Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 25, 2 December 1909 — Page 3

THE RICII3IOXD PALLADIUM AND SUX TELEGRA3I, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1909. ,

PAGE THREE

Wo Troat You

30 Days FREE

Blood poison can never be cured with mercury or potash. You might as well know this first as last. Medi

cal authorities say so. The most

these drugs can do is to drive the

blood poison back into the system and

mother it for several years. Then when you think you are cured, pitiful

mercury symptoms will break out, and

you find that your bones have been rotting all the while. Your teeth will begin to loosen and your tissues, glands, brain and vital organs will Bhow the terrible destructive power of the mercury and potash. Locomotor Ataxia, Paralysis, Imbecility and Premature death are then almost inevitable. Any medical authority will corroborate these statements. The remarkable vegetable Obbac Treatment does not drive in the

TROUBLE 111 RANKS OF STATE LEAGUE Resignations of Some of the Saloon Fighters Are Now Expected.

A DIVISION OF SENTIMENT

QUESTION OF WHETHER STATEWIDE PROHIBITION OR BETTERMENT OF PRESENT LAWS CAUSES ALL THE TROUBLE.

SCHOLARS TO MEET

At Anniversary of American Historical and Economic Associations.

NEW YORK MEETING PLACE

A TOBACCO REPORT

Agriculture Department Submits Some Interesting Figures.

KENTUCKY IS THE LEADER

Blood Poison

"but drives it out

tains no mineral poisons whatever, so

that once cured by the Obbac Treatment you never run the terrible risk of having your bones soften. your nerves collapse, your teeth fall out, your kidneys degenerate or your brain weaken. The Obbac Treatment is a marvel, producing remarkable changes in only .' days. This is why we offer to any blood poison victim living, no matter how bad a case, a 30-Day Treatment FREE You want to be cured and cured quick not poisoned with mercury and

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ment is yours for the asking. You will open your eyes at what it will do for you in a month. We treat you free for a month. Just write to us and get the treatment free. Then if you are satisfied it is the most remarkable treatment you ever took, you can continue if you wish. Never in your life, will you ever again have such an opportunity for a complete cure, as is given you by this Great Obbac Treatment

This is a square deal. You sign nothing, no notes, makes us no promises, except to take the treatment. The wonderful Wasserman Test, the only blood poison test known to scientists, proves that the body is completely purified by the Obbac Treatment, and that mercury and potash do not cure blood poison. Sit down and write to us, giving a full history of your case in detail. We will treat your letter as a sacred confidence. Consultation and advice free. We will send you also the remarkable book, ' Driving Out Blood Poison," free. THE OBBAC CO. 1779 Rector BIdg , Chicago, III.

(Palladium Special) Indianapolis, Dec. 2. There are strong surface indications that a ruction is on in the ranks of the Indiana Anti-Saloon league, and that within a short time, probably within the next few days, there may be some resignations among the officers of the organization. It is known that there is a division of sentiment among them as to whether the league should stand in favor of state wide prohibition at

this time or whether it should go ahead as it has been going and strengthen the liquor laws from time to time until it is found that the sentiment of the people of the state demands state wide prohibition. It is known that E. S. Shumaker,

It positively con-state superintendent of the league, is

in favor of pressing forward at once for a prohibition law, and that he has the following of many members of the league. Barney Not a Prohi. On the rfher hand, it is known that E. M. Barney, superintendent of the Indianapolis district, and R. C. Minton, attorney for the league, are not in favor of pressing for prohibition at

this time. Tliey believe it wil! be safer to wait a while and get everything in just the right condition before the league goes after a prohibitory law. A few weeks ago a meeting of the

trustees of the Anti-Saloon league was to have been held in this city, but it was called off and it is said now that the reason was that it was feared there might be a serious division in the ranks on the prohibition question, if the directors came together at that time. At least, the meeting was not held, but it is understood that another will be called within the next few weeks. And there are indications that when the trustees get together they will declare in favor of a state wid-3 prohibition law and begin laying plans to bring it about. Just what Barney and Minton will do under such circumstances cannot be told now. All parties are maintaining a deep silence on the subject.

New York, Dec. 2. Upon the occasion of the twenty-fifth anniversaries of the American Historical and American Economic associations, which will be celebrated in this city, Dec. 27 to 31, scholars in sociology, economics and other similar subjects will meet in convention. Learned men of all branches of science from foreign countries will be in attendance. Arrangements have been made for thirty sessions to be held during the convention at which addresses on scientific subjects will be delivered and discussed. Some of the prominent men expected to be present are: James Bryce. British ambassador to the United States; Henry Higgs of the Royal Economic Society of England, Pontaleoni of Italy, President Davis R. Dewey, American Economic Association;

President Albert Bushnell Hart, American Historical Association; President

A. Lawrence Lowell, American Polit

ical Science Association; President

Henry W. Farnam, American Associa

tion for Labor Legislation: President

W. G. Sumner, Americal Sociological Society; acting President S. N. D.

North, American Statistical Associa

tion; President John Finley, Ameri

can Social Science Association; G. W.

Prothero, London; Edward Meyer, Berlin; R. Altamira, Spain; C. T.

Colenbrander, Holland; Camille En-

lart, Paris; E. Dana Durand, Director

of the Census; Franklin H. Giddings,

Columbia University; W. S. Ferguson, Harvard University; Albert G. Keller, Yale University; Julian P,

Bretz, Cornell University; A. C. How-

land, University of Pennsylvania; Al

bion W. Small, University of Chicago;

Charles A. Ellwood, University of

Missouri; R. F. Scholz, University of

California; Frederic L. Paxson, Uni

versity of Michigan; Charles E. An

drews, Johns Hopkins University; H

L. Bourne, Western Reserve Universi

ty; Frank Heywood Hodder, Universi

ty of Kansas; Edward S. Meany, University of Washington; Waldo G. Leland, Carnegie Institute; Paul Dies-

ernd, Library of Congress, and Hon

W. L. MacKenzie, Canadian Minister

of Labor.

Take Off the Fat Where It Shows Most women suffer much humiliation because of great quantities of fat, bo located that, no matter how thev dress, everybody sees that they are abnormal. This i the day of the slend-1-fic-tire And fat wnmn bi-a - i .-.. I -

not tolerated either in business or so- '

cial affairs. Women may not know it. but men when they see a fat woman pass them on the street or in public places make all manner of sympathetic remarks about her. They do not mean to be unkind or to feem unmanly, but it is natural for a man to dislike fat

on a woman. here rat shows th?

most there is where it must be remov

ed, and as quickly as possible. This season's dresses seem to be made for

the fat woman's misery and the slender woman's delig-ht. They expose all the charms of woman and her ugliness

as wen. r,xercise and diet will not

remove fat. This has been proved. The famous Marmola prescription which has met with such phenomenal

uccess and has so many of our society

women as its sponsors, is now beiar in oim'nct

jom in ihiiipi iitnn iu meet me aemanu i of the public for this style of treat- ! state, less than 1 per cent of this coun-

ment. 1 hese little tablets j?o into vour system just like food. They stop the j try's crop is grown west of the MissiSstomach and digestive apparatus from . , . , , . , ...

producing rat and reduce the fat upon W. ucius iur win. houo-juo-the body at the rate of from 12 to 15 . taainni Ktat : .wh the Inrinstrv has

ounces a clay. I hey are harmless and " "

can be carried in your purse and taken gained much importance. even after you have indulged in a 1 " . . . .

hearty meal away from home. Th?y I KeniUCKy leaas an me states in to-

are sold at all drug stores at 7a cents hawn Ernwinsr. It. produces more

Your Hair is Worth lilt Afraid to use hair preparations? Dont know exactly what to do? Then why not consult your doctor? Isn't your hair worth It? Ask him If he endorses Aver s Hair Vigor for falling hair. Does not Color the oalir

J C t rvy Oct. Tj--n. Mm

DQWLING TO RETIRE

(Palladium Special) Indianapolis, Ind., Dec. 'Z. Charles .V. Miller. United States District Attorney for Indiana, and Henry M. Bowling, at present a member of the Indiana railroad commission, formed a law partnership in this city, and have opened offices in the American Central Life Building. Mr. Dowling will retire from the railroad commission on the first of January. While Mr. Miller was attorney general of Indiana for four years, Mr. Dowling was assistant attorney general, and the friendship of the two men has been of long standing. It is believed that this will be one of the strong law firms of the capital city. Whether Mr. Miller will desert Goshen and the Thirteenth district entirely, i not yet known, as he has not made any statement on the subject.

UNCLE SAM INVITED

CAmerican News Service) Washington, Dec. 2 Through Count Conrad de Buisseret, Steenbecque de Blarenghein, the Belgian minister to this country, Uncle Sam has received an invitation to attend the International Congress on Radiology and Electricity, to be held in Brussels in 1910. An international commission will be appointed at the forthcoming convention for the purpose of examining all questions pertaining to radiology.

A t Local Theaters

(Palladium Special) j Washington, Dec. 2. An interesting j report just issued by the Department j of Agriculture on tobacco production j

in the United States, shows while soni

every

re sold at all riruB stores at 75 cents i baeco growing case, or if you prefer you may write I ?'

Dept. 895, De

the Marmola Company

troit, Mich.

his bow to the American public as the leading player in a pure musical comedy. "The Prince of Tonight," wad staged by George Marion, that wizard of stagecraft, and he has left nothing

undone to make the musical numbers

a success.

Boyer Stock Company. The popular priced theatrical event of the season will take place at the Gennett next week when Nancy Boyer and her superb company of players will open in the "Girl From Out Yonder," a high-class play, demanding not

only brains on the part of the performers to interpret, but a full and complete scenic equipment as well, with Maine's sea-washed shores as the back-ground, with the charm and witchery of the sea, bringing to inland dwellers the life of the fisher folk and those who go down to the sea in ships. It is as far different from the average blood and thunder repertoire performances as could well be imagined, brim full of comedy of intense dramatic interest. It is safe to say that the "Girl From Out Yonder" is by far the strongest play ever produced at popular prices in America. To lovers of the better class of plays "The Girl From Out Yonder" will be a revelation in the way of popular priced entertainment.

than one-third of the United States's

crop, and about one-nintn oi me eu- j tire crop of the world. ! The tobacco grown in the United

States is of two general types or classes, cigar tobacco and chewing, smoking snuff, and export tobaccos. In 1!XS something more than l." million pounds of cigar tobacco was grown la the United States, and nearly four times that amount of the other types. The cigar tobaccos are grown mostly in New England. Pennsylvania, Ohio and Wisconsin, though there is a considerable and rapidly increasing production of this type in Georgia, Florida and Texas. The tobacco us?l for chewing, smoking, snuff and export are produced most heavily in Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, Virginia and South Carolina. Tobacco production is largely confined to certain clearly defined districts, each of which produces a special type and fills a demand for that type. The kind of tobacco grown in particular districts depends mainly on the soil and climate conditions.

Nothing so cheap for a good, wholesome, hearty breakfast, as Mrs. Austin's pancake flour. At all grocers.

Have your furs made into fur hat at C. A. Brehm's.

nice l-2t

How to Treat a Wife. An ancient Egyptian moralist, writing to his son. said: "If thou takest a wife try to make her happier than any of her women friends. She will b doubly bound to thee if the tie is sweet to her. Accord her what pleases her. She will appreciate the effort."

Just Once. It was Charley's first game of golf. His patient friend bad takeu him sadly around the eighteen holes and watched him hack the ball into small bits aud cut up the green as though it had been plowed by shrapnel. After the game Charley and his patient friend were talking to a few of the golfers on the clubhouse veranda. "That was a beautiful shot you made this afternoon, Charley," said his patient friend. Charley brightened up and flushed happily, while the young woman looked at him admiringly. "Which one?" he asked eagerly. "Why." said the patient friend. th time you hit the ball." Chicago Tribune.

The telephone and telegraph wires of the United States would encircle the earth at the equator more than six hundred times.

AWAY GOES INDIGESTION, GAS AND ALL STOMACH MISERY.

Better Than Usual. The vaudeville bill at the Murray this week is better than the usual run of vaudeville shows. Every act is clean and entertaining. The variety of entertainment is well distributed and the acts are well balanced. The Reckless Recklaw Troupe head the bill with a comical cycle and skating act. Their work although very difficult, is performed with perfect ease. They are exceedingly clever in their line. The real "tony" act of the bill is the dancing and singing act. Many dancers and singers have appeared on the stage in this city, in fact no vaudeville is complete without a dancing

and singing act, but there has never i been as clean, up-to-date, and clever j dancing and singing act on the stage j

in tnis city as this one. They are

original. Their steps are all new and

different from the kind you have been

used to seeing. They did not come

as a surprise for it has been rumored that they would show the people of

Richmond something in the dancing

line when they hit this town.

Georgia Gardner and Co. have a

family mixup act that is very amusing. The cast compose man and wife and two office boys. It shows how clearly a little misunderstanding will cause a great deal of trouble between man and wife. If you cannot laugh, go and see this act. George Muder, the unrivaled violinist, opens the show

with some clever selections on the vio

lin and mandolin. His imitations are i

very good.

Cash Stock Company. The Burleigh Cash company pre

sented "A Daughter of Satan," last night at the Gennett Theater to an audience which appreciated each point to the utmost. The plav was an in

tense one and the excellent manner in which Mr. Cash's company hav? staged it, made it one of the best bills which they have presented this week. Mr. Cash has selected some of the best vaudeville acts which any stock com

pany has offered here this year, one

of the best on the program being th?

male quartet of which Mr. Cash himself is one of the principal singers. H has a true baritone voice which is a pleasure to here. Tomorrow night they will present their big production of Monte Cristo.

An Emergency Brake. Saying her prayers is considered by little Katheriue a nightly propitiation to the Almighty to be accomplished with all possible speed. Night after night she rattled off the Lord's Prayer a string of unintelligible gibberish until a Nemesis overwhelmed her in the form of maternal chastisement. "I'm sorry to be obliged to punish you," said her mother, "but you are a naughty little girl. It's very, very irreverent iu you to rattle off the Lord's Prayer like that." "I don't rattle it off." sobbed Katberine. "Really and truly, mother. I don't. I always slow up toward the end. because I'm afraid if 1 don't I'll say it all through twice before I think." Philadelphia Ledger.

Pamela: Be sure to use Gold Medal Flour. Isabella.

GEM MET T TONIGHT The Burleigh Cash Stock Co. Dally Matinees 10c Evenings 10 and 20c Tomorrow Night Itt Count of Monte Cristo

Yl U RRAY'S APPROVED VAUDEVILLE Famous Reckless Recklaw Troope Comedy Cycle and Skating Novelty. Georgia Gardner & Co. in "Too Many Darlings." Geo. Muder, Violin Specialist. Ruff Bros. & Murray, "Live Wire" Dancers. MATINEE, 2:30; any seat. 10c. EVENING, 7:45 and 9:00; prices 10. 15 and 20c. Loge seats. 25c.

Anty Drudge on Cold Lunches. Anty Drudtt "Why, Mr. Sorrowful, what makes you tit on the doorstep?" Jhn Sornmfuf " I'm just waiting for Mary to hand mc out a bite of cold lunch. I never go in the house on washday, it smells like a bone mill." Anty Drudge Nonsense. Your wife washed with Fels-Naptha soap to-day, and it was all done two hours ago. She has a nice hot lunch for you and had time to read and play the piano besides. And there's never any body smell when Fels-Naptha s used." There was a woman who made a prayer to be saved from washday with all its carcJ Then she tried Fels-Naptha and quit praying that particular prayer. It wasn't exactly washday that she meant. What she really did mean was to be saved from boiling clothes, with its resultant nauseous steam and heat, and from back-breaking hard rubbing. Fels-Naptha answers that kind of petition completely, if you use it the Fels-Naptha way. Follow directions on the red and green wrapper. For white clothes you' 11 read: Soap the clothes, roll and let them soak in cold or lukewarm water for 30 minutes. Then rub lightly rinse, hang out on the line. No, you don't boil them; Fels-Naptha takes the place of that and hard rubbing, . too; - Fels-Naptha has many other valuable uses washing dishes for instance. You'll find directions for all on the wrapper. Be sure and follow them.

A little DianeDsin relieves had . diZ2lness- constipation

. . I stomach disorders.

Momacns in five

Minutes. As there Is often some one in your family who suffers an attack of indigestion or some form of stomach trouble, why don't you keep some Diapepsin in the house handy? This harmless blessing will digest anything you can eat without the slightest discomfort, and overcome a sour, gassy stomach five minutes after. Tell your pharmacist to let you read the formula plainly printed ' on these 00-cent cases of Pape's Diapepsin, then you will readily see why It makes indigestion, sour stomach, heartburn and other distress go in five minutes and relieves at once such miseries as belching of gas, eructations of sour, undigested food, nausea, headaches,

and ottas

Some folks have tried so long to

find relief from indigestion and Dys

pepsia or an out-of-order stomach with

the common every-day cures adver

tised that they have about made up

their minds that they have something

else wrong, or believe theirs is a case

of nervousness, gastritis, catarrh of

the stomach or cancer.

This, no doubt, is a serious mistake.

Your real trouble is, what you eat does not digest; instead, it ferments and sours, turns to acid, gas and stomach

poison, which putrefy In the digestive tract and intestines, and, besides, poi

son the breath with nauseous odors.

A hearty appetite, with thorough digestion, and without the slightest dis

comfort or misery of the stomach, is waiting for you as soon as you decida

to try Pape's Diapepsin.

the by

"The Prince of Tonight." "The Prince of Tonight," is

name of the new musical nlav

Frank Adams, Will Hough and Joe !

Howard, which Manager Mort Singer!

will present at the Gennett on Tues-f day. Dec. 14. The story is the most !

facinating Messrs. Adams and Hough have ever invented, combining as it does, modern characters and places with fantastic incidents and situations and making the whole the most original musical comedy of recent years. The music of Mr. Howard embraces the best compositions of his career. Th mere mention of Henry Woodruffs name in the title role i3 sufficient guarantee of the character of the play. Mr. Woodruff has been recognized as one of America's best actors, who, after a wide experience in Shakesperean roles, as leading man for Mrs. Fiske, Amelia Bingham and Henrietta Crosman. and as the star of "Ben Hur" and "Brown of Harvard, and other notable productions, will make

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OpeMinig oil EDeunlkeF's..

(DYLAN

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Myriads of pretty Dolls, Toys and everything that goes to make the Christmas day long to be remembered by the boys and girls. Dolls, all sizes and kinds from 25c to $5.00. The largest collection in the city. Hobby Horses, Teddy Bears, Electric and Steam Engines, Express Wagons, Sleighs, Tool Chests, Drums, Toy Trains, Books all are here and are here to make the Boy and Girl Happy. See our line of Fine China and Glass Ware.

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604-608 Main

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