Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 129, 16 March 1910 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AIO) SUN-TELEGRAM, WTDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 1910.
PAGE THREE.
ALET THIIIKS POOR SCHOOLS IRE BID State Supt. Gives Some Pointed Advice Concerning the Matter.
PROPOSES MANY CHANGES DECLARES THAT ONE GOOD 8CHOOL CAN BE MADE TO THRIVE WHERE TWO INEFFICIENT ONES EXISTED.
To make one efficient school thrive where two efficient ones struggled before, is the effort to which Robert J. Aley, state superintendent of public instruction, is now giving much attention. A1 survey of the state shows conclusively to him the ineffectual struggle of many small towns in Indiana to maintain good schools when they do not have sufficient wealth. His endeavor now is said to aid these towns by advice, pointing out how they can give the proper education to children in the community without pitching the local tax levy to the legal limit, which in some cases has proved too low. "The law makes two provisions to meet these conditions," said Dr. Aley today. "One is the establishment of a joint school by the township and the school town. When the town and the township are of about equal wealth this plan Is excellent. It reduces the cost to both corporations and makes it possible to have a better school than either corporation could support alone. "The second provision is the abandonment of the school corporation by the town and the consequent complete management of the schools by the township. When the wealth of the township is greatly in excess of the wealth of the town this is preferable. The surrender makes it possible for the township trustees to consolidate the schools upon the most economical basis. "Good schools cost. There is no doubt that the cost will increase. Geo. P. Brown once said: "The schools of Indiana will not be what they should be until they cost twice as much as at present. "In order to meet the increased cost of improvement we should eliminate the very small school, reduce the cost of supervision and save on material equipment. In a word, we must do in the . school exactly what the modern commercial world is doing in business. "The advantages of the plans are as follows: A reduction in number of buildings needed to accommodate the children; ,at material, reduction in the expense of janitor: .service; fuel ., and necessary supplies; reduction of number of teachers; a centralization of authority, giving a common aim and a uniformity of result, and a better gradation of the schools."
'. Don't worry over your bakings! GOLD COIN FLOUR insures perfect bread. Ask your Grocer.
WILL AVOID CONFUSION
Homeseekers in Western Reservations Will Be Notified by Mail.
Spokane, Wash., March 16. Official announcement is made by James W. Whitten, superintendent in charge of drawings on Indian reservations, that homsteaders intending to file on lands in the Spokane, Coeur d'Alene or Flathead reserves, for which the drawings were made last August, will be notified by mail of the exact hour when their names will be called at Missoula, Kalispell, Mont., Coeur d'Alene, Idaho and Spokane. In this way itSs expected to avoid the usual confusion attending the filing on government lands. Those who intend to take up land on the Flathead reservation will have the privilege of attending the selection at Kalispell, and if nothing desirable is found there, they may go to Missoula a week later to take up a claim. -Payment of 20 percent of the appraised value of the land is required at the time of filing, also fees and commissions amounting to not more than $16. A schedule showing the area, appraised value and classification of each tract, will be mailed to each successful applicant before April 15. The time for settlement and entry has been postponed until May 2.
Positively True
and Convincing Published With the Hope That Others Will Be Similarly Blessed. "I was Just as weak and tired in the morning when I got up, as when I went to bed, had a dull heavy feeling in my arms and legs, and a continual burning sensation in my back. Dull heavy headaches were very frequent, especially, just before a change of weather. Gas formed a great deal in my stomach and bowels, and I would bloat and belch very much. When my trouble started, some two years ago, I weighed one hundred and sixty-two pounds, but. through two years of disease and misery, I lost thirty-eight pounds. The medicine I took would fill a good sized shelf, and I was growing worse all the time. About four months ago, I saw a sick friend taking Root Juice, he said it was doing him lots of good, so I concluded to try it, although I had lost faith in everything. The first bottle didn't seem to do me much good, but I imagined I was a little better, so I bought six bottles, before it was all used, I was gaining a pound a day and feeling like my old self again. Sleep was refreshing, appetite good, and digestion seemed perfect. I no longer had the dull, heavy feeling in my arms and legs, or pain in my back, and have not bloated or belched since. Root Juice is the best medicine in the world, I am telling all of my friends of the great good it did for me. For business reasons, I do not wish my name published in the paper, but any one who suffers as I did, can get it by writing to the Root Juice medicine people." Root Juice is doing so much good, throughout the country, that praise of it is now being heard in every state, and at this point, it is easy - to get much valuable information, regarding the remedy, by calling at Luken & Co's drug store.
At Local Theaters
At the Murray. "The Hoboes" this week are proving a popular number if the applause which greets them at each performance is a criterion and it is evident that as a satire on tramp life it is a success. They have made good in all their appearances on the big time and so the Richmond people are fortunate in having the opportunity of witnessing another act brought from the big time through the efforts of Mr. Murray. "No talent too good for Richmond" is the slogan. Miss Denman, the Southern comedienne, has a popular hit in her song, "Foolish Questions." The Avallon family, European wire artists, have been accorded a full share of the applause this week. "The Cattle Thief" has much comedy as well as pathos in it and cannot but please those who enjoy the comedy dramatic. The motion pictures too add to the comedy of the bill and can not but appeal to the younger patrons of the Murray. House of Thousand Candles. The appearance of "The House of a Thousand Candles at the Gennett Saturday matinee and night promises to be an event decidedly out of the ordinary. The play is a powerful dramatization of the novel of the same name and contains all its many interesting episodes and strange characters. There is the mysterious Bates, the man with a past, which will be enacted by William Webb, an actor of rare
ability, and who is said to be the ideal artist for the part. Then there is the vanishing Glenarm, the daring and spirited young Glenarm, the villainous Pickering, the bright Irishman, Larry Donovan and 'the pugilistic preacher, Rev. Dr. Stoddard, the fun loving school girl, Marion Devereaux and her equally pert companion, Gladys Armstrong. "A Slave of the Mill." Hall Read has given us many thrilling melodramas, but none more so perhaps than "A Slave of the Mill" which will be presented at the Gennett theater on Friday evening. The scene in the mill where the villain attempts to throw the Hero in a vat of molten lead is exciting enough to satisfy the most exacting of the Gallery Gods. "Classmates." The savage realism in De Mille's new play, "Classmates," in which Norman Hackett will appear at the Gennett tonight very nearly caused the ringing down of the curtain on an unfinished act the other night. In the third scene Duncan Irving penetrates the South American jungle a thousand
miles up the Amazon, in search of his
rival, Bert Stafford, whom he has sworn to find and bring back to his sweetheart. Stafford is found by the rescuing party, but the members of the party are lost themselves. Duncan Irving has in his canteen a drop of brandy left, which he intends to give to the dying man. One of his own party demands it and rather than see him have It the two famished men struggle for the bottle and end by drawing knives. On the night in question a woman in the audience had watched the play with intense interest up to this point, and when she saw the knives, rose from her seat, screamed and fainted. It seems that her husband had been lost and found and killed in this very same manner in an African jungle two years ago, and this reduplication of his death was too much for her overwrought nerves. A physician happened to be in the theater, the hysterical lady was finally quieted and the scene went on, but an added horror was given to the scene that the actors in it will not soon forget. Arcade Theater. The Arcade theater has just install
ed a remarkable screen on which the pictures are thrown. This is composed of a large plate glass with back of pure silver and frosted surface. The light rays are intensified to such a degree that the whole room is illuminated during the picture and the picture itself seems to be a living thing. The film appears clear as crystal, every detail standing out in perspective. A visit to the Arcade will convince the most skeptical. The screen can only be seen at the Arcade as the management has a guarantee from the makers that no Richmond theater can install one for nine months.
HE GREW TOO FAT
Eccentric Farmer Made His Own Coffin, But Took on If Too Much Flesh.
MAN'S FEAR CAME TRUE
COLDS CAUSE HEADACHE. LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine, the world wide Cold and Grip remedy, removes cause. Call for full name. Look for signature E. W. GROVE. 25c.
Miss Nettie A. Lang is said to be the only woman in America who owns and manages an automobile station. The garage is known as the Lake Shore Auto Station antts in Chicago. She has been in the business more than two years and personally inspects each car before it is allowed to leave the garage. Though she employs only men as drivers she is reported to be in favor of hoving women learn the business as a means of earning a living.
Liverpool's chief constable says that owing to the religious feuds the cost of policing that city last year was increased by more than $50,000.
WHEAT ACREAGE SMALL
(Palladium Special) Greensfork, March 16. The farmers report that the growing wheat crop does not look very prosperous in this vicinity. The acreage will fall below that of last year. Ex-commissioner James W. Martindale says that this is the first year that their old home farm has not had a field of wheat growing Jn the last ninety years.
WM. CLEVELAND BURIED. Eaton, O., March 15. The body of William Cleveland, 85, a former resident of Preble county, was brought to Eaton Monday afternoon from Dora, Ind, for interment In Mound i- Hill cemetery. Mr. Cleveland lived in Eaton for years and is generally known by the, older residents of the city. ; MrB. William Rehfuss and Mrs. Lydia Booker, of this city, are nieces of the deceased. -
S for JOo Sheumatic .W Pains LI
Mexico, Mo., March 16. Always eccentric, the neighbors thought nothing of it some years ago when they saw James Reynolds of Guthrie preparing for death by building: a large vault with limestone slabs from the
cliffs on his farm, and to notice him hewing the boards from the walnut logs down in his woods pasture for hjs coffinReynolds finished the coffin some time ago and set it away till needed. Later, when he was past work, it dawned upon him that his exceeding corpulency, although hinted at during the months he worked on the casket,
was increasing at a rapid rate, and that if he lived too long he might not fit the box, or, rather, the box might
not fit him. v
This fear came true and a few Sights ago when he died the relatives ad to not only send for an undertaker, but a coffin as well. He bad grown too fat and it was impossible to bury him in the casket, because it was too small.
BOYS WILL RECOVER
Eaton, 0 March 16. Russell Rearth and Ray Root, the two Camden lads bitten a couple of weeks ago by rabid dogs, have been discharged from the Cincinnati pasteur Institute. The war that has been waged in the southern part of Preble county on all stray and unmuzzled canines has about been brought to a close, because of the fact that the the enemy has become scarce.
Though blessed with the most fertile soil and most favorable climate in the world, the United States produces
less wheat an acre planted than Eng
land, Germany oj Holland.
GOLD COIN, the flour of quality. Ask your Grocer.
As we get older the blood becomes sluggish, the muscles and joints stiffen and aches and pains take hold easier. Sloan's Liniment quickens the blood, limbers up the muscles and joints and stops any pain or ache with astonishing promptness. Proof that it is Best for Rheumatism. Mrs. Daniel H. Diehl, of Mann's Choice, R.F.D., No. i, Pa., writes: u Please send me a bottle of Sloan's Liniment for rheumatism and stiff joints. It is the best remedy I ever knew for I can't do without it." Also for Stiff Joints. Mr. Milton Wheeler, 2100 Morris Ave., Birmingham, Ala writes: " I am glad to say that Sloan's liniment has done me more good for stiff joints than anything I have ever tried."
S lobars
Liniment is the qickest and best remedy for Rheumatism, Sciatica, Toothache, Sprains, Bruises and Insect Stings. Price 25c, SOc, nd 91.0O at All Dealers. Send for Sloan's Free Book on Hone. Address'
DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOSTON, MASS. ..
rUT7fr..
J
GEM MET T Friday Eve., March 18th A SLAVE OF THE MILL Seats Now Selling Prices: 10, 20 and 30c
GEfJHE T T .. TONIGHT .. Jules Marry Presents fir. NORMAN HACKETT in
LASS MJE5
One of Tills Season's Best Attractions Prices: 25, 50, 75, $1 & $1.50
L1AKES UIEYS AET HUE EIIDII16 -HIE BACK AliD BLADDER HEI.
Just a few doses will regulate your out-of-order Kidneys. A real surprise awaits every sufferer from kidney or bladder trouble who takes several doses of Pape'a Diureti Misery in the back, sides or loins, sick headache, nervousness, rheumatism, pains, heart palpitations, dizziness, sleeplessness, inflamed or swollen eyelids, lack of energy and all symptoms of out-of-order kidneys simply vanish. Uncontrollable urination especially at night), smarting, offensive and disclorored water and other bladder misery ends. The moment you suspect kidney or urinary disorder, or feel any rheumatism, begin taking this harmless medi
cine, with the knowledge that there la no other remedy, at any price, mad anywhere else in the world, which will effect so thorough and prompt a cure as a fifty-cent treatment of Pape'a Diuretic, which any druggist can supply. it is needless to feel miserable and worried, because this unusual preparation goes at once to the out-of-order kidneys and urinary system, distributing its cleansing, healing and strengthening influence directly upon the organs and glands affected, and completes the cure before you realise It. Your physician, pharmacist, banker or any mercantile agency will tell yon that Pane, Thompson ft Pape ot Cincinnati, is a large and responsible medicine concern, thoroughly worthy ot your confidence. Accept only Papes Diuwtle fiftycent treatment any drug store anywhere in the world.
New Murray Theatre APPROVED VAUDEVILLE
WEEK OF MARCH 14TH.
Special Feature JESSE L. LASKEY'S THE HOBOES 5 Other Exclusive Features 5 Matinee, any seat, 10c.. Evening performances, 7:45 and 9:00. Prices, 10, 15 and 20c. Loge seats, 25c.
uVuul
Y
' We will loan you anjy amount on household goods pianos horses, wagons, etc You can have from on to fifty weeks to pay off your loan, $1.20 la the weekly payment -on a 950 lean for fifty weeks. Other amounts in proportion. When In need write, phone or call on us.
Reliable I Richmond Loan Corapcny Private
Established 1892.
Room 8 Colonial Bldg.
Phone 1545.
FUNERAL
WILSON, POHLMEYER & DOWNING
15 North 10th St. Phone 1335.
Private Chapel
Sanitary Ambulance.
Automobile Service.
K&TOKI
COLISEUM Moonlight Skating Thurs. Night. Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Morning, Afternoon and Evening Ladies Admitted Free
n
BEWARE OF THE IDES OF MARCO
That sign need not alarm you, for that time is past, but be ready for the next fifteen day as well as the month of April. They are great coal consumer. Call telephone 1178 and 1179 for Anthracite
AND
Pccobontas Mate Kro&
PALLADIUM WANT ADS BRING RESULTS
New SfivOes Dim
Our different makes in fancy mahogany, walnut and oak cases for 1910 are attracting attention, and you should not decide on a piano until you visit our factory and inspect the material used in the construction of these pianos. Our prices are based on the quality and workmanship and sold direct to the customer at a small profit above the cost to manufacture it ONE PRICE, ONE PROFIT EASY PAYMENTS IF DESIRED. 931-935 Main St.
