Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 55, 14 January 1916 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM FRIDAY, JAN. 14, 1916.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every, Evening Except Sunday, by '.-: Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Sts. R, G. Leeds, Editor. -; -y E. H. Hands, Mgr. r:
In Richmond, 10 cents a week.1 By mail. In artrance one year. $6.00: six months, $2.90; one month. 45 cents. Rural Routes, In advanee one year. 12.00; six months, $1.25; one month, 25 cents.
Entered at the Post Office at Richmond. ond Class Mall Matter.
Murder in Mexico. When a few Americans lost their lives on trans-Atlantic liners torpedoed by Teutonic submarines, the United States demanded cessation of a warfare that jeopardized Americans traveling the high seas. Down in Mexico, murder, arson and rapine have been rife for many months. Americans
have suffered untold property
day seventeen were lined up and shot by bandits. The Wilson administration has not been aroused to action by the outrage. What difference does it make whether a submarine commander kills Americans or a Mexican bandit and his band massacre them? American lives pay the toll. The administration ought to bring the "strict accountability" policy into practice in Mexico and not only prevent further occurrences of this sort, but also see to it that wholesale fear will make the Mexicans know that America means what she says.
Holding Up the Mail.
In the days when bandits held up the mail in the West, I the United ; .States.,: government stopped the nuisance, not by sending protests but by ordering armed forces into the bandit infested territory. Nowadays foreign nations hold up American mail on the high seas, and all Uncle Sam does is to send a note of protest. The other day announcement was made at London that the American ambassador had delivered a protest regarding the detention and censoring of American mail and simultaneously came a report that the British had seized 185 bags of mail, bound from New York to Bergen, Norway. The administration might abandon "watchful waiting" for the present, and get some action on the interference with our mail service.
Stopping Another Abuse. In the good old days of political extravagance congressmen were wont to have handsomely embossed society paper printed at government ex-
Once upon a time there was a Queen to whom the stork brought a little daughter. The King, however, wanted a little son, and when the Queen saw the little girl, she was afraid to show her to the King. So she took her to an old witch who lived In a cave a long way inside a mountain and asked her to take care of her baby girl and bring her up to be a good woman. The witch was a very good witch and she grew very fond of the . little girl. She named her Stella and she taught her to be a good girl as well as wise, so that when Stella grew up she could read the fortunes of many people in the stars. Now the Queen always visited the witch once a year, for she loved her baby and only gave her up through fear of doing her harm. When she saw how beautiful Stella grew each year she tried to think of some way she could have her daughter near her and not have the King know it was his daughter. By and by the King grew old and he was afraid the stork would not bring him a son, so he sent for a distant relative' who bad a son and gave him a bag of gold to let him adopt his son. The relative consented and the King made the son a Prince and his heir. When the Prince became a man the King said to him one day: "I have not long to live and I want to see you settled in life before I die. Go out over the country and find a wife who is suited to be your queen and bring her to me." So the Prince started out, but before he left the castle the Queen said to him: "Go to the mountain on the opposite side of the woods from here and you will find a cave. In this cave the daughter can read your fate in the stars. Consult her; It may help you find a wife." The Queen thought if the Prince taw the beautiful girl he might fall in love with her, so she hurried off to the cave herself by a shorter route and took with her a beautiful dress. "Put on this," she told Stella: "the Prince is coming to you to have his fortune read in the stars. It is fitting that you should be dressed properly to receive him, but do not tell him I have been here. By and by the Prince and his servants came riding to the cave and called tor the witch and her daughter. When he beheld Stella he got off his horse, and, taking off his hat, he bent low before her. "Can It be that you are the daughter of a witch?" he asked when they were alone, "you look more like the daughter of a king." . But Stella only blushed and hung her head, she really did not know what he meant, but to have a young and handsome man speak to her was something that had never happened before.
pense for their own social purposes. Rep. Henry A. Barnhart, chairman of the committee on printing, has slipped through the house a resolution - which empowers the chairman of each committee to have such printing done "as is actually necessary. in the official transaction of the committee's business." . . . . At the beginning of the present session, the chairman of a committee sent in a requisition for beautiful embossed vellum stationery that would have cost the government about $500. If a congressman has a voluminous social correspondence, let him pay for the stationery himself.
Indiana, as 8eo
Praising the Penal Farm. It was Richmond enterprise that resulted in the . establishment of a state penal farm. Its beneficial results have been commented on favorably throughout the state. Now comes Winthrop D. Lane of the Survey Staff, a journal of sociology and philanthropy, with the following praise: "Indiana has long hated her jails. For a score of years investigations, newspaper exposures and all the artillery of denunciation availed nothing against these 'agencies of vice and training schools of crime.' Now, by the simple expedient of providing a wholesome, bracing substitute, Indiana is literally starving her jails and workhouses out of existence. Some that heretofore aspired to a nightly population of eight or ten now find themselves caring for only two or three. "If the besetting evil of jails is idleness, the outstanding virtue of this farm community is industry," he says, and he goes into considerable detail in describing the activities at the farm, which he says are more educative, more like the work of normal life and better in training the prisoners as wage earners, than is a large part of the work done in walled prisons. ' -V:g3 Advertising America. ; 1
loss. The other Before the companies knew
vantages of European travel and they never let
a chance go by tages and the abroad.
Submarines, big cannons, trench fighting and sieges have stopped travel in Europe. Attention has been turned to the unseen scenic marvels of the United States. The railroads finally have
been aroused to America far and
are enjoying heavy traffic. They want more of
it, and so they
and publicity campaigns.
The railroads
revenue formerly enjoyed by the. steamship companies. It took then a long time to see it.
She found she was disappointed when she began to read his fate, for th stars told he would marry a king's daughter, and that he would not go far to find her. The Princo had fallen in love with Stella by this time, and when he heard what the stars held for him he cried out, "Never will I marry the King's daughter. I will make you my bride or no one. Come we will go to the King, and if he will not consent I will give up my claim to the throne if you will be my wife." The witch told her to go to the King and so, with Stella seated on the horse OAS sj-rst Mr beside him, he went back to the castle. . ' The Queen was watching from behind her curtain and when she saw Stella her heart leaped for joy. The King was struck with Stella's Against Substitutes Get the WeO-Knowa Round Package-
9W BW
1 " USdCV!-
Caution a 'ggAvold Subttltutctfe
IrJ" TqCio a Paohaao Homo
war, the trans-Atlantic steamship
the value of advertising the ad to picture the educational advan recreation derived from a trip the advantage of advertising wide. Trans-continental lines are beginning to start educational are now awake to a source of beauty, and when he beard that she was the daughter of a witch he said he would not give his consent, and although the Prince pleaded that he would not wed unless he could have Stella for his wife, the old King was firm and said no. "Then you can find someone else to be king," replied the Prince. "I would rather have Stella than all the thrones in the world." And he put her on his horse and was about to ride away when the Queen came into the room. "Walt," she said to the Prince, "I have something to say. This girl is the daughter of a king and rueen and In every way worthy to be your wife." "Who is she?" asked the King. "I should be only too glad to have her for a daughter If this be true." "Stella is your daughter and mine," said the Queen, going to the girl and putting her arm around her. "But you were so angry when the stork brought a daughter instead of a son that I told you she died, for fear you might harm her. She did not die. I took her to the witch and asked her to care for her and she did. This is your daughter." - The King gave a big wedding for his daughter, and told all the people that he had found her and a son as well. The old King lived for many years, and the Queen also, and the Prince and Princess were happy ever after. Tomorrow's story The Stepmother. Masonic Calendar Friday King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M. Stated convocation and Installation of officers. Saturday Loyal Chapter, No. 40, O. E. S. Stated meeting. Deep cultivation with the aid of dynamite is being tried on tea plantations in India.
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THURSTON PLEADS
In the outset, tha writer declares in uppercase type, for most effective preparedness. Continental United States , should have a standing army of at least 101,000,000 trained from earliest childhood up for: "Train up a child in the way he should go, and even when he Is old he will not depart from it." Conscription is a burning shame and disgrace to any nation, therefore, this one hundred and one millions of thoroughly trained and equipped soldiers should be volunteers, not conscripts. In all the world's innumerable wars, women have held a place second, and In many important respects equal to man; children 'also, have held no inconspicuous position: this grand and mighty standing army will co-slat of men, women and children. E Pluribus Unim, united, loyal, righteous, a ster ling patriot citizenship-solidarity. A Spartan host ready and quick to do and die for country and humanity: "And now there breathed that haunted air The sons of sires that conquered there. With arm to strike, and soul to dare, As quick, as far. as they." That monstrous sacrilegious lie, "God is on the side with biggest guns," has been the world's greatest corse. God has only to do with war as with all other evils, which are entirely man-made, and for which mankind, "They have their reward." This mighty standing army will be volunteers to fight to the finish humanity's battles. And not too proud to fight. "That all looks and sounds good on paper, but what are you going to do wben attacked by another barbarious nation with their huge guns and twolegged fighting devils in human guise?" "They tell us, salr, that we are weak unable to cope with so formidable an enemy. " "Sir, we are not weak if we make a proper use of those means which the God of nature hath placed in our power. Three (101) millions of people, armed in the holy cause of liberty, and in such a country as we possess, are invincible by any force which our enemy can send against us. "Besides, sir, we shall not fight alone. There is a just God who presides over the destiny of nations, and who will raise up friends to fight our battles for us. The battle, sir, 1b not to the strong alone it is to the active, the vigilant, the brave." "In memory's enchanted halls," comes to the writer a bright April early afternoon nearly fifty-five years ago. In the little town of New Holland, Ohio, an incoming west-bound train left the daily paper with im mense headlines announcing firing on Fort Sumpter, and President Lincoln's call for seventy-five thousand three months volunteers. The next train east carried ten boys of the village to Columbus, Ohio where the first and second three months O. V. I. were organized, sworn in, and entrained at 10 p. m., for Washington, D. C. Two train loads of happy-go-lucky boys ranging from 18 to 25 years were speeding gayly on their way, wholly BEOT EOT WATER IDOifT FEEL IMHT Says class of hot water with phosphate before breakfast washes out poisons. If you wake up with a bad taste, bad breath and tongue is coated; if your head is dull or aching: if what you eat sours and forms gas and acid in stomach, or you are bilious, constipated, nervous, sallow and can't get feeling just right, begin Inside bathing. Drink before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it. This will flush the poisons and toxins fro mstomach, liver, kidneys and bowels and cleanse, sweeten and purify the entire alimentary tract. Do your inside bathing immediately upon arising in the morning to wash out of the system all the previous day's poisonous waste, gases and sour bile before putting more food into the stomach. To feel like young folks feel; like you felt before your blood, nerves and muscles became loaded with body impurities, get from your pharmacist a quarter pound of limestone phosphate which is inexpensive and almost tasteless, except for a sourish twinge which is not unpleasant. Just as soap aad hot water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening and freshening, so hot water and limestone phosphate act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. Men and women who are usually constipated, bilious, headachy or have any stomach disorder should begin this inside bathing before breakfast. They are assured they will become real cranks on the sublect shortly. Adv. BOOKS All Late Fiction at 2c a Day THE READER CIRCULATING LIBRARY 23 N. Ninth St. Carl F. Weisbrod Piano Tuning and Repairing. Phone 2095. AT RATLIFS Out of The High Rent District No. 12 North 9th St a1UY HERE AND
1
FOR LESS
unarmed In citizen's, clothes;, in for "a frolic, or a fight and didn't care a snap which." On the Long Bridge at Pittsburg the trains were stopped. "A terrible riot in. Baltimore, Massachusetts troops unarmed while marching through from one railway station to another, across the city, were fired upon by. rebel sympathizers, shot down like sheep in the shambles." Encamped at Lancaster, Pa., the two regiments were uniformed, armed, and drilled three weeks; entrained again, and as we marched through Baltimore, the streets thickly crowded with vicious "butternuts" as pro-rebels were called, looking daggers, but very quiet and ordely; evidently they saw how ardently the "Yank" boys were hoping they would try It again. After only a little over three months service, all were seasoned veterans, and on re-enlistment for three years or during the war, became expert drill masters and
seasoned intrepid officers. During the Buchanan administration, stealthily and steadily armaments and munitions bad been transferred, under different pretexts, from the North to the South, leaving the North almost wholly unprepared so far as concrete military armament goes, at the outbreak of the Southern rebellion. While the boys were fighting at the front, "butternuts," so-called because they wore breast-pins made from butternut bulls; and "Knights of the Goldend Circle," "Copperheads," were active and offensive; they they were taken care of by the loyal "Home Gaurds." The Pogue's Run incident. Mason and Slidell, Valandingham, and many others will be long remembered as incidents of the "times that tried men's souls." Let - us not deceive ourselves, but think soberly graft-free, war-sane, and ask candidly: If preparedness depends on shooting and killing stuff and "God is on the side of biggest and hardest shooting guns," then WHY OUR GLORIOUS VICTORIES OF 1775 and 1865? Returning from bis peace expedition, Henry Ford says: "When I left, I was of the opinion that bankerr, manufacturers of munitions and armaments were responsible, but I am now con vinced. it is the people themselves, those now being slaughtered, that are responsible. The men doing the fight ing huve been too content to let those who rule them do their thinking and Try This for a Cold U s Fine Pape's Cold Compound" Ends Severe Colds or Grippe in Few Hours. You can end grippe and break up a severe cold either in head, chest, body or limbs by taking a dose of "Pape's Cold Compound" every two hours until three doses are taken. It promptly opens clogged-up nostrils and air passages in the bead, stops nasty discharge or nose running, relieves sick headache, dullness, feverishness, sore throat, sneezing, soreness and stiffness. Don't stay stuf fed-up! Quit blowing and snuffling! Ease your throbbing head nothing else In the world gives such prompt relief as "Pape's Cold Compound," which costs only 25 cents at ar drus store. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, and causes no inconvenience. Be sure you get thei genuine. Adv.
QUEHILJER. OIROS. 15 South 7th Street Special Week Enttdl Sale
Cinfl YflDiiP IcM Mis IiTw
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Indiana Sweet Corn, Extra Sifted Early June Peas, Mustard, Canned Soup, Vienna Sausage, Alaska Salmon, Saur Kraut, Pure Apple Currant Jelly, assorted to please, . . . . . .3 for 25c Three Large Bottles' Catsup 25 . ... . Choice Guaranteed Eggs, Doz 25' ' .."
OHJEMILJEIR IBiCDS
FOB PREPAREDNESS
they have not taken the advantage of their divine right to say for themselves what they shall do and think." Interviewed, several high up German military officers say: Let us be quite frank; we all want peace, but we know it is quite out of the question and wben we try to make our men believe otherwise, It is simply in order to stimulate them, for they are quite worn out." The hue and cry, "peace at any price pacifists," comes from the munitions grafters, military and fifty cent stop-at-the-spicket and waste-at-the-bung-hole politicians. The real peace-at-any-cost mouthers, would have a trillion Collar navy, seven million stand ing army, forty billion armament and munitions. It is very doubtful if there are a baker's dozen actual "peace-at-any-price" pacifist in the United States. Real pacifism means sane, loyal, patriotic, do and die for country. preparedness; not big guns and enormous armaments. But what of Belgium and Servia? In proportion to size, they were better prepared with guns and munitions of war, than the United States of America
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healthy; lustrous
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Fresh Halibut Steaks, pound., 15c Three large Loaves of Mother's Bread. .10
SMOKED MEATS No. 1 Sugar Cured iqi Shoulders, lb. la2C No. 1 Sugar Cured Bacon 18c per pound , Choice Bean Bacon, pound , lie BREAKFAST SAUSAGE, pound CHEESE Full Cream per pound Brick Cheese per lb 22c 22c
is today; and their faith, patriotism
and reliance was glue to these killingmachines. Instead of SUPER-MEN. As was also Rome, "Who sat on her seven hills, and from her throne of beauty ruled the world." - Likewise. ALL THE WORLD'S GREAT MILI TARY. soKlled "civilizations." It is the writer's firm belief that W. J. Bryan. Henry Ford, and other leading pacifists, will eventually have the "laue-last" on their merciless critics and conscienceless fun-pokers. JOSEPH M. THURSTON. KAISER IN DANGER ROME. Jan. 14. It Is reported from Athens that Queen Sophia of Greece has been called to Berlin because of the serious condition of her brother, the kaiser. Peat is being used as a fertilizer in greater quantities in the United States $350,000. worth in 114, against $170,000 worth in 1913. andf ordinarily ttttU tluk. t i C 11c So 122 4c beef, lb.. '. .14 5 OLEOMARGARINE Swift's Lincoln OP? 2 lbs ZDC Moxleys Special n 2 lbs ODC Buehlcr Dros.' Special. 10 SAUSAGE Frankforts. Wleners Garlic and Bolcma. per lb 12e Fresh Link Sausage, lb. .124e Liver Sausage, lb. tOe
