of , New Harmony's life, and a spectacle which possessed extraordinary theatric interest, being presented, save in one '
Harmony in scene, by the children of the high and ;
lower grade schools. Miss Dye's "libretto" was conveived and written with literary and theatric 1 acumen, and the stage direction by Mrs. Mary Hookett Flanntr, of Indian- j apolis, a well-known dramatic reader, and W. V. Mangrum, of the New Harmony public schools, resulted in a i smoothly dovetailed series of stage pictures theatrically effective as well as historically interesting.
j The atmosphere of the centennial j was in keeping with that of the town. The 35,000 visitors represented none I of that element which sighs for the I ordinary delights of such celebrations. ! The absence of all carnival features i
was conspicuous, and even the peanut
MRS. WINN'S ADVICE TO WOMEN Take LydiaE.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and be Restored to Health.
Mil - A
Kansas City, Mo. "The doctors told me I would never be a mother. Every
month the pains were so bad that I could not bear my
weight on one foot. I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham'g Vegetable Com
pound and had not j
finished the first bottle when I felt
greatly relieved and j I took it until it j
made me sound and
well, and I now have two fine baby pirls. I cannot praise Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound too highly for what it has done for me. I always epeak a word in favor of your medicine to other women who suffer when I have an opportunity. " Mrs. H. T.Winn, 1225 Freemont Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Head What Another Woman says: Cumming, Ga. "I tell some suffering woman every day of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and what it has done for me. I could not eat or sleep, had a bad stomach and was in misery all the time. I could not do my housework or walk any distance without Buffering great pain. I tried doctors' medicines and different patent medi
cines but failed to get relief. My hus'
oemp tor the purpose five exploitation.
,ana popcorn stands am Dut little Duel-j band brought home yourVegetable Com-
j utci). I in kui li s,aiii uiri D 1 CJ 111vited to leave by Imported metropolii tan police, and the visitors who came
trom all over the united states, were
the unusual sensation of abso
lute freedom from those petty annoyances usually attendant upon such af-
of more expan- : tfi'rs. j Nobody locked doors.
Autocrat Necessary. The interest, from the standnoint of
At The Tavern, the town's inn, you
were told, when you took your purse
Use Like Cold Cream to Subdue Irritation and Clear the Skin.
modern Socialistic propaganda, there-1 to the desk for safe keeping, that you for, lies in the fact that without this ! c'luM lpave if in 'our room, autocratic head, the community would ; never lock up anything here," not have been the successful industrial ! sai(i the host.
New Harmony is at present a village
Constant or intermittent, irritation producing itching and rod, angry Eclema patches on the skin is readily relieved with bold-sulphur cream. The moment it is applied the itching etops and the hyaline; begins, says a noted dermatologist. It effects such prompt relief, even in aggravated Eczema that it is a never-ending source of amazement to physicians. For many years bold-sulphur cream ; has occupied a secure position in the treatment of cutaneous eruptions -by i reason of its cooling, parasitedestroy- j ing properties. It is not only para- j eiticidal but also anttpuritlc and nnti- j septic and nothing has ever been ; found to take its place In overcoming j irritable and inflammatory affections ; of the skin. While not always estab-1 lishing a permanent cure, yet in every j instance it instantly stops the ago-1 nizing itching; subdues the irritation and heals the inflamed raw skin right j up and it is often years later before j fciy Eczema eruption again appears. ;
Those troubled should get from any pharmacist an ounce of bold-sulphur cream and apply it directly upon the affected skin like you would any ordinary cold cream. It isn't unpleasant and the prompt relief afforded is very welcome, particularly when the Ectema is accompanied with itching. This is published for Walter Dodge C Cincinnati. O.
experiment it was. The Rappites were the first arts and crafts workers of this section. The exhibit made at the New Harmony centennial showed them makers of every object of household and persona! use. Wonderful dresses made out of silk, cultured and woven if silk is woven by these remarkable people, were shown. Not only did thev make the things themselves, but the tools out of which the latter were fashioned. Long before Gustav Stickley evolved the slogan (although not admitted by him), "Live the higher life and buv my furniture," the Rappites were making chairs that would put the Craftsman's to the blush. Nothing called out the derisive sarcasm of Mr. Duss more than the alleged footprint of the Angel Gabriel, shown as one of the relices of the Rappites regime, and presumably of what his been termed their "superstition." Laughs at Relics. Duss states that this footprint, "canned in stone," was a curiosity brought to New Harmony, and no doubt to some questioner, was pointed out :p Gabriel's footprint by a humorous Kappite. The mention of the Gabriel relic invariably brought out. a skyrocketing display of vitriolic ridicule from Mr. Duss, who maintained that the community was carried on on a sane and normal basis of living. And the fact that Frederick Rapp was a member of
Dandruff Soon Ruins the Hair
Makes It Lifeless, Dull, Dry, Brittle and Thin.
I Girls if you want plenty of thick, ! beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for it will i starve your hair and ruin it if you i don't. ! It doesn't do much good to try to brush or wash it out. The only sure way to get rid oi dandruff is to disI solve it, then you destroy it entirely.
To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten tho scalp and rub it in gently iwth the finger tips. By morning, most if not all. of your dandruff will be gone and three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every singie sign and trace of it. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop, and your hair will be silky, fluffy, lustrous, soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive and four ounces is all you will need no matter how much dandruff you have. This simple remedy never fails. (Advertisement)
pound and in two weeks I could eat any
thing, could sleep like a healthy baby, and walk a long distance without feeling tired. I can highly recommend your Vegetable Compound to women who suffer as I did, and you are at liberty to use this letter." Mrs. Charlie: Bagley, R. 3, Cumming, Ga.
5c Tonight sc The Intruder An essentially modern incident dramatized by the Majestic Company. Cast: Madge . . . . Francelia Billingtorf The Husband W. A. Lawrence The Intruder . . . George Seigmann A Wild West Burlesque by the Komic Company. "The Last Drink of Whiskey"
"TTtTHEN the food reaches the stomach it is objected to peculiar VY churning movement by the muscular walls of the stomach" (See
Dr. Pierce's Medical Adviser, page 45). In the lirer, kidneys and skin, the blood is purified of its waste materials these organs act as human niters, leaving- the blood pure and clear unless liver, digestive tract and kidneys are clogged. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is a stomach, liver and kidney tonic by assisting the stomach to assimilate, the liver to filter, the kidneys to act the poisons are removed, the red blood corpuscles are increased and one feels light, fresh and active instead of logy, dull and heavy. The "Discovery" stimulates the stomach, increases action of heart and arter
ies and is a most satisfactory alterative in blood-taint of any character. The refreshing influence of this extract of native medicinal plants has been favorably known for over forty years. Everywhere some neighbor can tell you of the good it has done. Sold by all medicine dealer in liquid or tablet form or tend S O one-cent etampe to Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.,and a trial box will be mailed you.
JL
will make an ideal covering for it. For over 20 years the- standard.
Miller-Kemper Company
DR. A. O. MARTIN DENTIST Colonial Building Suite 212 213
Wc Have It Not only equipment, but skilled workmen in our cleaning plant. One can not - ihoi;t the other. A trial is all we ask.
DRY CLEANING COMPANY BROS.
318 Main Street. Phone 1493. We Call and Deliver.
I
r V jm I peerless
mfi iUrn ; I . 'JriWM5& LkHw E SIMPSON col-y
IIJafe 'H, - yTC- MJra r satisfactory I
if Bahies live in a world of their own m f m j
j E Their dreams are pleasant ones. 3 L a Every Mother and Father can bring 13 S,IS'PV1 j If Haby's dreams to a Happy Realization J ilff f j By providing a iiloch Carriage for baby &
ft. a 1 vj. m " n
Li in :rm&?' a
3 II 11 A'-mcy'v-V-WUSS-- B
Bloch Carriages are superior in quality, style and
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The name BLOCH on for
a Carriage Means Comfort Baby.
GET A BLOCH AND MAKE BABY HAPPY.
627 Main St.
629 Main St.
For Correct G lasses go to MISS C. M. SWEITZER Registered Optometrist 927' i MAIN, PHONE 1099.
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A
The Noon-day Lunch Is Made a Meal with The Richmond Baking Co.'s pure and wholesome
Butter-Krust
Bread. "It's Made wiih Milk" And the demands of healthyappetites are equally satisfied. Thousands of bread lovers are eating this delicious bread from three to five times daily. Why not you? There's a smile with every bite, and you get a big loaf for 5c. Richmond Baking Co. 1
Chicago Excursion VIA c.& o. Saturday Night, June 20 .S3.25-Round Trip-$3.25 Train leaves Richmond 8:13 p. m. Returning leaves Chicago midnight Sunday night, arriving Richmond 8:25 Monday morning. C. A. BLAIR. Home Tel. 2062. Ticket Agent.
ill
Can You Use $10, $25, $50 or $100? If you need money call on ut. We loan any amount from $5 to $100 on household goods, pianos, teams. Stock, & Etc., without removal. If you are unable to call write or phone and our agent will call at your house and explain our LOW RATE. Private Reliable The State Investment & Loan Company , Phone 2560, Room 40 Colonial Bldg., Richmond. Indiana.
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