Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 141, 30 March 1911 — Page 8

PACK KIGIIT

THE KICI13IOND PA L.L. A D I L' 31 AND Sl'.VTLURA31, Till IiSDAV, 3IAIU11 llO. 1011.

MODEST MODEL WAS ABASHED BY NEGRO Pretty 18 Year Old Girl Refused to Pose in Nude Before Black Man.

Chicago, March SO. Xo official action will be Ukn by the authorities of the Art institute on tho refusal of Mamie Blanha, an 18-year-old model, to allow a nr-Kro to remain in the life clan before which she a pobIdk. accord! ng to a statement made by Ralph Holmes, superintendent of the Institute. Mr. Holmes said that he did not believe that race prejudice played any part In the action of Miss HIanha. It was due, he said, rather to the antipathy of certain of the students in the commercial art department to James Downs, the negro who wus excluded from the clan in life. "The problem Is not at all serious." said Mr. Holmes, "as we have only it very few negro students In the Institute. As I remember, there are but four negroes attending classes. One of these Is a woman, and Thomas Downs is the only one a'ttending u life class. If Miss Wanna does not desiro to pose before a negro, I preaume Bhe hns a right to not to, at any rate no rffort will be made to force her to do Ho. "Tho thing that makes me believe that a certain student was back of Miss Ulanha's move Is the fact that sho must have posed before Downs before, as he has been In the Institute nearly four yenrs and has; of course, drawn from all life models. Wantid Negro Excluded. "This student to whom I am referring came to me about two weeks ago and demanded that Downs be excluded from tho class. As Downs is a very modest, hard worKing student. I told the young man that I should certainly do nothing of the kind. Then, as I believe, he got .Miss lllanha to make her statement that she would not kbc, as there was a stranger in the class. "I have not seen Miss ninnha myelf, but Newton II. Carpenter, tho secretary of the Art Institute, has. Hhe told him that she believes now that her stand was a mistaken one and that she would not raise further objections." Downs Tells of Incident. Downs, who is regarded by his professors as a very capable student, asserts that he was thunderstruck when Miss lllanha said that she wanted no outsiders in the room. "As I work for my tuition and can only attend rather Irregularly," he said, "I have to. shift my classes continually. I was In the habit of going to whatever class I thought was best suited to my needs. I went into the class before which Miss lllanha was to nose because there was more room there. Then came the statement that no nonmembers of the class could remain. I knew who was meant and I got up and went away quietly. "Yes, I have a very good Idea of who the student was who stirred up the trouble. I have no desire to pursue the matter further. If I stood .on my rights, 1 suppose I could Insist on remaining In any class, but I have no desire to affront the feelings of people who do not care to pose before me or to make myself an object of dislike to them." GAINS TEN POUNDS. Women lost flesh over wash tubs. They get thin. So do the clothes. Hewitt's Easy Task Laundry soap prevents that. A cake will save ten pounds of flesh. Makes clothes cleaner and longer lasting. Does It in less time and loss effort. No boiling necessary. A splendid soap, the original white soap, fine for bathrooms best for laundries. Your grocer has it. WOMAN AT FUNERAL KILLED BY HUSBAND St. Louis, Mo., March 30. Mrs. Iletecca Sabo sat with a baby In her arms In a moving funeral carriage and fought with her husband, who ran alongside, for possession of a revolver ith which he had threatened to kill her. For half a block the struggle continued, amid the screams of the four women in the carriage and the cries of a baby: Then the weapon was discharged. One bullet went through the flesh of Mrs. Sabo's wrist, struck thme bottom 1 of the carriage at an angle and rebounded into a door. Another bullet Just grazed her. Women In other carriages leaped from therefrom in panic. Mourners and spectators then seized Harry Sabo, the husband, and beat him altrost into insensibility before turning him over to the policeman. Sabo's wife left him about three weeks aso, because, she says, he was rruel to her. TALK OF COMPANY TO BUILD HOMES The committees of the Young .Men's Business Club and tho Commercial Club appointed to Investigate the "homo" problem In Richmond will meet in the Commercial Club rooms this evrnln. It was at first thougl by tho committees that a good plan to remedy the situation would be to organize a company for the purpose of building about 100 houses In tho city and this formed the nucleus of a discussion at the first meeting. Nothing definite was eer done, however, and it is understood that this proposition bas virtually been abandoned because of alleged Impracticability. Kfforts of the committeemen will probably be expended this evening in devising some llan to encourage building among Individual, tn the city to relieve the congested conditions. A wealthy Yonkert (N Y.) man has Just married his housekeeper because he mads such capital apple pics.

SOFT, GLOSSY HAIR.

It Can Only Be Had Where There Is No Dandruff. Any man or woman who anii soft glossy hair' must be free dandruff, which causes falling hair. Hin- it has become known that dandruff U a germ disease, the old hair preparations that were mostly scalp irritant.-;, liav been abandoned, and the puM fibers and doctors included, hav to using Xewbro's Herpicid , the hair preparation that kill ihdruff germ. K. Dodd. DU -k 'ii "n says: "Herpicide not only 1 a:i.l..ir ne) l ill! ' i!; , ' l t le the scalp from dandruff and prevent jhair falling out, but promt a n - a I growth. Herpicide keeps my hair w-r; glossy. Sold by leading druKKi I Send 10c In stamps for sample to Th Herpicide (:o Detroit. Mieli. on dollar bottles guaranteed. A. (,. i.u ken & Co., Special Agents. TO KfJOWJDENTITY Man Thinking He's Charley Ross Asks Police Help. Kansas City, March P.elieving himself to be Charley Host, kidnapped from the home of his wealthy lather in (Jermantown, Ia., forty years hkh, Charles DeWitt has applied to tipboard of public welfare for asistanee In unraveling the mystery of his identify. DeWitt's experience, as he remem bers them, have all the features of a conventional kidnapping romance, with a background of murder. Here is DeWitt's story: "Tho first thing I can remember about myself dates back to a tin" shcn 1 must have been three or l'o years old. I lived in a large unpaiddouble 'L' house with my parents had light yellow hair, blue eyes , and fair complexion. My fat Iter v. dark tall and slender. "I remember being kidnapped on I v once, but I heard my captors say the I had been stolen twice. It was from the house where I lived with my par ents that remember having been sin! en. Hut before I was kidnapped there were two deaths in the house, v. Iiieli I remember distinctly, a man ami woman being poisoned. "Only a little while after these two deaths I was carried away by three men who seized me as I stood in the front doorway. Then I remember rid lug In covered wagons, on railway trains and on ocean vessels. (Hue when a storm came up I was in charge of a tall young woman who cried and said they would all be lost because they had done wrong. "Finally I was left at the home of Charles Klrschman. in Marcella, 111. 1 followed county fairs for some years after which I came to Kansas City." IOWA TEACHERS IN A MEETING TODAY (American News Service) Atlantic. Ia., March "0. A large attendance marked the opening here today of the annual convention of the Southwest Iowa Teachers' Association. The program covers three days and provides for addresses and discussions dealing with all branches of school work. Several educators of wide prominence will be heard. Eyes With Double Pupils. Cicero says that "the glance of all women with the double pupil in th eye is noxious, blighting and withering." Cadmus tells us that such persons would not drown. Still others say that If they did drown the body would never sink, neither would it decay. They could cure the disease of the chest consumption by rubbing their perspiration on the affected parts of the' individual, and in case the double pupils were red Instead of black they could cure the lepers and the blind So thought the ancients. L&SY

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Wonderful Bargains Today,

Buy Your Rugs, Curtains, Furniture, and Stoves Now, and Benefit Accordingly. We furnish Homes the Easy Way.

BIG ATTENDANCE IS IIOWJSSURED Inquiries Conccrniy the l:nennpment Are Pouring in Steadilv.

.eirlting from inipiiries rctiwd by id. .1. K Kessl.-i-. assitarit adjutant ueiiejal of the Indiana depaitment o; the ii. A. H. with headtjuai ters at in dianapolis, the interest shown -..-the .state in the 1911 state naiii;nietit to tie held in Richmond in M: y, indicates tin- largest attendance :ti seeral years and possiblv hi tip- h:.tor of the organization. ', preparations heme :;.aie i 'he eomiiii'tec in i en; iiii tio'i h t:io loeal eeentie i . itu Hi :''"- are (..- in;,' v.a''hed .i!h I!!1: h !.!'. ;!! over the slate ;-nd i n j 1 r''-.- L-iw ln-en pot. ling into the ,t ! i u. t'..i Y.-l.-r III IV.". tile state en- an.;. Mi. lit held here .Qui lie- I'illl . e ! '. : to It member tha' encampment a-; po.sibl the most n ; . .ilile of ,iti i ii r held. Therefore tie i i" :j;a!ii looking toward Richmond with tip- fo.i.i.-st expectations of another i; I time. The m-omi.se that the encampment w i'l i : ti I.---, ic:-' Ii'i ' fail it t a rue -t at tended ev- ; n J c pleasing to j r charte and M n 's Hnsji : .y ' . encamp- ' !-e UK af- - niaktii2 J 1 a the fit V I ; ' Tods. a whence come ; Ies of food. The :.:id pea wore farye ami parsley in n and currants in it : Ihe r. e-nion. vorite "Iberl; . the rrne, and r: 1 -h"s hall from Chimi ' Tapan. f-' h-rsi thetnut is n . of T"' '. the rorl.itlilt'ti Land. . t'? " :'!'t"TV tree, wa.nut and m.1 westwart! frotn I'ersia. .- milder that eat orliiiat.vl : h Afric;i at a time when Kuy;.t i 1 va- the granary of the world I He . hextnut came frTi It:!!.'.', celery fr. -ii (Jertnany. spinach from Alalia. t;c suntlnwer from I,"u and en. i.n.t r from Itidi i. 'I'.d. i. co is :, native of Virginia. i no i iul (- ate. "I won'i'-r why Amy is s. luj ritisweriuj; my letter'.-" "Why, you kie u she's married now;" "Hut she t'laM v rite just the same." "Oh. hlie pro th i tTi-ite and cave the letter lo l.er h u.-t : nd." liuffalo E.Vliess. Particularly the Ladies. Not only pleasant and refreshing to the taste, but gently cleansing and sweetening to the system. Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is particularly adapted to ladies and children, and beneficial in all cases in which a wholesome, strengthening and effective laxative should be used. It is perfectly safe at all times and dispels colds, headaches and the pains caused by indigestion and constipation so promptly and effectively that it is the one perfect family laxative which gives satisfaction to all and is recommended by millions of families who have used it and who have personal knowledge of its excellence. Its wonderful popularity, however, has led unscrupulous dealers to offer imitations which act unsatisfactorily. Therefore, when buying, to get its beneficial effects, always note the full name of the Company California Fig Syrup Co. plainly printed on the front of every package of the genuine Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. For sale by all leading druggists. Price 50 cents per bottle. AND Efl S. AY

S31-333 IVSAIN ST.

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You can at an thing your stoinac'j craves without far of Indigestion or Dyspepsia, or that o;ir food will feri'.f nt. or sour on your stomach if you v. ill take a little Diapepsin occasionally. Your meals will taste pood, and anything you cat will be digested: nothing can l'enn tit or turn into ad or poison or stoma; h cas. whh !i caus-s iii lchine. Iiz ; a ft-t-'.int: o; f i!n ss a 'in r eat.;!.;; N I ndie.-t j. mi i I;l.e u t-imp :n .-tour.ch i i :: ; io-.i.n'.-;-. iie.irtu Water t-ii . .a.n in stoma, h at.d 1:. !-:::! s or u'L-r ilea-:. i i; f sjoi:;.i. ri arc a:iii.- . . . ff.rx. ..; : :i w this .ff.rivc rw ! . - . ! i ..-.; ..si-i i-cai' '! '- a.'! .o;i. a !. .t':!i stoimfo It i:u"st ;'':..' i: ' w !. n otir t;:s.:r it .i:.'f A ;(:. !os w ill (iiiir.-; a'! t!: ;. nd to-.! a: and !-a-.c nothing t-; f. rtia :.! : s - ami upset th stoi.ia. h ti-r a i. r2' '':. east of I'a; - )iai-ep.-!f, fr. :-. j ;r d; : at:-! start t.,i..ij,!' ,ow , a:-d iu a I "' -.tr.a o'l v, , ! 1 ,;.,!.. I : a ;r : ' o.-.r . an cat anytl, want w i ' ho; it t !.-'imist : ;. , a :;d t a' thin : in I.'irit.. ami jias that i ri ; il ..':.: ali and intestines is moiii; to ' .a:rift! away v.itllont the u ,.: I.a:ie or any other assistance. Should ton at this niomcnt l. st,f ferina trom ind ic--1 i; m or any stom arh disorder, yon can relit-: with:: five minnte.y POMCK SKARCII FOR HOY WITH Ml MIS The p,,i 'art tn. tit i out h lookout !! a ! ! ear old t'. from New C.t -t : v i.. - a a! !,.;,,- ' r n a w a fiotP i'-.- : . )( : I '. . name is I hi!:,, r. : ;.- .. I j- : : ir- l.e-I'fV.-tl to I ' i. -.. I;, ml O. in th.- r : v. e:. . :, that in. i . . . . 'ii io. I'le i,.,..it e , , . ,. - !,;, ,..l:t! - i 1' M.. a mi t :, !..,.( a l-.: - I I I ' . . - a I M . i : o I ! '.-. .'.' .. siai. d tia e.e i . ,!. -all id. i i i ; i -. . c . r. . 1 1 ' '-at.'; I . a! i;. r ',.-,it,l a -',;' d to t ;i - m : ii. ; - l. ' . a .- I. 'Pi Ti,. ,'.!:.. ; - art.' ' . i . i.g ' n. 1 1 : i i. . . ha I; i - -o-.e.i bet-,-. "' ' "" ""' ,n i a . P V t r. -:t , 'A 1 ' ' !'te " Arcjimg. Angling was indulged ia bv the Egyptians, the Creeks and the Toinan-

THE CLOTHES SOLD HERE ARE CUSTOM-MADE CLOTHES, READY FOR IMMEDIATE SERVICE. THEY'RE EVEN BETTER THAN CUSTOM MADE BECAUSE THEY'RE NEVER UNSATISFACTORY. OUR GARMENTS ARE DISTINCTLY DIFFERENT FROM THE ORDINARY READY MADE, ARE EXCLUSIVE IN STYLE, SUPERIOR IN MAKE AND WORTH AT LEAST 50 PER CENT MORE THAN THE PRICE OF $10.00 AND $15.00.

ALE

Tomorrow and Saturday; Sale Ends Sat.

lTlffiRCULOSIS WAR

SUCCESS IN STATE Red Cross Sanatorium at Rockwood Affords Proper Treatment. I; ..m.tpi: March :.. The suc- ; :; ' : "atii.t r.t of t tih.-i e ln..:.::a i.v I! a:is of p;;:e I t o; ! 1 1 mm: is ; tit an a.-s . l a::;', tin- work of the In.i'.a't; of The American Kei' I'rtiss so ,i the relte! (,! Miltflf's o! -tl.e l uhire ;'aj:!ic" is meetir.-r .v.ih . . .s- !:!! ion. "We desire the puh.ic. ' sa ; ! .;.n:.. VY. I.i.ly. td this -U . tr. a- ' r . . 1 ; - i ; i'ii's- ttit'reulosis iH'ini. h;p Uii;iv hat is tteini: dot.t at ;: .-! it ntii n t he tUiit'l I'lllttsis sal!..'''. I'iix-. at Utichwood. si n'Ues tri.! ltar.ville. this state. In the last tr,. wav.- we hae had pevcntt pattctits theft w hose treatment has been pah! ' ! ti'l moi:e receixed lrniii the sa i- ' Ked Cross Christmas seals. Th. s. .. . a's h.i e come from tliftet en Ml. onlv two fiom h i1 of these ca.-es made to M a : t ii it I the ph .-it lati :u . a -'- -n' n -linu. I lo ntites tli.it, -t : t carefui s. lettion of !:..: a li's work, noi a single , i. -nlr.-d in aa of the cases, I.! !i. lie ;. litis: ' There a I e (A it'lll , p: "'speets that each one treated will in tin.- time attain a complei.- ea'ie ami : nowhere hae heft'-r Tisnh: h.-en o!.t tained in iln -anie muni" r ot t ... - vt here so loi', a period ot lin!.. lai(lapsed ami not ,i siii",le death iia - (H'l'll I I . (i .' Would Ha Died.

" ini tiler cousideratioii jn this;,),, ,. connection i that 7.". per cent of these! east s would have died before this , ;(!,(.,

urn had they not received proper treatmoiM tor a suiticient length ot ""' -N"' llas l",n I'l " , v " "' - l-"' ""' ' I; ta, i , l'"t' a.-soei.i turns tor !' would have eoillllillIlK a't d '' to-. .!.-' 1, oihl IS. The 1, -III'.!' II' 1 ( :. ';, . patient has atiorded: :eAic!ie '"' "to disease, ii- ' ''": ,'mi'' '" '"" t Mieir home.- and io socit-i "... "i.e.- th.ni ii'is.-ionaries m t le' ; ! warfare wajie.i against tho plague.! 1 ci.-t to tiie i'. d Cross of main'.i;',i;i-: t!u pattents at this sanitoi'1'1"1 ;ti:' a ( l including everyj'!"1- " The sanatorium is on the cottage

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DoiTf OeBayS eU Qulbk-I Furniture, Carpets, IRugs, Curtains and Household Goods OF EVERY DESCRIPTION ALMOST GIVEN AWAY THESE LAST 2 DAYS OF THE SALE. IT WILL BE A BARGAIN EVENT, AN AVALANCHE OF MAJESTIC FURNITURE AND HOUSEHOLD GOODS SACRIFICE SUCH AS WILL TAKE THE CITY AND VICINITY BY STORM. YOU WILL BE HERE IF YOU HAVE ANY REGARD FOR YOUR MONEY.

CORNER

i Statu or Omo. Crrr tr Touoo. Ltc Cocsmr. ssrv J. CHrvtr cultM (nth ttrat b ts SHitor parlr.fr of th (Inn of V. J. (HtMtl 4c CO-, doing ) bvilne In in CU jr of Toledo. Ounty nrt Cut i frsi!i1. nd that sid firm wUI pv th sum ft ONF. Hl"rREI IOLLARS! tor (Kt BI rvrry ;c.-ir of OATtRitft that casaot be curra Dy tae use ot ; H-iU. CATiRnfl Cl'RC. j FR ANK J. CHENEY. Swom to N-tor ra and subartlbrd to my prtsroce.

tlt. sth day ol Lvcrmbrr. A. D.. 1SS. i A. W. GUEASON. !'-. w ta k , . M Ha Ms Catarrh Cure ts takra tntwrnally and acts dlwft.y u;vt the blood and mucoua surfaces ot tha svstem. Seod fur trtlmof!!3ls. fir. F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo. O. sv!d bv all Dmestst. 7 V. 1 jke Hall s Kamily Tills (or ronUttkio. plan, with only one patient in a cot-i-c. w ".lieh makes the segregation i tc We hope the results of this ,:r.;.a:-;u against tivberculosis may ad '.. all quarters of the state and '.st fulness of the work may t f.t'.l reeosnltion and reward. : t h.at this may be accomplish- ' . i;ed Ctoss committee is most 1 ' " - t! u . '.. -f-e that the benefits of Cie - . ; see that the benefits of the - c.c should always be used in t: 'a ' ti o' cases with regard to : a! probability of cure. Typical Case. Vronu he typical cases cured I m.t - '' ot a man who worked in a la:'-e ti..t'!c,facturing establishment in t!o t !, :!' s(.!,. supvwrt of a wife and fear t inldren. When through .!; . a-, h, became incapacitated for wt.fi.. his family was scattered aiiionu ici.iiitts and friends. He was taken i.i charge hy the Red Cross tuhercuiosis commiitee and sent to Kockweod. lie was there four months aim ! i pounds and was aftertt.iii! staf tin - lueii. He has worked cone;i months and is again : l is family. A recent wed that not a sympas. remained, ''tee has erected six cot:h It. nd lor tuberculosis will erect four more ..i line Haute; six on ! ; ia! grounds, Indianapo'inttnnes. In these intat. pata ' IHmi, local societies are prepar- ,.(! ,,, maintain the patients after we . p,-(,vide the cottages. The purpose of 'the committee is to encourage local , interest in maintaining these cottages i;l ,.jr ,(UI1 neighborhoods."' . o Caivum i bobcovwr. it is to the wife of Professor Galvani of Coi0gna that Is due the credit of having discovered the electrical batlerv which bears his name. Some skinned frogs lay upon the table, and. noticing a convulsive movement in their limbs, she called her husband's attention to the strange fact, and he instituted a series of experiments, and in 1701 he laid the foundation of the galvanic battery.

i Your M

Only Two More Sale Days, Friday and Saturday. Save $75 to $150 on Your Home Outfit.

NIIVIXM ST.

A fikiit f-er a Ood. The ancient Egyptians belieTed that the spirit of their greatest god. Osiris, dwelt anions them in tae form of a pare white bull marked by a certain sisn. Herodotus mentions two of theea slsrns a black eagle on the back and a black forehead with a square of white in its center. These creatures when found were worshiped during life and mummiriMi n f

You Will Bo Proud of tht appttrtact of your stsva if you use Black Sflrt Stove Polioh It makes old stoves look like new and lasts four times as lonff as any other shine. Don't imagine all brands of stove polish are alike. Black Silk is different. It's so much better than other stove polishes that there is absolutely no comparison. It's in a class all by itself. It makes a brilliant, glossy shine that anneals to the iron don't nib or dust off. Give it a trial. Try it on your parlor stove your cook stove or vour gas range. If you do not find it the beet stove poliah you ever used, your dealer is authorized to refund your money. Here U what com of K tadiea write usi "I like Black Silk Stova Polish Viettcr than any I have evr used. People say, 'where did you sret your new stove.' and 1 tell them it a B.ai-k Silk Stove Polish that makes it look like new." "I will not use any other kind when I can eet Black Silk Sjtove Polish. It makes stoves look nicer and stay nico lonsrer than any other polish." "Black Ssilk Stove Polish Is ly far the best I ever used. 1 have tried many different kinds but find none as srootl." "t like Black Silk Stove Tolish better than any I ever used. Several parties in this neighborhood are anxious to eet some of your polish since they saw my stovo ufter using it." Ask your hardware and stove dealer for Black Silk Stove Polish and refuse a counterfeit brand. Costs you no more than the ordinary kind so why not have the best ? MADE IN LIQUID OR PASTE ONE QUALITY Black Silk Stove Polish Works stehuno, iujkois Ask your hardware dealer also (or Black Silk Air Drying: Enamel for use on grates, feeders, registers, stove pipes, etc. prevents rusting. Night, Apr. I

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