Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 101, 9 March 1918 — Page 2
'AGL TWO
THE KiCHMOND PALLADIUM. AND SUN-TELEGRAM. SATURDAY, MARCH 9, 1918
ARMY OF CYRUS n BABTONIAN EPISODE of D.W.GRlFTTTtfS INTOLERANCE.
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By T. F. McQREW. There will be very little objectloa raised to keeping a few hens even in the center of towns and small cities provided the surroundings, the house and the poultry are kept clean and free from unpleasant odors, and no males are kept with the hens. It is the males that make the fuss and annoyance that neighbors object to, and it is usually less expensive to purchase a new lot of pullets each fall than It is to rear the youngsters to maturity. Then again, baby chicks can be purchased of almost any breed or variety, which saves the trouble of hatching the chicks and the Inconvenience of keeping both the old and the young fowls on the one small piece of ground. The secret of success with laying hens Is, first of all in their breeding and selection. They must be bred for laying; they must be selected for size, strength and vigor. Those of good, medium size that have vitality and vigor to a marked degree and which are wide between the thighs, full and deep through the abdomen, are apt to be good layers. When thus selected there are not likely to be many drones among them. They must be kept in a house that is comfortable for them. The open-front house with the roosting place in the rear of the building is the best. The floor must be perfectly dry and covered to a depth of a feet or more with dry litter. All the grain that is fed to the fowls should be thrown into the little so that the hens must scratch and dig for all they get. This provides the very best of exercise for the hens, keeps their blood warm and flowing quickly through their bodies and excites egg yield. Lazy hens that sit around or on the
roost and do not work and dig for their living axe not apt to lay many eggs. The best kind of feeding is a good grain mixture made for egg production and an equally good dry mash mixture to be fed In a hopper. Hens to do well must have all they can eat.
Saloonkeepers Plan to Keep on Selling ANDES SON, Ind.. March 9. Thirtyfour persons today advertised that they will file applications for saloon licenses at the April term of the Madison County clmmis8ionere. At present there are twenty-eeven saloons In Anderson. The liquor dealers predict that the prohibition law will be repealed before April 2. FORT WAYNE. Ind., March 9. Six local saloon keepers have filed applications for renewal of their licenses by the board of commissioners at their April meeting. The saloon keepers also plan to file an Injunction suit against the enforcement of the state prohibition law In this county, having the idea that the decision of Judge Hostetter at Evansville will hold the law unconstitutional.
CANCEL CONCERT DATES
OXFORD, O., March 9. It has been
I definitely deided that the Miami UnlI veraity Glee club will not make a tour
Even the dates for concerts at Camp Sherman have been called off. It is possible that week-end concerts may be given In Hamilton, Cincinnati and Connersvllle, Ind.
275 Students of Western College Donate $1,000 Oxford, O., March . The 275 students of the Western College for Women yesterday contributed $1,000 -to the endowment fund of the institution
which,. It Is hoped, will reach $500,000 by the first of May. The girls raised the amount by pooling their Incidental fees. Each girl Is required to deposit $5 each year for breakage and damage. The bulk of this money is refunded, and it Is the rebates that have been pledged to the endowment fund.
MURRAY TONIGHT VAUDEVILLE CARSON TRIO I FAGG and WHITE Singing and Musical Act. ' Africanology. TOM MOORE and HAZEL "HONEY" DALY In Brown of Harvard' Sunday Only f The Super Production "LOYALTY" Also 2 Reel Keystone Comedy "WRONGED BY MISTAKE" MONDAY VAUDEVILLE CLOVER LEAF TRIO I WILLIAMS and HELD
i
Featuring "ONE TOWN BAND"
The Roustabout and the Yaller Girl
CRANE WILBUR The Handsomest Leading Man of the Screen, la "THE BLOOD OF HIS FATHERS"
1 11
Norma
CHARLES TX u?
Did you ever think you would like to see a spectacle in a theatre iu which over 125,000 peoplo took part, along with 7,000 horses and 1,500 chariots? W'eW, this Is wtat is revealed in D. W. Griffith's colossal work, "Intolerance," which monies to the Murray tomorrow. This mighty work is not only big in ruinbers and in scenes but It is as bis in therae. It portrays the hopes and V niggles of love through all agos, and I ov the human aspiration has always )en hampered by tho intolerance of thos who put themselves in high places.
CATHERINE DE MEDICI xUi
FRENCH EPISODE. ,
In Griffith's great opie you find the whip of intolerance cracking over the heads of the ancient Babylonians nearly 3,000 years ago and you follow it
great note of human appeal calling to you from across the ages. It is as if you had taken a trip around the world and overed a period of three thousand years in the flicker-
Miss Talmadge at her best in this wonderful picture. A stirring drama in which love overcomes the empty glitter of cabaret life.
down through Palestine when the Man j ing speed of contemplative thought.
of Men came with his great tolerance and message of hope and again you see in religious warrare as it was carried on in medieval France in the sixteenth century, and now you see again in factory and shop and the streets of this land. And though the scenes
change and the magnitude of the shift-
Mr. Griffith has made a daring Inno-
vation and has succeeded. This is why "Intolerance" is the sensation that it is everywhere.
j ing views appal you there is ever that i p
6V DAISY DEAN" - -
?MM;Sll ! Igh. John Travern not o
VW& i&&W4?H'' ' Xi I down the employees of his
IfsmifmmmM ' ihe also cut oK Ilugh w (I 1 tHmaSfJtmWK 1 I when Hugh decided to
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THE HEART OF ROMANCE WIZJLIAM FOX PRODUCTION PALACE Grace Darmond is one of the brilliant screen artists signed late last year by Albert K. Smith, president of Vitagraph, to a long term contract to star in Fllue Ribbon Features. She is one of the youngest stars in motion pictures today, of wondrous beauty, with sunlit hair, large brown eyes nnd a perfectly moulded face. She has beeu a featured player almost from the day she stepped into the Pelig studio, in Chicago, three years ago. She is splendidly cast in "The Other Man," the Vitagraph Blue Ribbon Feature, which will be the attraction in Ihe Palace Theatre on Sunday. Harry Morey has the leading male role and Mth Miss Darmond is featured Florence Ueshon, another of Vltagraph's newer stars. WASHINGTONf In "Ghosts of Yesterday," Norma Talmadge's current Select Star Series release which will be shown at the Washington Theatre today, an exjulsite oil painting of the star by lames Montgomery Flagg is slashed to )ieccs and irretrievably ruined. The 'ale of the slashing is really tragic and las almost cured Miss Talmadge of ler well known devotion to realism. John Trnvcrs was a driving taskmaster in his ribbon mill, and a cruel
father as It proved to his only son,
nly ground
mill, but
ithout a cent marry as his
heart directed him. Hugh's choice
for a wife was pretty Xora Carey, an employee of his father's. John Trav-
ers couldn't see her as his daughter-ln- i
law, so he called his attorney and prepared to make a new will in which Hugh did not figure. But something occurred which prevented John Travers from affixing his signature to the important document. You'll fee what this occurrence was and what came of it when you see "Whims of Society" at the Washington theatre Sunday. "Whims of Society" Is a World-Picture Brady-Made. Charming Ethel Clayton is the star of the production and she is supported by an excellent cast, numbering some of the foremost film favorites. The production has been staged on a notably lavish scale and some of the pictures, particularly those in the ribbon mill, are exceptionally interesting. Admirers of June Caprice will soon see that smiling William Fox star in a new, pretty and stirring photoplay. It is called "The Heart of Romance," and will be shown at the Washington theatre next Monday and Tuesday. All overs of real art and tme drama in motion pictures will receive with delight the announcement that Henry B. Walthall, the celebrated screen star, will appear at the Washington theatre for two days, commencing Wednesday, in his first Paralta Play, "His Robe of Honor." The story is from the pen of Ethel and Jame3 Dorrance and concerns the intrigues of politics and the wiles of political bosses. Mr. Walthall appears in the role of a young attorney who has been appointed judge of the supreme court of the state of New York through the Influence of a graft-permeated political machinew hlch anticipates using him for a tool to serve their ends.
Mit y 3& 3& i
Masonic Calendar
- Richmond M. Called
Sunday
Greater Vitagraph Presents HARRY MOREY and CORINNE GRIFFITH In the startling 5-act drama
' 1
K Shows Continuous, 1 i
HIMGTOM
Last Time Today THE LEADING EMOTIONAL ACTRESS
Talmadge
-in-
hosts off
Yestte ir
Jay"
Pathe News Orchestra Music
45 to 11:00 P. M. ADULTS 15c; CHILDREN 5c
Sunday
WM. A. BRADY PRE8ENT8
L 0
in
ims of Society"
The story of two working girls sisters and of their battle against poverty, suffering and temptation. How true love and character triumphs over circumstance. Comedy Pathe News Orchestra Music Shows Continuous, 1:45 to 11:00 P. M. ADULTS 15c; CHILDREN 5c
: 3 Days gssj? March 10 Cont!nous 12:50 Noon to 11:00 P. M.
THEATRE Shows Start at 12:30, 2:35, 4:40, 6:45, 8:50 The Wonderful Production that Amazed the World It was shown one solid year in New York and six months in Chicago It played 3 different engagements of one week each. In Indianapolis, packing the theatre every performance and turning thousands away, who were unable to secure seats.
Also-
WILLIAM DUNCAN
i
'VENGEANCE and the WOMAN'
Tuesday, March 12. -Lodge No. 196, F. and A.
meeting; work. Wednesday, March 13. Webb
Lodge No. 24, F. and A. M. Called
meeting; work in Fellow Craft degree. Saturday, March 16. Loyal Chapter !
No. 49, O. E. S. Stated meeting and initiation of candidates.
Most of us don't need new ideas as much ns wo need doers to hslp us carry out some of tha old ones,
CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY'S Thrilling western romance. Also a Cartoon Comedy EXTRA Sunday Night EXTRA KOLP'S ORCHESTRA For some real music
Coming Next TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY 'The Passing of the Oklahoma Outlaws' Tonight "The Battle of Arras" Also HANK MANN FATTY ARBUCKLE and H0LLIGAN In 3 big comedies
COLOSSAL $2,000,000 SPECTACLE
Love's Struggle Throughout The Ages'
125,000 PEOPLE !
The Indianapolis Star Said:"Human ingenuity can go on further and do no better than it has gone, and it has wrought, in 'Intolerance.' It is the last word in screen spectacle productions. It attains the pin point of the pinnacles. Not even Griffith himself, who produced 'Intolerance' could produce a greater cinema miracle than he has produced in this No One Should Miss It
7,500 HORSES ! 1,200 CHARIOTS ! Four different stories that sweep at the end into four thrilling climaxes ! "It holds human nature up to the Mirror."
Glimpses of the Holy Land ! The Massacre of the Hugenots! The Race Against Death! Belshazzer's Feast! The Eye-staggering Siege and Fall of Babylon! Most Gigantic Production in History
S
The Greatest Show in the World ! Prices During This Engagement All Seats 25 cents
