Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 358, 31 October 1909 — Page 6

THE RICHMOND PATXADIU3I AXD SHN-TELEGRA3I, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 190t.

PAGE SIX.

ITCHItIG SEEMED

TO BE INCURABLE

Terrible Red Patches on Face and Arms Made Victim Ashamed to be Seen Suffered Intensely for Ten Months Expert Treatment Gave No Relief Two Sets of the

CUTICURA REMEDIES ENTIRELY CURED HER

lATIEIITIOIi GIVEN

TO NITRATE ASA CeOPJEBTILIIER

Attention Called a Decade Ago

By Sir William Crooks Because of Shortage of the Wheat Crop.

"About two years ago I contracted eczema and suffered intensely for about ten months. At times I thought I would scratch myself to pieces. My face and arms were covered with large red patches, so that I was ashamed to go out. I was advised to go to a doctor who was a specialist in skin diseases, but I received very little relief. I tried every known remedy, with the same result. I thought I would never get better until a friend of mine told me to try the Cuticura Remedies. So I tried thero as the last resource, and I am very

glad that I did, ror alter lour or nm applications of Cuticura Ointment I was relieved of my unbearable itching. 1 used two sets of the Cuticura Remedies (Soap, Ointment and Pills), and I am completely cured. I always recommend Cuticura to any one that is suffering and in every case it seems to cure. Miss Barbara Krai, 29 Mt. Pleasant Ave., Highlandtown, Md., Jan. 9, 08. Fretful Babies Suffering from Skin Humors, Soothed to Sleep by Cuticura. A warm bath with Cuticura Soap and gentle anointing with Cuticura Ointw mascot a m H

twAAtAat rf emolli-

ents, afford immediate

relief in the most dis- ' wMiainff fnrma of itch

ing, burning, scaly and

crusted humors, eczemas, rashes, inflammatlnna irrirAtionH And

chafifigsof infancy and

'childhood, permit rest and sleep and point to uruxuHv cure when all

other remedies fail. Guaranteed absolutely pure and may be used from the hour of birth. Cuticura Soap (25c.). Ointment (50c), Resolvent 60O ami Chocolate Coated Pills (25p.). are aold thrmif hout the world. Potter Driw Chem. Corp..

MTMailad Fies, Cuticura JJooa on Skin D

NINE DIE III BLAZE

("American News Service) St. Johnsbury, Vet, Oct. :. Nine persons perished, two more are dying, and five others are in a serious condition, as the result of a fire which destroyed the Citizens' Saving block, the

principal business block of this city this morning. Two of the men jumped from the upper stories and were instantly killed. Seven victims were burned to death. The loss is placed at fl."i0,00a The origin of the fire Is unknown.

CHILI NITRATE BEDS

THE WORLD'S SUPPLY

This Will Be Exhausted and

The Sole Solution Now Is to

Manufacture It From the Atmosphere.

tries have this power in guincwm

eni.r to nrovide the output requir

ed, and not so many years ago it was

not known that the United states naa

it. Since then, however, the water power question has assumed a new phase, and what seemed a dream then has become almost a commonplace today. Germany and Sweden were the first countries to avail themselves of the new process. Scandinavia is rich in

water power, and has proved an ad

mirable field for experimentation.

There are now under construction processes which will utilize 120,000 horse

nower. The plants have proven a

commercial success, and have led to a

movement to establish the nitrogen

manufacture on a great scale in this country.

This is the point where the struggle of certain allied interests to obtain a monopoly of water powers in the West becomes a vital factor. The normal development of nitrogen plants has been impeded. Delays the Inevitable. There can be no doubt that the partial absorption of power sites has

morolv Helaved the inevitable. To

SYSTEM CHANGES

IN DEPARTMENTS Employes Are to Be Shifted And Classified Under The Plan.

VETERANS RULED AGAINST

ATTORNEY GENERAL DECIDES THAT IN REDUCTION OF RANK AND SALARY OLD SOLDIERS AND SAILORS ARE NOT IMMUNE

Money Come In Bunches to A. A. Chisholm, of Treadwell. N. Y.. now. His reason is well worth reading: "For a long lime I suffered from indigestion, torpid iiver, constipation, nervousness, and general debility," he writesi "I couldn't, sleer., had no appetite, nor ambition, grew weaker every day in spite of all medical treatment. Then used Electric Bitters. Twelve bottles restored all my oldtime health and visor. Now I can attend to business every day. It's a wonderful medicine." Infallible for Stomach, Liver, Kidneys, Blood and Nerves. 50c at A. G. Luken & Co.

MAY COTTON SOARS

(American News Service) New York, Oct. 30. W. P. Brown, of

New Orleans, the leader of the cotton bull movement paid $15.01 for the May cotton options this morning, establishing the high water mark. James E. Patten is supposed to be behind the cotton boom. Great excitement marked the trading today.

Washington, Oct. . CO. ft wns not until Sir William Crooks, the great British scientist, sounded a note of alarm about a decade ago, regarding a shortage In the world's wheat supply, that serious attention was directed to

"the nitrogen problem." 1

Nitrate as a fertilizer is the ope'i sesame to large crops. Consequently the world has faced for many years a rapidly increasing demand with a rapidly diminishing supply. It has been axiomatic that upon nitrogen depended the maintenance of the wheat

crop at its present proportions. "The population of the world is increasing so rapidly," Sir William Crooks said, "that the supply of wheat will shortly not be sufficient to feed it. I predict the approaching exhaustion of the world's stock of fix

ed nitrogen, the great fertilizer for wheat, used in ever increasing quan-

Exhausted Soon. He added that the nitrate beds of

Chili, which are the sole source of the world's supply, would possibly last fifty years, if used at the rate of a million tons a year, but he foresaw its entire exhaustion inside of twenty years. There is but one solution it is thought the manufacturer of nitrogen from air. When it is realized that land yielding but 11.9 bushels per acre

without nitrogen fertilizer will produce 36.4 bushels with, it, the importance of the problem is seen. Scientists fully realize they are battling with one

of the vital problems of human existence, and have set out to conquer it in that spirit. Ten years has seen such radical progress in chemistry that the element is being artificially produced now. and in a few years more the Chilean beds will become a small factor in the total supply. The problem, scientists claim, is solved. The raw

product is the atmosphere, which contains exhaustless quantities of nitrogen. That this source is limitless may

be seen from the fact that there is enough nitrogen over each square mile of the earth's surface to produce more niter than is to be found in all Chili. The secret of extracting nitro

gen from the air, at such a cost as to make it commercially valuable, has been learned. Gets Turkish Bath. Plainly speaking, nitrogen is manufactured by treating the air to an "electrical Turkish bath," involving a heat of many thousand degrees. Enor

mous power is required, and unless it is cheap the proposition is impracticable.

Under present conditions water

power alone is low enough in cost to

make artificial nitrogen a commercial

proposition. Comparatively few coun-

(American News Service) Washington, Oct. 30. The best evi-

; dence that the heads of the several ex-

merely delayed the inevitable, i o ( department3 mean to reorganhave the manufacture of artificial nit-, ...... , , rogen fall into the hands of a trust , and classify the employes undei would be a calamity. When Chilean , their jurisdiction Is contained in a . . .!n i ; oninion recently ren-lered bv Attorney-

nitrogen becomes scarce, mere win - - - - a hue and cry from the American far-! General TV ickershani. who, in responso ., .u . ,., tIifi 'to the president, decides that in th?

mer. lie win men ottc iuc ""' ..... j i M nf the finht for water nower. ! matter of reduction in salary and ra.ik,

... j.. . ,v, f ex-sold icrs and ex-sa-lorj and their

the chemist and technologist that the j widows and orphans are mt.tled ,o no

1 pi fit It" ill. UalCl Cl W-ll. Oianu wi ran

to come will doubtless see better and equal footing w,th other employes.

in the congressional elections next

vear. The basis for this opinion is

the fact that more than two million

copies of the speeches delivered in the

house and senate during the extra ses

sion have been ordered As? members

f the house and senate.

The democratic congressional com-1

mittee, it is said, will circulate thou

sands of copies of the speeches delivered by Senators Dolliver, LaFollette and Cummins, three of the leading republican progressives in the senate. These senators charged that the Payne bill fell short of keeping the promise made in the Chicago platform and, in fact, severely attack the Payne bill fn every schedule. It is this dis

content in the West that gives mem

bers of the democratic congressional

committee encouragement and hope

for a democratic house in the next

coneress. If it was not lmer.aea mai

th tariff should figure in next yearV

wtinns. It is highly improbable that

millions of copies of tariff speeches

would be circulated, when, as a nrat

ter of fact, no elections were at hand.

in administration circles the state

ment is made that President Taft will ;

be satisfied to have the tariff as an

issue in the campaign next year. The

two months during wnicn me rajn?

bill has been in force indicates that It

will be a revenue producer and that.

while it may not yield revenue me

first year to equal the expenditures, it is likely that within two years, provided the administration's program of economy is continued, it will produce a surplus. This, of course, includes revenue from the corporation tax.

t r

rV d O

more efficient methods than those now in use, but technically the problem has been conquered. No one scientist is given the credit for this, for the principle of extracting nitrogen from the air was long ago established, and it remained only for modern science to reduce it to the

purposes of commerce. this it nas

done.

The United States annually imports about 255,000 short tons of nitrogen of

which about one-sixth is used for agricultural purposes. Fully 60 percent of it is used in the manufacture of explosives. It enters largely into the processes of enameling, glass-mak

ing, pickling, and the manufacture or minor chemicals, but the farmer's in

terest in nitrogen is more vital than

any other. It Is he who should see to it that

the new industry in this country is properly developed, and the importation of nitrogen thus slowly but surely decreased. It constitutes one of the

strongest reasons why the water sites of the country should not be allowed to fall into the hands of monopoly, for the prospects of future development are almost beyond computation.

Its A Top Notch Doer. Great deeds compel regard. The

world crowns its doers. That's why

the American people have crowned

Dr. King's New Discovery the King of Throat and Lung remedies. Every

atom is a health force. It kills germs, nH colds and la grinne vanish. It

heals cough-racked membranes and coughing stops. Sore, inflamed bronchial tubes and lungs are cured and hemorrhages cease. Dr. Geo. More, Black Jack, N. C. writes "it cured me of lung trouble, pronounced hopeless by all doctors." 50c, $1.00. Trial bot

tle free. Guaranteed by A. G. Luken

& Co.

For many years, ex soldiers, ex-sail

ors and their widows and orphans

holding positions '.inde- the government, have been looked upon as the

wards of the nation. I.i other wonli they were given the preference in tUe matter of appointments, promotions and dismissals. When occasion arose tnst necessitated a reduction of the force iu a department or separate unreal of the goverrfment. as, for instance the gov

ernment printing office, Mi cvl war

veterans and their widows ard orphans, would be the last to go. Later, this same preference was extended to the Spanish war veterans. And even when it came to cutting expenses by reducing salaries in the departments, the preference still held good. Never before, so far as can be ascertained, has the Attorney-General been

asked for an opinion en the lav.' cohering this ruhject. The fact that the preference for war veteran? ?.nd their wM"ws. and or

phans does not apply to a reduction of salary or rank is construe! to nieai

that in the "shake-up" in the Treasury

department soon to take place, em

ployes who have entered the service through the civil pervic; in the last few years will fill th places of those who hav become superannuated in the service, and thus there will be a redistribution of salarie-.. Secretary MacVeah does not want to do an injustice to anyone, but he

realizes that it is neeea.a:y to give the

Congress has been most liberal in the matter of appropriations during the last two years, and the expenses

of the government have increased beyond all reason. For instance, for the fiscal vear ended June 30. 1907, the

ordinary disbursements of the govern

ment amounted to $5dl,i0o,l-9

In two years from that date to be more exact, for the fiscal year ended Tune SO. 1909 the ordinary disburse

ments reached the enormous sum of

$6fi2,324,444, an Increase of over J100, nrtfl 000.

It is said, on high authority, that it

was this statement showing the in creased cost of running the govern

ment that caused President Taft to

issue the order to the heads of the departments to devise ways and means

of reducing expenses. " MEANING OF ECONOMY.

Te CUvrt Ua of Monay at Your

Disposal.

A young matron who Is the envy oi her set on account of the clever and

skillful way in which she makes the most of a moderate income was dis

cussing the meaning of economy the

other day and gave it as her opinion

that, although many persons made a net subject of economy, a very small

percentage of them understand the

W V

I ) ( K 4 u

Grows Hair

and we can PROVE IT! The Great DANDERINE Nevei Fails to Produce the Desired Results.

T enlivens and invigorates lit ImIF . elands tlianra of tl

resulting la a continuous aatf Increasing growth of th hair.

Letter ef prmlM am eoattBoalle eesitnc la from aemriy all pn ft the coaatry atattac tan Haaaertaa ku rraee4 th growth of hair la riHi that wr coajidered at lately hoplM. A lady from Frooklya writ: "After a abort trial nav h&lr torreU falling, and 1 bow have a lot! be4 of hair, very heavy and err oa aa4 a quarter yard Kw-

DanderiOC stimulates (K seals, males it healthy and keeps it so. It is the greatest scalp invigorstot known. It is a holcame medicine lor both th hair and aralp. EveB a small bottle of it will put more geaulae life la you hair than a gallon of any other hair tonic ever nude. It shows results from the very start. Now on sale at every drug and toilet store in the land; 3 aises 2SC,SOO and 01.OO

SCe.. To b'W bow o.tal-kly wWmW ltsnutairiMaria.w will aead a large earnr-l fr by return mall loaayoo who . ola thi ireeeonpoB to to

Out ImsUm Dtaiariat Ca.. Cafes,

I with thrtrntm and addre I and 100 Is allvcr or elamp 1 to pay poatag.

one's looks. With hair, skin, teem

and figure in good condition it was

easier to look nice, and the others admitted that neglect of one's hair and tetth did mean extra large bills at the hairdresser's and dentist s.

CHICHESTER S PILLS

TimeFor Hardy Shrubs

Fred H. Lemon & Co.

Florists and Decorators.

2v

It. X

lu.1 A.k wear Itiaaatal

CMba lee's IHaeo Braa llll la aad 14 Mtallic' fllMA Ilthta-

Taa ber. B ftrfwr.

it 1 aT"' ttiiii" Bllli! MBAKBt PILLS. . . . KT - . . ......

SMD BY DRUGGISTS

hat It is necea-.y to gue ine - -eeononiT."

young clerk a chance, and pay him

is worth. This can only be, " uul ,J"'"-' "

NEW STOCK COMPANY

Articles of incorporation for $25,000

were filed today with the secretary of state by the Alexandria Coal and Ice Co., with Edgar F. Hiatt, Prof. F. It. Torrence and Wilfred Jessup, all of this city, as the incorporators. Tho capital stock of the company is $25,000. This company will do business in Alexandria, Ind.

i what he is worth. This can only oe t

j done by reducing those clerks -vho j

have given tneir Dest unae ana pnrrnj (

to the government and who have now ! passed the age when they can meet the ';

requirements. , A very large number of the em

ployes in the treasury department be-1 long to the class known as civil war veterans. They hold preferred positions in the matter of salary. It is they who are to be reduced, thus making way for "younger blood." It Is said this plan has been adopted in preference to dismissal and calling on the civil service to fill vacancies. The opinion prevails that the other

departments will adopt the Macveagh plan, and that the outcome will be legislation providing for the retirement for superannuated employes in

the classified service. Secretary MacVeagh is said to be favorable to the Gillett bill, which was reported to the house in the last congress.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.

There seems to be no doubt but that many congressmen feel confident

that the tariff will be a leading issue

but the best and cleverest use of the money at their disposal," she said. "An income of $100,000 a year may be spent economically as well as an income of $1,000. The $100,000 man or

woman may get Just as great ralue

for his or her income as the man or

woman who has only $1,000 a year

The others took up the question there were seven of them in the group and

aired their views.

One declared her pet abhorrence was

the obvious economy, the economy that looks on economy. Another de

clared thnt all her economy only led

to extravacance. because she finally

had to cet the thing she wanted, while

doing without it had led to dodder-

inir exnenses and dissatisfaction. All

a creed that it took a clever and ex

perienced woman to be cleverly economicalin fact, some one who had

at one time been extravagant and had oninvori the educative influence of

havine money to spend for to have

had to be careful all one's days is

most frightfully narrowing. une thought it made it much easier to are one's, monej It one took care . of

Richmond Feed Store Feed All Kinds

Phone 2196.

11-13 N. Oth

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If yea ars troubled wtth sick bssdschs. easv stipsttoa. tediaTMtJoa. offenahrs breath or aor diseasa arialna from stomach trouble. fMtSte or $1 bottls of Dr. Caldwell's Syrsp Vmpttm U Is positively ruirintssfl to cars yoa.

I

Mme. Steinheil Trial Will Be of the Greatest Interest

SENT UP FOR LIFE

(American News Service) Connersville, Ind., Oct. 30. The jury in the case of John Wilson, on trial for the third time charged with murdering his wife returned a verdict of guilty this morning. He was sentenced to life imprisonment.

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(American News Service) i Paris, Oct. 30. Greatly exceeding in public interest the Dreyfus case, the forthcoming trial of Mme. Marguerite Steinheil for the murder of her husband, Adolph Steinheil, and of her mother-in-lay, Mme. Japy, with iti promise of revelations concerning the sudden demise of the late President

Faure, of France, is the topic of the

hour in Paris. The opening of the cel

ebrated action is scheduled for Wednesday, November 3.

The indictment upon which Mmej

Steinheil is to be tried recapitulates

the activities of the Paris police for a year and a half, and in its details it rivals any French detective story ever penned.

It suggests a motive for the crime in

the intense animosty borne her mother-in-law. Mme. Japy, by Mme. Stein

heil, and the latter's evident wish to

be freed from her husband that she might wed Maurice Borderel, a wealthy Frenchman, who had become infatuated with her. Personages high in French political diplomatic, judicial and social life will be, without doubt, dragged into the case, and startling disclosures are looked for when the tafcing of evidence commences. It is hardly likely that the Dreyfus

case, the Humbert case and the Syvc-'

Hon mystery together caused so prt- ' faund a sensation throughout France, j

lu the prominence of the persons involved, the strange atmosphere of mys

tery that envelops its every angle, the trailing revelations it already has caused, and the still more appalling revelations it incessantly threatens, this murder mystery i.jver has been equaled since newspipers were published for the first time. It reveals the fact, hushed up through nine years, that President Felix Faure was poisoned to death at the home of Mme. Adolphe Steinheil. a beautiful Parisienne, February 16,

1800, instead of dying of apoplexy in his own mansion, the EJysee Palace,

as officially given out at the time. It explains, at least in part, the

strangling of M. Adolphe Steinheil, the woman's husband, and his mother inlaw, Mme. Japy, by the alleged fact that Steinheil held documents proving the murder of the president. It involves Magistrate Ledyette, one of the most honored judges in France Open charges were made that he had prevented the investigation of the ca.sf through illicit use of his great judicial influence.

It involves the honesty and integrity of the famous secret police of

France. Mme. Steinheil was a woman spy of this bureau, and it hs even been hinted that secret police aided in the murder of her Husband and Mme. Japy.

I November 27, 1908 Magistrate Ley-

neue wnnaraws irom me case, wnicn is sent to Magistrate Boucard and then to Examining Magistrate Andrew. December, 1908 Mme. Steinheil undergoes the ordeal of examination at the hands of Judge Andre, famed throughout France as "the terrible Magistrate," and although she does not commit herself, she is held for trial. November 3, 1909 The fair prisoner is to be formally arraigned for trial upon indictment charging her with dual murder. The arrest of Mme. Steinheil came as

a dramatic climax to a series ot sensational events. After she had unsuccessfully tried to throw suspicion upon

did not hesitate to print what they term the story of this affair. According to these stories M. Faure had met Mme. Steinheil in the Swiss Alps dur

ing the army maneuvers the year pre

vious to his death.

Immediately after this, according to

the same authority, M. Steinheil, who

had been complacent at the friendship

existing between Faure and his wi'e and who had accepted the Legion of Honor at the hands of President Faure,

began proceedings for divorce, but through the intervention of his family

this suit was withdrawn a foitnight

afterward.

. According to gossip, compromising

papers of some political importance

Molt (Duntl oil CeinmciiBQ And Ain't Going to Be Everybody is hurrying cement work to completion before freezing weather, and cement stocks are running: low. Dealers do not like to carry it over the winter. We have specially fixed to take care of everybody that may be caught short of cement. If your dealer fails you. you can get it at Mather Erottlieirs Co.

3 PER CENT. ON SAVINGS

Ask to see

The Dy-Town Sanitary scd Ecccicd

Take oat the bristles In strips to renew. Several styles. Prices from 9tM to ItM. W. H. ROSS DRUG COMPANY. Phone 1217. 804 Main St. Autotlme exposure scales to tit any camera. !. .

It threatens the gravest of official scandals and involves the reputations of one can only guess how many officials of the highest rank in the government-Here is the story, chapter by cbap'r-r. in chronological order, of this mo.t amazing and picturesque of modern "mysteries of Paris." February 10, 1890 Felix Faure, president of the French republic, t'ies probably by poison, in the residet.ee

of M and Mme. Adolphe Steinheil. ilie woman, presumably, having poisoned him. February 28, 1S99 -President Faure

buried with solemn ceremonies, it hav

ing been given out that he died of apoplexy. May 31, 190S Shortly after mdiiight, Mr. Steinheil. artist, and Mmo. Jspy, his mothe-in-iay ari founi strangled to death. June 7, 1908 Mme. Steinheil is arrested. She denies her guilt-

July 13, 1908 Mm-?, feteinheil accus cne Wolff. He is arrvsied July 14, 1908. Wolff proves himself it.nocent and is freci. November 1V. 1908 Facts of President Fa u re's death are published at last. Public opinion demands that the entire mystery be cleared up.

one man. an American journalist, nam- j were surrendered, but M- Rochefort reed Frederick H. Burlingham, she dra- peatedly charged that others remained

matically charged another, Alexandre

Wolff, son of a former servant in the Steinheil household, with the murders Political opponents of the government, like Henri Rochefort. endeavored at the time to make political capital of the affair by seeking to force an exposure of the scandal connected with the mysterious death of Felix Faure, president of the republic in 1S99. Although hushed up at the time, it was

common knowledge of those behind the scenes that Mme. Steinheil was with M. Faure when Faure died. Mme. Steinheil also is alleged to have been the friend of President Faure, of Magistrate teydette, who first investigated the mystery, and of other men of prominence. Her great beauty is declared to have been used in a remarkable series of political intrigues. It was alleged that the woman hand

ed Faure poisoned wine ten times after

he entered her house, a guest, and that

he was dead five minutes later. Further, it was alleged that the body lay for an hour on a sofa in the parlor, and that a brigadier and three men of the secret police carried it to the carriage, which was driven rapidly back to the Elysee. Some of the Parisian newspapers

in the possession of Steinheil at the time of his murder. The sensations of the day were capped by the direct charge of the Libre Parole that Mme. Steinheil poisoned

President Faure.

And now the great case is to come up

in the courts again, and all France is

breathlessly awaiting the additional

revelations that are expected to ensue.

fj,'k

DEL J. Ae WALLS. THE SPECIALIST

21 Sonth Teat SU.

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