Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 161, 18 April 1909 — Page 7

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THE KlCimOWIFALlJKZOXIKf-TElJEGIlAJa, SUJfDAT, AFTXTL 18, PAGE SEVEJf. GIVES ATTEUTIOf TO OHIO AFFAIRS President Taft Is , Trying to

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You may have it all figured out just who's going to win, and why, and how; you may be posted on "form" and have the averages and percentages down fine; or you may not care much about itnor be any where between these extremes. Men are like that about clothes as well as base ball; some are over-critical, some are careless, but the great big ma-

jority of us want good clothes; and want to be sure of getting them. We've got the right things for all of these men, the .

critical, the indifferent the sensible. They're

Sctafraeir

& Mini

GotOies

the best all-wool it We sell them

and they meet every requirement that can be fairly made of clothes, They're stylish ; they're made of fabrics; they're tailored in the most perfect manner known to the craft; they're right; and we know

because they're right; for you and for us. . You should wear Hart, Schaffner & Marx clothes for your own sake; for the satisfaction of having such clothes; for the economy of quality, and style, and correct fit; you can do it for $18 to $28. This store is the home 'of Hart, Schaffner & Marx clothes

on, tamill'Dini ;i Compaon

524 Main Street

Straighten Out All Party - Differences. V . .

WANTS HARUONY PREVAIL

IN AN EFFORT TO BRING THIS

ABOUT HE IS CONSULTING FREELY WITH SENATORS DICK AND BURTON.

By Sheldon S. Clin. Washington. April 17. White wan

lng for congress to get th tariff bill

ready for his signature President

Taft is devoting a good deal of tats time trying to straighten oat the af

fairs of the republican party in Ohio.

He is exceedingly anxious that har-

mony should prevail ia his own state

and In the hope of achieving It ha is

consulting freely with Senators Dick and Burton and the republican mem

bers of the Ohio delegation in th

house.

60 far as surface indications go Sen

ators Dick and Burton are working- in harmony, but ia the very nature of

things the harmony cannot extend very far beneath the surface. Coming

as they both do from the north-east.

era part of the state, their homes

within thirty miles of each other.

their interests are naturally antagon

istic Tradition in Ohio gives one

senator to the northern and one to the southern part of the state, and when Burton was elected to succeed Foraker he very materially reduced Dickon chances of re-election. And just as Dick didn't want Burton elected, so It would be to Burton's interests to have Dick defeated for re-election. . Would Turn Tables. Should Dick be returned to the senate two years hence Burton teem would be In the. same unhappy position Dick now occupies, his chances of re-election complicated by the de

mand of the southern part of the state

for recognition. Cherles P. Tart, the president's brother. Is regarded as certain to be a candidate for Dick's toga, so, this Is added as an additional embamus-'' meat to the president In his efforts to preserve harmony In Ohio. 8enator Dick 'never has pretended to be a Taft man and there does not exist a single reason, as reasons ordinarily are guaged'ln politics, why the president should regard the senator's Interests In the making of Ohio appointments. Yet, should the preslder fall to give Dick the same consideration Burton received the charge would be made that the president was seeking to enhance his brother's political fortunes at Dick's expense, and Dick still has sufficient following to make harmony impossible should such suspicion hotf sway. VYar-t Recognition. Tet the Ohio republicans who fought Tart's battle against the Poraker-Dick combination are clamorinr for recos

nltion and it is only natural that th

president should wish to favor them. While It probably Is true the relations between Burton and the nreldmt r

not so close as they once were. Burton was one of the original Taft boomers

and stood by the Taft banner from first to last. Burton naturally reasons that he ought to have the Inside track of Dick, whose re-election as senator would be a menace to Burton, and It is galling that Dick should be consult

ed eoually with him when Ohio aa pointments are to be made.

It Is a tribute to Tart's abiHtv m.

barmonlzer that he has managed ts

preserve this fsr the semblance of aa

cord between the Ohio senators, but

a break Is as certain as niatit ! tsur.

tain to follow day. Dick and Burton

each going to try to secure appointments whici will serve his own cause, and as their political fortunes travel .

opposite roads the president In his

present coarse will not Ions: be able to

satisfy both or either of them. Whem

the Inevitable break comes Ohio re.

publicans are likely , to have even s

bigger row on hands than they have had during the past year.

1)

A n Indianapolis Man has A Number Of Educated Hens

t Indianapolis, April 17. Every body bus heard of the athletic girl and the athletic boy, but it was for John S. Hunt, who has a little "farm up In Cornelius avenue, where he sojourns when he is not down town workin;, to develop the "athletic hen," Around the court house and other places where he is often seen, Huat has fame as a sort of physical director to the hen. And it all came from the fact that he subscribed to a poultry journal, read it with great cai 3 and thought, then proceeded to apply all that It told him about hens. A little red rooster that can do a hop step and jump, a big white rooster that can do a standing high Jump of something more than three feet, ractng chickens, chickens that can turn handsprings these are some of the wonders of the Hunt chicken yard. He admits all these things and says, therefore, that they need no proof. ."Well. a friend wanted to know, 'how. can a chicken turn a handspring when it has no hands?" ' Part of Training. "Oh. that's just a part of the trainteg," Hu&t replied. And further, ho

would say cothing on that subject. In the first place, he became possessed of the "chicken bug." He fell to figuring one day. He figured that If one hen could lay a hundred eggs in a year and the poultry journal "ads told him about hens that did better

than this then It would be posslb'e for this hen to raise a hundred chick.?. Half ot these, the roosters, he would sell." At cents each this woulJ make each hen earn him a year In the production of Tries." Then lie next year each of the remaining fifty (counting out the roosters) would repeat the programme laid out for them by the example of th.rr mother. And so, starting with tea hens and carrying the figures along for a few years he had a .vision of acres upon acres aye. section of land all covered with chickens, marching constantly In companies, regiments, divisions toward market for him. ' !v. So he bought some eggs. Some of them hatched., - Some of the little chicks liTed. Some of them developed Into the egg-producing kind of chicken. 'And some of this kind laid eggs, some of the lime. All to the end that

he found there were more "ifs" than eggs in the chicken business.' Net Diseeuraged. But was he discouraged?. By an overwhelming majority he was not. He only devoted himself more faithfully to the poultry journal. It; told him what to do about the hen that failed, neglected and refused to lay. r Such hens, he found, needed exercise. And thus it was that he went into the physical training business. "First, 1 got a lot of straw, and

when I fed those chickens I threw the feed oewn ia the straw. They had to scratch or starve. That developed their "wind. you see. And as their wind-got better, they naturally could run faster and farther than any chickens you ever heard tell of. "And then I read about how to give them more exercise, for they were so busy scratching and mantes races they didnt have time to lay, and as far as I could And out from, the poultry paper, they were absolutely sure to lay If they just had enough exercise. : And so I began to give them bones to 'gnaw and tied those bones up in the air so they would have to jump when they picked the meat off. "At first the bones were a half foot above the head of tie tallest rooster. When all the. chickens in the"-' pea could jump and reach them, I strung them six inches higher. And so they west higher and higher till the axe

no wthree feet high and still going up. I had to put an extra wire on the fence. I cropped their wings so they couldn't fly over the fence, all, right, but I found how they were getting over. They were jumping! - ? "Oh, yes, he said in reply, as to the eggs, "I did forget the eggs. I guess they lay some now. But you know it doesn't make much difference whether they lay or not as long as they can jump so admirably!

Words To Freeze The SouL "Yoar son has CobsusboUob. His case is hopeless." These appalling words were spoken to Geo. EL Pleven, a leading merchant of Springfield. X. C by tTo expert doctore one a lung specialist. Then was shown the wonderful power of Dr. King's New Discovery. "After three weeks se," writes Mr. Bieveas, "he was as well as ever. I would not take all the money in the world for what it did for my boy." Infallible for Coughs and Colds, its the safest, surest care of desperate Long diseases on earth. 50c end Sl.oO. A. C LoVen Jb Co. Guarantee satisfaction. - Trial bottle tree.

An impresario is a manager, agent or cocductor of a troupe of operatic or concert singera: also, rarely, a teacher or trainer of sach singers.

A MANUFACTURED CUUATE Methods f the Paris Market Gardeners In Forcing Nature. The gardeners of Paris cet their products on the market weeks before the regular season for them. This forcing of nature is described by Ernest Poole in Success Magaslne. The secret is simply this: The French maraichers haTe manufactured a climate to suit them. As one observer has said. They have moved the climate of Monte Carlo up to the suburbs of Paris." Some new prodigy of modern science, this? Not at a2L Only enormous expense In money and tn tine. The gardens, whenever possible, are placed on land w!th a slope to the smith and are well protected by walls on the north and east, walls buOt to reflect right as well as to give protection from the northeast winds. The ground is practically covered with glass, not as in a greenhouse, but by glass frames in the open, -three Iibt frames of uniform size. 12 by 4H feet, and also by glass bells. These, too. are of a uniform size, about the shape f a chapel bell, a little less than verenteen inches In diameter end

from fourteen to fifteen inches higu.j The Freneii call them clecbes. Y ,

may often see over a thousand frames and over 10.000 glass bells in one twoacre p4otla the suburbs of Paris.

jk. more'TotenX innovation Is the

pioymeat of hot water pipes run

the eon. making of the earth a.verttabte steam heated hotel, with this essential difference, that the hotel keeper here ts desperately eager, not to keep his guests, but to ptiiund them to leave on the earliest passible day.

A Mwnorabt Wrack. The most asemorable wreck fat the history of the American surf was that of the berk Mexico, stranded on Hempstead beach. Long Island, early in the morning of Jan. 8. 1537. She carried 104 passenaers and a crew of twelve men. Four passengers and four of the crew were saved by a serfbeat from the beach under the command of Baynor Rock Smith. All others, were frozen to death, though the wreck was se cfose to the shore that their cries and even aome of their words were plainly heard on the beach. It was the story of this wreck, as pehBafaed

throughout the aatfoa. that led te the

establishment of the TJaJted life aeving wi 1 h c Scrap Book.

The types play aome cueer tricks on newspapers and their readers. The

Kennebec Journal, an old. Maine

atandby. was made to say recently

t!iat Tale hd a nerrow ejeane from f orn: shing the President Is 1776. Til-

den was a Tale man although 111 health

compelled h!m to leave the colieae be

fore he received his

The essentia characteristic of ambergris is the penetrating and peculiar odor, similar to that of musk. It is so powerful and so diffusive in its perfume that the most minute quanti

ty when mingled with any other strong scent ia still perceptible. Its chief component Is a fatty matter, called

ambrien. which Is got by boiling bergris in alcohoL

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