Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 213, 8 June 1910 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, JUXE 8, 1910.

BICHMOHD MAY GET A BRAIICH BUREAU

State Free Employment Station Expected to be Located Here Soon. ; WORK IS GREAT SUCCESS. AND CENTRAL OFFICE AT INDIANAPOLIS HA8 HARD TIME CARINQ FOR DEMANDS MADE BY THE MANY EMPL0YER8. (Palladium Special) . Indianapolis, Ind.j June 8. J. L. Pcetz, state statistician, baa in mind branches of the State Free Employment Bureau at several places in the state, and he believes he will yet be able to work out the plan. In speaking of the proposition yesterday Mr. peetz said : "I am more than pleased with what has been' acconiptybdthus far bV the new bureau. It Is doing more good and ts spreading its influence more rapidly that I ever hoped it would. And do you know, I had a hard time to set anyone to Introduce the bills in the Legislature to establish the bureau when I bad them prepared at the last session- It's a fact. When I conceived the idea of establishing tht bureau in connection with my office I had the bills prepared and asked no less than a dozen' senators and more than that number of representatives to Introduce them. Finally I asked Senator Orndort, of Whitley and Huntington counties, and he agreed to introduce it. The bill passed the Senate without a dissenting vote. In the House I finally asked Representative Fred King, of Wabash, and he introduced the bill there. It passed with only two or three dissenting votes. I did not ask for any money with which to operate the bureau, because I had no idea that it would develop so rapidly, but It has grown out of all expectations. Many Calls for Help. ', "Calls for help come in from employers In all parts of the state, and I believe the work could be carried on better if branches were established in various centers of the state. I have now In mind a plan to establish such branches In South Bend, PL Wayne, Richmond, Terre Haute, Evansville, New Albany and either Hammond or Gary, and shall work on the plan until I am able to cary it into effect. I doubt if this can be done this year because of a lack of money with which to carry out the plan, but if I am reelected I will ask the Legislature for a small , additional appropriation for this purpose. : v "These branches ' Will' be trader tlie supervision of the bureau here in my office, but each branch would have an office and a clerk In charge. Someone from my office could go to each place and open the branch and get it started, and then it would take care of Itself. , "It would not cost much money to operate the branch. I should call on the mayor and the charity societies of each city to furnish the room for the office and place a clerk in charge. It would be a much cheaper plan for taking care of the unemployed and the needy than under the present system Of giving aid to those who apply for it. By this method of co-operation the benefits of the free employment bureau could be extended throughout the state. We are constanly receiving applications from all over the state for men to work in -factories and other lines, Yesterday we sent thirty men to a small city near by to work on a new road. Only a short time ago we sent one; party of forty-two men to Anderson in response to the call of a manufacturer who was short of help. These men are now working in his factory. So it goes right along. We will not need to establish a branch office in the gas belt because those cities are so close to Indianapolis that we can take care of them from 'the central office. But in large factory centers like Hammond, Gary, Ft. Wayne, Richmond, Evansville Terre Haute and New Albany, a branch office would be a good thing. I believe the free employment bureau will eventually solve the problem for 90 per cent, of the unemployed of Indiana." THE GOOD PHYSICIAN'S METHOD ' It Is a email wonder that physicians prescribe an alterative (blood purifier) for eo many afflictions, since the blood la so intimately related 'with every function of the human body. Poisoned, or impure blood, aside from such manifestations as syphilis, catarrh, Inflammatory rheumatism, plmple3, boils, 80"ea, muddy complexion, etc., effects the appetitie, the digesiion and the whole human organism. - The most powerful and effective alterative known is Dr. A. B. Simpson's Vegeteable Compound, discovered by a famous physician of Indiana and used In his practice more than forty years ago. It has never failed to cure the most dreadful form of all poisoned blood (syphilis) and has of coarse readily conquered all the lesser blood diseases. Nothing has ever equalled It for giving a clear, healthy complexion. It is sold at $1 per bottle at all drug stores.

X, Red Heart Beer HrA guaranteed by the JUNO BREWING SrJiyiTOr I ' ffntt rrTftnTVL Co- under the Food and Drugs Act. 1 v A 1 Pr5) A" I RED HEARTl Aij3 J. F. ROWLETT, $IU0&

NeM Manager

' ' 2. wm wmmmmmmmgm vs. 9 ROY CAN BE PREVENTED Blindness of Children at Birth Can be Overcome, It is Announced. PUBLIC IS APPEALED TO St. Louis, June 8,-The American Medical association at the opening session of Its house of delegates entered into an active campaign for the prevention of blindness at birth and the strict regulation or eradication of midwives, who were pronounced by Dr. T. Park Lewis of New York as an "unnecessary evil." John Glenn of New York, director ; of the Sage foundation fund, and Miss , Carolyn Van Blarcom, secretary of the ;

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New York association for the blind. 1 1 According th. t-s( utrouuiers arrived yesterday with the view or to-; t!jw n-mln-r of siar iliat ;iu ih son .. ... ... . , ; by. a person if sm-nie pvt-Ktxut fc operating with the committee of the1 , t -.,,, ,' ... . about i.OOO. 1 lie number visible American Medical association in a pio-j tliroujrli the ielesroM' has been estlpagan da against blindness at birlh, I matetl to lv between T.'.ooo.ooo and one third of which it is claimed is pre- j 0.K)0.C0o. ventable. Dr. Lewis, who is chairman of thej ?mcT"Ji"e,e rohailRIie!imatJsra Comes

blind schools and other eleemosynary Institutions were overcrowded with blind children, the majority of whom might have been saved at birth with the proper care. "This pestilence," he said, '.'can be wiped out only through the co-ordinated efforts of the organized medical profession. Any preventative propa ganda to be successful must have the' support of the general public, and we A "HIT" AT THE MURRAY. TP . tm hrt t rSI"?;T.i1i William McCall w ho Is making a hit this week at the Murray, by his extemporaneous songs.

Of The Arcade

iK -jr.j?.-:: I it J mm ..ftyarTt PARKS. are urging the organization of a com mittee in each state on optualmia neonatoruni working la conjunction with J the national association ot chanties and correction, national education association, the ' federation of women's clubs and other allied organizations." At a meeting of the house of delegates the legislative 'body of the medict.l association, Colonel William C. Gorgas rc-tlred as president. Dr. William H. Welsh of Baltimore, was installed aa the new president. The association will be asked to take adrmative action on the bill for a department of public health now pend- . lnjf ,n consress- -. , in advocacy ot pne conservation ui human life in the United States, Dr. Llston H. Montgomery of Chicago, urged the passage by congress of the J public health bill iu an address be-1 fo:e the American association of medical examiners. A clinic on pellagra will be held this afternoon by Superintendent Zeller of the Illinois state hospital at Peoria. Between M and 15 patients will be ex hibited. - . t L. . w wt From Bad Kidneys Once Your Kidneys Work Prep?rly, Rheumatism, Kidney Disease and Bladder Trouble Disappear. How To Cure Yourself. It is no longer necessary to spend months and months undergoing a complicated treatment ior rnenmatism, kidney or bladder trouble, or spend a good many dollars in doctors' bills. A new treatment can now be obtained which seems to act more like a marvel than a medicine. This treatment has produced such satisfactory results in a short time that it is now guaranteed from first to last. There shauld be no more doubt about the rapid cure of rheumatism J no fears of the fatal termination of treacherous kidney disease or dropsy. Rheumatism means nothing more nor less than that your kidneys do not work properly. Your blood passes through the kidneys hundreds of times a day to be filtered and purified. When the kidneys are weak, the poisons are not taken out of the blood a& they should be. This leads to various diseases, such as rheumatism, terrible Bright's disease, diabetes, dropsy and bladder trouble. The new guaranteed treatment is Dr. Derby's Kidney Pills. One day's use of them will prove their remarkable effect. M. T. Ridenour of Lima, Ohio, says: "When I feel bad in my back, I just take a couple of Derby's Kidney Pills and get immediate re lief." If you have rheumatism anywhere, back pains, cloudy, foul urine, oains in the bladder, Bright's disease or diabetes, put your whole confidence iu Dr. Derby's Kidney Pills, and you will not be disappointed. Dr. Derby's Kidney Pills are sold at all drug stores 60 pills 10 days' treatment 25 cents, or we will send them direct from the laboratory of Derby Medicine Co., Dept. 12, Eaton Rapids, Mich., prepaid if you wish, it you want to try them first, just tell your druggist to give you a free samole package.

,--y "Sim'

A COUSIO OF TAFT LIVED .III RICHMOND

Little Rosa Liberati, Now in Omaha, Was Here With Her Father. UNKNOWN AND DESTITUTE. FAMILY WAS HERE UNTIL THE MOTHER DIED LEARN OF CONNECTION IN CASE IN JUVENILE COURT. Unknown to their neighbors and entirely without friends, there lived in Richmond for over a year a cousin of President Taft. No one knew that the tiny Rosa Liberal!, whose father, a Corsican tailor, did piece work for a tailoring house here, was very close indeed to the president's family, but t ? , "xmm IT '' -M 111111

X ,i . rmm TThree million Owls flv W

LOUIS G. DESCHLER CO., Distributors

TO ADVERTISE THE CELEBRATED KING PIANO KING OF THEM ALL

II

FIRST PRIZE $250 Purchase Check

THIRD PRIZE $200 Purchase Check.

RULES GOVERNING ANSWERS: Anyoneownihg an upright or Grand Piano is not eligible to any of these prizes. Contest closes June 14, 1910. 1020 r.lAIH STREET RICHMOnD, IND.

now there comes from Omaha a dispatch telling all about the connection. The little girl, whose mother died in the Reid Memorial hospital in this city, has been taken away from her father because he beat her, and is now detained in a private charitable institution In the Nebraska city. Rosa is cine years old, and it was four years ago that her father, Edward Liberati. came to Richmond, bringing the child and her sick mother. They lived in two rooms over 1013 Main street, which were scantily furnished, but the mother finally became worse and died. The father then took the little girl and went to Omaha, where they have lived since 1907. Little Rosa's relationship to President Taft comes through her mother, whose manage to the Italian was the result of a pretty romance of ten years or so ago. At that time Liberati was an opera singer. While playing in Greenville, N. C, he became ill and Dr. Taft was called to attend the case. The company went on its way and Liberati was removed to the Taft residence for treatmerttMiss Lena, the doctor's daughter, helped nurse the young fellow and each fell in love with the other, with the result that they were married with the eonspnt of the doctor. Before the marriage, however. Dr. Taft made an in

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Nickel smokes come and

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forever. Best by test witn tne rest ; IV VALUABLE PRIZES FOURTH PRIZE $175 Purchase Check.

vestigation and found that Liberati came of a good family in his native country. After the marriage Liberati continued his musical career until his voice failed. Doctor Taft, the grandfather, died some years ago. but his wife.

grandmother of the little girl, is yet living in North Carolina. A Maw Mi -WAYS Of EARNING MONCV Woe id ye like to turt m braNM? Tim UtrV, Book thorn kow Bait mil BtaaafaeA a turtng bl m jroar bant. I it'll 6 T" " " popoHtva : fom gtt the muafacmrrr't aa4 Home Factory E?S n moms Meowcra umvc i mm . ov New Murray Theatre APPROVED VAUDEVILLE Week of June 6th. Double Feature Bill. Dumetrescu Troupe, Quadlateral Bar Aerialists. Gilmoxe-LeMoyne & Perry in "A Strenuous Day." Other exclusive features. Next week, "The Eagle and the Girl." Matinee, any day, 10c. Night performances, 7:45 and 9. Prices 10. 15, and 20c. Loge seats 25c Owls flv always a car to everywhere. clock ticks some an A :CrC::-i till f:-. "jr' t3 Indianapolis, Ind. III

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The prizes will be awarded to the neatest correct answers received. Concealed in this big face you wilt find, if you look, the faces of two children and a woman. Can you find them? Try and win a valuable prize. DIRECTIONS Trace the outline of the three concealed faces on this or a separate sheet of paper. Send all answers, together with your name and address plainly written, on or before June 14, 1910, to King Piano Co., 1020 Main street, Richmond, ; Ind. SECOND PRIZE $225 Purchase Check

FIFTH PRIZE. All others will receive a purchase check of $50.00.

These Aire Bargains You Ought Not Miss Seeing at the

OOSIER

Itemodelleg 18-inch Stair Carpet. . q ydw 35c Cottage Flowered Carpet 24a Men's $15 Suit "00430 Men's $2 Dress Pants.. Boys' Knee Pants ....... JJJJq Ladles' Bleached Vests... Misses' 25c Lace Striped-Hose Ca Men's Fancy Hose ... w. ... Men's Shawknlt Ho gg' 9x12 ft Wool Fiber Rugs, $15 valu CQ.C3 $25.00 Axmlnster Rues, 8x12 ,t- sio;co 65c Linoleums now ...... q Ladies' $3.50 Trimmed Hats CI.CO 7-Piece Berry Sets, $U0O value ; 3Ca $10.00 ' Retrisjerator, holds : 40 pounds of Ice ...... OjftCO $1.00 Curtain Stretchers, now : OCa Washins; Machines... 0IC3 $1.50 Uneeda Oven.. ja2Q You'll find hundreds cf Dry Goods, Hosiery, Underwear, shoe and house furnishing bargains that you NEED Look through the store all the many specials on display and youll agree that this is Richmond's Biggest Bargain Event

WIS