Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 129, 17 March 1909 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM ANI SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 1909.

PAGE THREE.

01)11(1 PERRY MAY BE SUCCEEDED BY PAT UELLEHEH

He Is Receiving Support of the

Democratic Faction of the Indiana Commercial Travelers' Society.

MARSHALL KEEPS THE i05 HUNTERS ANXIOUS

Yhere Is Not a Day the Governor Is Not Besieged by Delegations Backing Various Candidates.

' (Special Correspondent.) Indianapolis, March 17. The democratic organization of the Indiana Commercial Travelers is behind the candidacy of Patrock J. Kelleher for an appointment under Governor Marshall, that of adjutant general to succeed Oran Perry being about the right thing, according to Kelleher's friends. A delegation of travelers called upon the governor a day or two ago and made a plea for the appointment to the position. They did not speak for any particular position, but they told the governor they felt the fact that Kelleher was the democratic candidate for statistician last fall and that he was defeated by a small plurality entitled him to something at' the hands of the governor. Governor Marshall did not give the delegation a definite answer as to what he will do In the matter, but the members cf the delegation are firm in their belief that he will hand Kelleher a plum. The adjutant general's job will not be open until next December., but Kelleher will probably be willing to wait that long because the job pays 12,200 year. , 'AII In Suspense. . Governor Marshall has all of the boys in suspense. He has not made a single appointment of the many that be has to make, and he has not given

anyone any promises, so far as can be

learned. This is - what keeps the "boys up In the air, for it is their first chance at the pie counter in a good many years, and they are all mighty hungry. And then to think that the governor will not come out and hand, them what they , think is coming to them oh; it is cruel. There is not a day that the governor's office . is not besieged by delegation after delegation in the interest of some candidate or other, and scores of candidates themselves also call on the governor, setting forth their fine points, to him in brilliant language. Keeps Mighty Quiet. If Marshall has decided on any appointments he is keeping it mighty quiet, but it is generally believed that he has his mind made up as to a good many of them.. It is believed that he will begin making a clean sweep of the railroad commission as quickly as possible. W. J. Wood, the democratic member, is the one whose commission expires first and there is a. general belief that he Is slated for the toboggan. Some of the democrats were not entirely satisfied with what they saw of his democracy during the campaign and they are saying that Wood is al-

Watching a Stomach V Digest Food

Was the Means Whereby Science Made t Possible the Cure of Dyspepsia. The Abbe Spallanzanl was the first scientist to study systematically the chemical powers of the gastric juice, but it was by the careful and convincing experiments of Beaumont that the foundation of our exact knowledge of Its composition and action was laid. Beaumont was an army surgeon, located at an obscure military post in Michigan, while it was yet a territory, and was called upon to treat a gun shot wound of the stomach in a Canadian voyageur Alexis St. Martin. . When the wound healed a permanent opening was left by means of which food could be placed in the stomach and gastrtc juice taken from it. Beaumont made scientific experiments with his crude means and wrote a book which today is recognized among the classics of physiology. Beaumont blazed the way for other scientists so that today medicine knows what the stomach does with food and what food does to the stomach.' Science also knows what the gastric juices are and how to make them best for the system. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, thanks to the poor army surgeon and Alexis St. Martin, give man a means of digesting food, replenishing the exhausted juices, soothing the nerves and correcting dyspeptic conditions of the stomach. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are natural fruit and vegetable, essences reduced in concentrated form and ; by tremendous power compressed into a tablet. These wonderful little digestors are known all over America and Canada. Full meals have been digested by them in glass tubes and they are sold by every druggist Physicians to the number of 40,000 nse them. They are meritorious and powerful. Go to your druggist and buy a package today, price 50c. or send us your name an J address and we will

send you a trial package by mail free

most sure to go. And Wood himself is not confident that he will be allowed to remain on the commission. ; There is one thing, however, that Marshall will not do, and that is he

will not disturb Warden Reid, of the state orison at Michigan City. While

he has not made a definite announce

ment of his intention it is known that he thinks much of Reid and that he

likes Reid's record as a warden. This

is taken to mean that Reid will be

retained. Put Superintendent Whit

taker, superintendent of the reforma

tory at Jeffersonville will have to go,

if present signs count for anything.

Whlttaker is considered a politician

and the democrats are not going to

stand for any republican politicians remaining in office if they can help

it. Are Many Changes.

If the governor has any other in his mind he has not made it known, but it is known that he has a great many changes under consideration, some of the fattest jobs in the entire bunch will be those connected with the state

bureau of inspection, created . by the

passage of the public accounting bill.

The chief inspector will hold office four years and will draw a salary of

$4,000 a year, while the two deputy inspectors will get $3,000 a year. Then there are as many field assistants as

may be required, the number being unlimited and they are to get $10 a day and railroad fare, but they must

pay their own hotel bills and other expenses. No names have been heard mentioned here for any of these jobs, but it is believed that the governor has some men in his mind for the places. The Cigarette Law. . Many Inquiries are being received at the state house as to the new anticigarette law, the queries coming mostly from cigarette manufacturers and dealers who wish to flood the state with them at the earliest possible moment. The anti-cigarette bill which was passed by the legislature amends the one passed four years ago so as to limit the penalties imposed to the offense of sellins cigarettes to any minor and to keeping them for sale to minors, instead of forbidding the selling and keeping for sale to

anybody. The maximum fine for the

first offense is $100 with imprison

uiem, insieaa 01 sv. mere is no

emergency clause, and the law will not be In force until the laws are published by the proclamation of the governor, which will be some time in April. r The bill of Senator Wood, which was to give Lafayette a police matron, is not to become a law after all. This is the bill that was lost for several days after the session closed and which was found in the senate safe.

Governor Marshall agreed to receive it, although late and said he would

sign It if It were found to be in prop

er form. But when he examined the

bill he found some technical errors in

it and refused to receive it. Therefore It is a dead one.

THE THEATER !

Good, old fashioned cakes are made

from. Mrs. Austin's buckwheat flour.

Now at your grocer's.

WANT FARMS NAMED Government Asks Wayne County Farmers to Take This Action.

WILL ASSIST IN DELIVERY

Those who are patrons of Uncle Sam's rural mail service have been notified to name their farms in order that it may facilitate the department in locating misdirected mail. The postmasters throughout Wayne county received such instruction this week and notified the carriers immediately. Uncle Sam recommends the use of as many different names as possible. No doubt this community in the future will resemble England or the Eastern States, where every farm and dwelling has some appropriate name. The name of the farm will be displayed on the box either above or below the patron's name.

ARRANG

PROGRAMS

C

Township Schools Getting Ready for Their Commencement Exercises.

SCHOOLS SOON TO CLOSE

Preparations for commencement exercises in - the different township schools, which will be closed soon, are being made by the pupils and the Instructors, also County- Superintendent C. W. Jordan. The Wayne township schools will close April 9 and on the following day, exercises will be held at the Pythian temple. South Eighth street, at 2 o'clock. This has been the custom for several years. Rev. Robert. H. Dunaway, pastor of the Second Presbyterian church, , will deliver the principal address. - ' Miss Magdalena Englebert will have charge of the exercises. 4 . . . The Washington township commencement will be held at Doddridge chapel April 24. Rev. J. O. Campbell will be the speaker.

A traveler by the night train from Peterborough to Grimsby, complained that while dozing an animal of some sort had run over his face. The railwayofficials did not take serious notice to the complaint until the next night, when another passenger made a similar complaint. Then it was disvered that the train was infested

Address F. A. Stuart Co liS SJWfjTf with rate and it has been taken off so Bldg, . Marshall, .lagfc kt It may 1 cleared oX U peats. -

Treat Your Skin Now with the delightful E. Buraham Toilet Requisite. They, will render your complexion exempt from any ill effect of exposure to the wind or the sun. E. Bsnkw. Cstiw a Bear FUwtr Cress ... SSc sad $!. E. Bank' Hygieaic Ska Tmi. . . l.M E. Berakaa. Cmtm Face Lstise. . . l.M E. Barsbaa'a DcveUpiag Cream.... l.Ot E. BaraWs LOmzom (Has Wtiteaer) .25 E. Baraaaa'. lastaataaeeai Skis Bleackiaf 2.50 E. Bwakui' Medicated CeaIeriaa P.waer, (4 Skades) .50 E. Bmkia'i knpwceptibU Usage Stick 25 Hair Took. 56c aa l.M Cray Hair Restorer 1.00 "BO Preparations'

C7aaaC9E. WuhiartM Stmt

CHICAGO. ILL. For Sale by All Dealers. If your dealer cannot supply you aaad It cents (for mailing) for samples and booklet.

Wssltsafal Istslt

TEETH ASTHEY GROW The Way Nature Forms and Fixes Them In the Gums.

THEY ARE NOT MADE OF BONE.

THEATRICAL CALENDAR. ? GENNETT. Wednesday, March 17. A Mid Summer Night'e Dream. Saturday, March 27 Vogel's Minstrels Monday, March 29 "Sis Hopkins." MEW PHILIPS. All Week High Ciass Vaudeville.

Vogel's Minstrels. The vocal contingent of John W. Vogel's BIx City Minstrels is unusually strong and will no doubt create quite a surprise to those who favor this form of ' entertainment. Harry

-Leighton, J. C. Oldfield. Arthur Sam

son, Harry Beebe, W. H. Starr, S. Otis Riggs, C. G. Shiffer, C. Louis Schick, Master A. Newton, the wonderful boy soprano and the Louisiana Glee club, will be heard to good advantage at the Gennett theater where this grand organization is to appear on March 27. "Sis Hopkins." In Sis. Hopkins, which is now being presented for the tenth consecutive season to record breaking audiences by Miss Rose Melville, who originated the famous country girl character and gave it to the stage, there is an entirely new "entertainment" scene for the young ladies' seminary commencement. The songs are new and the dancing is delightful. The "pieces" which the girl pupils speak for the benefit of their visiting relatives are characteristic of the country seminary. Sis Hopkins comes to the Gennett on March 29. The New Phillips. One of the strongest attractions of its nature which has ever appeared at the New Phillips is the act put on by the Three Lesin rings. These people are clown acrobats. Only one of them is dressed as a clown but they all have a bunch of merriment up their sleeves. . This said clown can play a piano standing on his head and can do several other things which are far from the average stunts of their nature. Both of the other members are excellent also. , LaFevre and St. John sing and dance in a manner new to this city. Although Arthur Abbott goes under the name of a comedian he is hardly that. He is more than that. Arthur has a good bunch of songs that border on the sentimental and he makes good. "Midsummer Night's Dream." ' The Columbus, Ohio, State Journal printed the following in yesterday's issue: , "A Midsummer Night's Dream." with its delicate fantasies, its elusive imaginings and its grotesqueries, was presented at the Southern theater yesterday afternoon and evening through the medium of words, dances, songs, and the exquisite music of Mendelssohn. After hearing this incomparable musical suite given in connection with the play, one could scarcely imagine the drama without It. Last evening the appeal to the ear was by far the most important and beautiful part of the performance; for the Russian Symphony orchestra, 'under the direction of Modest Altscbuler, gave an appealing, intelligent and wholly satisfying interpretation of the music. The lovely overture was played in a darkened house, thus greatly adding to its impressiveness; and it was listened to by a remarkably quiet land sympathetic audience. The violins of; the orchestra are especially good; and their full - but delicate quality left nothing to be desired. The reading of all the selections of , the suite given throughout the play was marked by great feeling; and the wedding march, in particular was given a wonderfully fine and spirited rendition-) ' It is impossible to spead as enthus

iastically of the interpretation of the

play as given by the actors and their management For those who love "A Midsummer Night's Dream" any visible interpretation is apt to be unsatisfactory. The play is, of course, the height of idealism, just what it is entitled, in

fact a dream, 'too Catterias sweet

to ba-suhstanriil - ,. . ,

Teeth Are Really Skin Structures In Respect to Their Mod of Origin. The Variety of Form Which Adapts Them For Varying Uses. Familiar to everybody as are the teeth, few persons, save those who have dipped into their history viewed from the scientific side, can form an adequate idea regarding their true nature. If the man in the street were asked to construct a classified list of his bodily belongings he would almost fertiuily place teeth In the section which included the bones. There appears reason for his choice. Teeth are hard and bonelike in structure, and they are fixed iu the jaws. These facts would seem on the face of things to justify the inclusion of the Imu la the list of skeletal structures. This view of the teeth, however, is readily proved to be Incorrect. We hare only to appeal to nature's way of making a tooth in other words, to study Its developmentto assure ourselves, that teeth are not bones at all, but structures of a very different kind. The first indication of tooth formation begins in very early life with the formation of a groove in the gum, or mucous membrane lining the mouth. This fnrrow is the birthplace of the teeth. From tbegroove arise as many little projections of the gum as there are to be teeth. Each projection we call a papilla. Now, this little body contains a plentiful (supply of blood vessels, destined to brliig to it the raw material blood out Qf which not teeth alone, but all other organs, tissues and secretions, are manufactured. The papilla, besides, la composed of nnd particularly invested with living cells of special kind. These cells are to be regarded as the workmen which fabricate the tooth. The material specially required for tooth formation consists of compounds of lime associated with other substances. , Around the papilla and upon it, as on a mold, the bard material of the tooth is deposited. It Is elaborated into a substance which, under the microscope, shows a special structure of its own. differing widely from that which is represented in bone. The great bulk of a tooth consists of ivory or dentine, as it is also called. This is a dense, hard substance which shows a texture composed of an infinite variety of microscopic tubules. But at the crown of the tooth especially we meet with a layer of different kind and of still harder consistence. This is the enamel, which ranks ss the hardest substance in the body. Its position on the crown of the tooth bears a relation to the resistance to wear and tear the tooth is Intended to exhibit, the softer ivory being thus protected from the obvious results of the process of attrition. Thus on the papilla, as on a living mold, the tooth is formed, its substance coming to cover, as in sn envelope, the little projection Itself. Long before the tooth, however, is completed the groove in the gum has become partitioned off into a series of sacs or compartments. The furrow Itself becomes converted into a tube by the upward growth and union of its edges in the middle line. Then succeeds division into sacs, in each of which a papilla is present and in each of which a developing tooth is contained. If the bard materials of the tooth be found around the papilla we discover thus that the tooth is a hollow and not a solid structure, for the pulp inside every tooth, a substance richly supplied with nerves and blood vessels, really represents the : papilla' of the early stages. The tooth's nourishment is thns duly provided for, since processes of the pulp pass Into the minute tubules of the ivory and so contribute to the maintenance of the vitality of the organ. When the tooth is completed within its sac, all that remains is for it to appear in the jaw, in which provision has been made-for its fixation. A tooth "cuts" the gum when through upward pressure on the sac it bursts through its investment and takes the place nature has mapped out for it In the armamentarium of the mouth. Now. in all this history there is no bint given us of any connection between bone formation and tooth development save indeed for tbe connection between the two structures in the jaw. The gum is tbe present tissue of the teeth, and the gum is simply the skin layer of the body folded inward at the mouth to form the lining membrane of that cavity, while it is continned onward, with variations in its organization, to form the lining of the digestive tubes as well Teeth are therefore truly skin structures in respect of their mode of origin, which, after all. is tbe surest and Indeed tbe only test of the nature of any living tissue or part. By all odds the very longest tooth in the world is that of the narwhal, which grows into a twisted Ivory pole often exceeding six feet in length. A. "Wilson in Illustrated London News.

THURSDAY MORNING we place on sale one hundred and fifty fine Axminster Rugs like cut, Easily worth $3.00 AT Q 1 .69 E AC H We also offer during this week the following

MUG BMiSMNm

9x12 Fine Cottage Rugs ...$ 4.95 9x12 Brussels Rugs .'. $ 0.05 9x12 All Wool Ingrain Rugs S 0.05 9x12 Tiger Brussels Rugs $ 0.05 9x12 Hodge's Wool Fibre Rugs $11.05 9x12 Fine Tapestry Rugs 014.05 9x12 Fine Axminster Rugs 010.05

We Guarantee You a SAVING ca INGRAIN CARPETS end 1IZ

RAIL !ROAD SXOIRIE

Hear Ye! Hear Ye! All who need 8EED OATS or CLOVER 8EED should remember we can supply them immediately In any quantity. Have received another car of NORTHERN OATS. OMER G. WHELAN

Feed and Seed Store

's. 6th St. Phone l7f.

COR. Otti and MAIN OTRIiSCVJe,

FURNITURE

....THB PROVIDENT LIPB AND TRUST COMPANY.... In form of policy; prompt settlement of Death Losses; eqwItsMo dealing with policyholders; In strength of organization; and ln-evevyw thing which contributes to the security and cheapness of Life) 1nas) ance this Company stands unrivaled.

B. B. K10LLBR3SRQ, Act. 11 Oontll Ctn '

Milton Elrod. formerly of the ELBOD SCStT CCS9ANY. Milton QrodT&Col flr3

PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY.

Phillips Theatre.

8a me Man. "There goes the most talked about man In this community." "You surprise me. Who talks abont Mmr H does." Chicago Tribune.

Majority is always better than the best repartee. Disraeli.

The Swedish national commission for the prerentation of tuberculosis has recommended the gradual establishment of 4,600 retreats for oonsumtires, to be scattered throughout the length, and breadth, of the v country. The total cost wffl be nearly 11,000,000 crowns. It Is proposed that the cost of maintaining patients shall be borne by the municipalities ' m which they are sent. -

Remember the Cloak and Suit Opening at Knoltenberg's

VAUDEVILLE. Hall VVeefc, March 15 First Three Days. Three Lesinrings in Acrobatic Feats. 7 OTHER DIG ACTS7 Admission 10 cents to all parts of the house. Entire change of prsram Monday Thursday

ROLER S RATI HQ

L 0

y tin

Tuesday - Thursday - Saturday Moraine, Afternoon and Cvcnlnc-

(EteDDCOO

Harry GV

and ' 2sr tto?l5

TONIGHT ctiCslS

Russian Syinpncay Orchestra L!

schcler, CcseScr, esd C

Den Greet Players la A Mid-Summer Mfk?a Erecm

Scats oa saJc ait Box OfiUcc lrl

( masy-UsldBQ Ways of Ucr2 Adb

To Buy cr Sdl a Ccuriagc :

A new Carriage does not Sell cheap. But there la a way to Buy second-hand ones cheap. On our Classified page we have a column headed "Horses and Carriages.' A two or three line announcement placed there headed "Wanted" or For Sale," and stating just what you want or hare to Sell, wfil brine you bargain resutts. Host a3 of the Horses and aecond-hand Carria-es in this city arebought and sold in this way. Because this paper goes to a good class of business men, little Want Ads of this nature bring results in the quickest manner, and at the expenditure of bat the price of a few cigars. If you want to Duy or SeQ s Car riage, it is sorely worth your while to read our Oawtfird page fcr a few days, or dac unrest a few

pennsss tor a smaa aa. sryanaac

v

WmT lfMt ar H SS4S.

tshrMMSnss

No wat.ViHERB'y6a may Kve--ocr Cfcrr-'hd VJcAAd fed fcr yea

JUST what you WANT. You may be ess cf our ere ".try rcs&ra, cr 127 Li

out of town a short c..Jtziicr. or yon may ccsnce to pscr ca tha paper a

city. No matter our Want Ads are valnabSs to YOU ANYWHERE, il

but d out bv READING them just what they wi3 do.

i I

it..

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