Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 154, 11 April 1909 — Page 10
THE RICHMOND FALLAJJiUAt ASU L iBLajGU.Y Jl, SU3DAV, APKlii 11, iiniJ.
PAGE TEN.
mm
-Ltemonslratioa Extraordinary., and Exploitation of the Celebrated (SdDSSAMID) cnsET Commencing Monday and Continuing All IVeek under the supervision of Madame Miller, an expert corsetiere and personal representative of THE H. W. GOSSARD COMPANY, makers of these celebrated corsets. 'TIS AN EXTRAORDINARY STYLE EVENT and every woman, whether a Gossard wearer or not, owes it to her self interest and should avail herself of this unusual opportunity to learn about these remarkable corsets. The Corset For Health
it is a mistake to believe that a corset must be unlovely to be hygienic. The line of beauty is also the line of health and the corset which gently persuades the figure into correct lines, lends it style and gives it proper support, is the corset that the thinking women will select.
TAFT WILL PROVE All EASY SUBJECT FOR CAMERA MAII Veteran Washington Photographer Gives His Expert Opinion on the Posings of The Presidents. ROOSEVELT WAS HARD MAN TO HANDLE RIGHT It Was Hard for Him to Stand Still Long Enough McKinley Was the Delight of the Profession.
(Front
are the only corsets that properly bring out and fix permanently the beauty line at the back. They are the Americanized adaptation of "L'Irresistible," the original front-lacing corset, conceived by Madam Consuello Foulde de Grasse and created by Madam Margaine La Croix both well known artists to follow out Hogarth's theory that the arch of a perfectly formed woman's spine is the
most beautiful line in art. There are Gossard models for every figure. For the woman who is stout, there is a model which molds her form into perfect symmetry while it reveals the long, willowy, graceful lines required by the prevailing modes. For the slender figure, there are models which correct and soften the lines and by inducing proper standing position, impart poise, compel deep breathing and straight shoulders. We are now showing the new Gossard models. Our expert corsetiere, trained by the manufacturers, wul give the benefit of her knowledge to every woman who wishes to find the corset model that is perfectly adapted to her figure.
Don't Fail to Come in Next Week
3 PER CENT. OH SAVINGS
NEW ART WALL PAPERS FOR OPRIIJG CONSTANTLY ARRIVING Our Clearance Sale continues until March 15th. Big bargains in II grades. Mr. 8 A. Madonald, formerly of Muncie, who is an expert in wall decoratmg, is now with us as salesman. Remember our Special Sale of paintings by Richmond artists. ELLWOOD MORRIS. & CO. ' 720 MAIN ST., RICHMOND.
A. C IL.EIVJOEIVII UTH ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Rooms S3 andl St. Colonial Block, Richmond, Indiana. NOTARY PUEUC PHONE 2245
PcilctUaxn Want Ails Go Into All Homes
Mr. Taft ia eoine to prove, I think.
the easiest poser for photographs ofj all the presidents I've pointed the camera at, and I've had . the lens on quite a number of them," said a Washington photographer. "He isn't particularly fond of having his picture taken, and it's hard to get him. But when he does face the lens he falls naturally into the position, doesn't have to be directed to 'smile,' doesn't stiffen up like so many photographic subjects and generally knows the game so well that all of his pictures are successful. "Mr. Roosevelt was an excessively
hard man to pose for the camera. He was what we call a rigid subject. It was impossible, it seemed, for him to fall easily and naturally into a desired posture. He had to be bent, twist
ed and generally forced into the proper position., He unconsciously fought the photographer, as we say. When in the chair for a bust picture he had a way of thrusting his chin far for
ward in a grotesquely aggressive way
which, in a picture, would make him
appear to be saying to the beholder of the portrait. .'Say, what's that you sav? Say it again! I double-dog-dare
you to say that again!'
"And he generally had the fidgets when he faced the camera. It appear
ed to be a positive misery for him to
stick to one Dosition for more than
two seconds at a stretch. The very
low-cut turned-down collar that he al
ways wears appeared to bother him
considerably when he was under the lens, and he had a way of incessantly
grabbing at the front of the collar
with his right hand, as it he wanted to yank it off and toss it away. His
hands appeared to be doing something all the time, anyhow. I never photo
graphed a man who had less natural repose. I used to wonder how Mr.
Roosevelt ever slept at night how he
got to sleep, that is.
"Once I photographed him as he sat
back in a deep chair beside a table. It
took me a good five minutes to pull and haul and tug him about in the chair so that he'd look -natural, and
he was so unyielding under this work that it was like moving a sackful of steel billets. And he would persist in
sticking his chin forward in that chal lenging way, despite the fact that 1
vanked his head back half a dozen
times.
'"Mr. Roosevelt. I finally had to
say to him, I hope I haven't said or done anything to cause you to look
that way as if you had a chip on
your shoulder and were waiting for
me to knock it off.' And once again I lowered his chin. He laughed goodnaturedly, and then I sneaked the prongs of the headrest up to his back
hair, although I knew that he didn't
like headrests.
"'Now, sir, if you'll just rest your head against this.' I started to say as I essaved to fix the prongs of the
headrest to the back of his head
'you'll have the right position, and '
'No, no. no! Take that thing
away! Take it away by all means
and at once!' he broke out, as soon as
he caught on to what I was doing.
And he shot his head forward away from the prongs, and I had to move the headrest completely off the scene
before he was satisfied. 'I'll hold my head all right.' he went on. 'Go
ahead.'
"He did pull his chin back a bit then, but he immediately began to
beat a tattoo on the table beside him
with his right hand. I requested him
to belay that drumming while I fo
cused .him. and then he began to heat the same kind of a tattoo on the left arm of his chair with his left hand.
He smiled very broadly when I requested him to discontinue that, and by this time he was huddled all in a bunch In the chair again, and once more I had to take care of him and unravel some of the knots of his rigid position. Finally I got the snap at him, but the picture wasn't satisfactory to me, although he appeared to like it- He was profoundly bored by the time I got through hauling him around in the chair, and when Mr. Roosevelt is bored his expression Is sort of sardonic. That's what ailed that picture, from my point of view.
In that picture his lips sort of curve away from his teeth and there is almost a contemptuous expression in
his eyes. His expression in that picture seems to say, "Great Godfrey, but I wish this infernal fool of a photographer would hurry up this business and let me get out of here. "And. as a matter of fact. Mr. Roosevelt always was in a terrific hurry to get out of a photographic studio. For all that I think Mr. Roosevelt, while president, liked to be photographed. He liked, at any rate, to see the finished pictures. He always wanted proofs of all the plates, and he generally ended by ordering copies struck from all of the different negatives. : V- : During the last couple of years of his incumbency he didn't much caVe to be photographed full length or three-quarters, for he grew undeniably stout in spite of all his tennis, horseback riding, wrestling ; and so on. About eighteen months ago, maybe you'll recall, he took off about fifteen pounds by dint of immense effort and dieting. When I photographed him the next time I noticed his decreased girth. r "'You don't want to get too thin, Mr. President, I said to him- 'Folks won't recognize your pictures if you do.' He seemed "immensely pleased at that. 'I am pretty well down, don't you think?' he asked me, and he patted his white waistcoat with manifest
delight. 'But it's a fight it's a fight. and his teeth suddenly came together
with a click.
"Once I asked Mr. Roosevelt to per
mit me to photograph him without his eyeglasses, just as a sort of a novelty.
but he wouldn't consent to this. 'The
eyeglasses are just as much a part of ana- regulations
me as my ears, he told me, and I have a bad staring look without them.
look like somebody seeing a ghost.' "He wouldn't brush down his hair.
either, if it happened to be tousled
when he removed his hat upon enter
ing a studio. 'I don't like sleek hair,'
LOTTERY REPORTS XUT t PBIHTED United States Law Is Very Stringent in Covering This Point.
PUBLIC DOUBTS REFUSAL
WHEN NEWSPAPERS REFUSE TO ACCEPT ACCOUNTS OF RAFFLES, PEOPLE SUSPECT IT IS AN EVASION.
Many times persons call at this of
fice and say they are going to raffle
oil some object and ask to nave a
note made about it in the paper! They
are told it is against the law and if
the paper printed it, the use of the
mails would be prohibited. Some
times this is believed, but at other
times it is taken simply as a means of evasion on the part of the editor, who does not want to use the matter offered. For full explanation of the law governing the subject of lottery, the fol
lowing is quoted from the postal laws
AKIK1R- F&O KIT
Mad from pure Lead, Zinc and Linseed Oil. We can truthfully
mend this to be equal if net superior to the time honored ANCHOR LEAD and oil, mixed by the hand of the experienced painter. SEAHEV & DROWH PHONE 1715 015 KIAItl OT.
CLOUDS SEEII Oil FIIIMICE HORIZON (Continued From Page One.)
The Lottery Law. Sec. 499. No letter, postal card or
circular concerning any lottery, socalled gift concert, or other similar enterprise offering prizes dependent
upon lot or chance, or concerning
schemes devised for the purpose of
turn out very bad, however, a further
rise in stocks is likely, because of th plethora of money and the scarcity o
floating securities. View Unchanged.
The English view of the Wall street
speculative position is unchanged
When definite signs are visible that
American activities are dlrectd to trade, and that Wall street Is content
to rest a while, English investors wi.l
be more reassured.
Ensrlish markets, however, are not
greatly disturbed over the cutting of
iron and steel prices in America, but
there is some apprehension in Ger
many. There have been rumors of a
proposed American-Austrian iron trad
agreement, but they are altogether discredited here.
he told me once, when I handed him a obtaining money or property under
brush before starting to pose him, and
the best that he would do would be
to nervously smooth down his hair with his hands.
"Mr. McKinley was a singularly
easy man to pose for the camera
patient, plastic, submissive to the operator's requests and possessed of a certain natural grace that made him
valued photographic subject. He,
too, toward the latter years of his life,
grew to dislike any but bust photostoutness was ever increasing. No
false pretenses, and no list of the drawings at any lottery or similar
scheme, and no lottery ticket or part thereof, and no check,-draft, bill, money postal note or money order
tor the purchase or any tickets, or part thereof, or of any share or any chance in any such lottery or gift enterprise, shall be carried, in the mail
or delivered at or through any post office or branch thereof, or by any
letter carrier; nor shall any newspa
per, circular, pamphlet or publication
photograph ever quite did Mr. McKin- of any klnd containing any advertiseley justice. All In all, he had quite meat of lottery or gift enterprise the most remarkable. pair of eyes that of Ur kind 0tteTng prizes dependent ever I saw in a man's head. They were i. ,,, i!,, 0
lierally as mellow as the eyes of an
antelope-brooding, darkly luminous.
suffused with pity, and yet they were strong and wholly masculine eyes, too. It was hard for a photographer to
catch him without an expression of almost ineradicable melancholy in his face. His smiles were rare and fine,
but they passed very quickly. He was
often compared with Napoleon for
FARM FOR RENT. f
!
We have lor rcat a
11 acres lew miles southeast of CesttervtUe. W. H. BRADBURY SON 1 aael 3. Westcott Black
i t
POTATO CHIPS (Made Without Lard) BAKED HAM a CREAM TO WHIP HADLEY BROS.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY.
Deed Potatoos Corn and Potato Fertilizer RiCHr.iorjQ)
FEED CTO
i IS North Math St.
PHONE 2190
Pottattoes, GDatis anmdl Fei?llfiflfl2Z(2iP Garver and Meyer can furnish you with the beat Fertiliser for cosa oats, potatoes or lawn. Large stock on hand. Car of eats anal ear of prairie hay just received. Good assortment of seed potatoes. Prloea right. Call or phone 219ft. Garver Cl Meyer
list of prizes awarded at . the draw
ing of any such lottery or gift enter
prise whether said list is of any part
or all of the drawing, be carried in the mail or delivered by any postmas
ter or letter carrier. Any person who shall knowingly deposit or cause to be deposited, or shall knowingly send or cause to be sent, anything to be conveyed or delivered by mail in viola
facial resemblance. His face was much tIon of this sectlon or who fihall
finer than Napoleon s. It was as strong, but lacked the hardness of the
knowingly cause to be delivered by
mail, shall be deemed guilty of a mis-
Corsican's. For a handsome man. with detneanor, and on conviction shall be
a really noble head, Mr. McKinley was
the least vain personage that I ever
leveled a lens at.
HAWS' WITNESSES TOLD TO APPEAR
Are to Appear Before the Dis
trict Attorney on Monday Morning.
punished by a fine of not more than five hundred dollars or by imprisonment for not more than one year, or by both such fine and imprisonment for each offense. Any person violating any of the provisions of this section may be proceeded against by information or indictment and tried and
punished, either in the district at which the unlawful publication was mailed, or to which it is carried by mail for delivery according to the direction thereon, or at which it is causi ed to be delivered by, mail to the per
son to whom it is addressed.
TRIAL IS SET APRIL 19.
MR3. WILLIAM E. ANNIS, WIDOW
OF THE MURDERED MAN, WILL
BE THE STAR WITNESS FOR THE STATE. : i
CLUB TO GIVE DANCE. The sixteenth annual dance, follow
ing the Lenten season, will be given
by-the Entre Nous Club next Monday
night in J O. O. P. hall. A local orchestra pas been engaged to furnish the music. It is expected that there
will be a large attendance.
REGHT NOW
Our stock of Lumber was never more complete than RIGHT NOW and when it cornea to prices well! We'd rather talk privately with you about them, but they're all right. Let us make you an estimate on whatever yea want.
CAIN LUMBER COMPANY
Phone No. 1010.
19-27 S. MX St
Albert O. Martin, Dentist
Colonial Bunding, Rooms 18md IP.
PHONE I 37
DEL J. A. WALLS, TOE SPECIALIST
it Teat St,
of each week.
Consultation and one month' Treatment Free. TaBATS DISEASES OF THE THROAT. L.UNOS, KIDJCETS. IiVEK nJ BLADDER. RHEUMATI8M. DYSPEPSIA and DISEASES OF THE BLOOD. Epi
lepsy . (or talllna fits. Jneer. t-rtrai ana nmrrww
Diseases. Female DlHtra. L of Vitality from Inaiseret la. Fissure and Ulceration or the Rectum, without detention from boslnesa RUPTURE POSITIVELY CURED AND UUARANTEED.
TO THE FARMERS :
WE WANT MORE CREAM AND WE WANT MORE MILK and we will take all you make the whole year around if it's one gallon or one hundred gallons a day. Call on us. Telephone us Write us. Let ua submit our proposition.
COMMONS DAIRY CO. 9 SOUTH FIFTH STREET. PHONE 1183.
New York, April 10. District Attor
ney Frederick G. Dewitt of Queens
county; today summoned, witnesses
who are to testify at the trial of Cap
tain Peter C. Hains. for the murder of
William E. Annis last August, to ap
pear at bis office on Monday. The
trial is set for April 19. .
Mrs. William E. Annis, widow of the murdered man is to be one of the
most important witnesses at the Captain's trial Among tho others who
were summoned are all the men who
were in or in tho vicinity of the Bay-
side Yacht club float on the day of the
shooting. They are Charles H. Roberts, Mario Downs, Edward Andrews,
Herbert Funke, John C. Stevens, C. A.
Birchfield, Louis Harway and Fred Le
vitt. Harvey O. Rockwell, at whose home the Annis were stopping, has also been summoned.
Claim of Defense.
It is the claim of the.-defense that
Capt Hains, although insane at the time of the shooting, is sane now and
should be freed. In contradiction to this, It Is expected, District Attorney
Dewitt will offer the testimony of the attendants at the JaiL It Is freely stated that the captain's mental con
dition is steadily becoming worse.
Queens county tax payers say that
it ne is insane, as it is said he Is. a
commission should be appointed. This
would do away with the enormous expense.'"
'Wll- :
DEAD OF BROKEN HEART.
Concord, Mass., April 10 Mrs. Geo. S. Whittlngton, whose husband disap
peared March IS, leaving; a note de- j
daring he Intended taking his life, is dead of a broken heart. No trace of her husband bas ever been found.
She (Indignantly) Ton bad no but
to kiss me!
A Shoo off Renown
BEACON SHOES for Men are sold In nearly erery city and town fa Oe United States. They nave anas late popular favor because of their exceptional wearing qualities and cadastre styles. Where awn have formerly paid 4-00 and $5.00 for shoes, they at satisfied with BEACONS at $3.00 and S3.50. Every pair is made from high grade selected stock, by Union Workmen. Thar are sold to yon throng our -exclusive agent, thereby saving you two unnecessary profits, BEACON Shots are sold only by oar (pedal agents and can be obtained nowhere else. If you are not acquainted with this high grade shoe, call om oar agent and see the hot shoe on earth lot $3.00 i ,3.50. v -
TOE IMMDAIH) '
Exclusive Acsnto
TOISE
He nt it wasn't hnslnraa It
