Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 258, 25 July 1911 — Page 2

PAGE TWO.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AXD SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, JULY S3, 11111.

CHICAGO

EDITOR

IS

GRAFTER'S VICTIM Paid for "Inside- Information" Against Lorimer Alleging Lobbying.

(National News Association) Washington. July 25. The greatest sensation yet developed fat-fore the Lorimer Investigating committee -was brought out today when James Keeley, publisher of the Chicago Tribune, testified that George O. Olavis whom the editor recently had-had arrested on embezzlement charges had told him Lorimer and former Representative James Tawney had received fees paid by lobbyists In Washington for congressional work. Tawney was chairman of the house committee on appropriations in last congress. Keeley's striking statements were brought out during the cross examination but by Judge Ifancey. Keeley said that Glavis came to him in Chicago and represented that he knew of the existence of certain books kept

by a firm of lobbyists which had dealings with Lorimer and Tawney; and that he knew of one instance where $2,000 was paid to these lobbyists by a firm of liquor dealers and he knew that twenty five percent of this amount was retained by Lorimer. Glavis agreed to obtain the books from a wife of one of the members of the firm in Washington and Keeley gave him a hundred dollars for his expenses. Glavis went to Washington where Keeley arranged with the Tribune correspondent to pay him six bundred dollars for the books and papers. After accepting the money Glavis approached Keeley in an effort to withdraw from the agreement and refund the money, but Keeley insisted on Olavis making good and the embezzlement Indictment followed. Glavis claimed be had turned the books over to his brother in West Virginia but the latter denied any knowledge of them. Keeley Indicated after Investigation to print what the books showed. He admitted Glavis had put one over on him, and McCormlck gave him the laugh.

TONY BIDDLE GREAT FIGHTER AND JOKER

The Haarle of Xilfto. 1 lafrata aod children ara constantly neadiaa a laiathra. It la important to know what to givm tham. Ttaair stomach and towels ava aot strungsnomjb 'or salts, punratrvs waters ar cathartic pills, powder or tablets. Give them a mild, pleasant, a-entle, laxative tonio like Dr. Caldwell's Svrup Pepsin, which sells at the small

y ooats or si at drotr stores. It is the

one treat remedy for yon to have in the house to

give couuren wnen tney need it.

y. ' S(t , y- v (4 1 " r-- 't '

MEETING

"Tony; Biddle, the rich Philadelphia amateur boxer, now at Atlantic City, who has discovered that a heavy coat of sunburn on his bald spot has produced a growth of hair. At least, he spread the story about. The baldheaded visitors, never doubting the word of the young millionaire, took the hint, and Instead of appearing on the IJoardwalk well protected against the rays of the sun, appeared hatless. Now most of them are nursing a fine growth of blisters. And they haven't any hair. "Tony" hasn't appeared on the boardwalk since he appeared the new hair restorer.

The Duke's Quostien. "Is everybody free and equal la America?" "Yes. duke, of course." "Then why do you constantly remind me tbat yon are introducing me nly to your really very best people?" Pittsburg Post.

Y, M. B. C.

'HELD LAST WIGHT Club Names a Committee to Investigate "the Water .Works Proposals. Directors of the Young Men's Business, club met on Monday evening at the Westcott hotel and took up the consideration of the water works franchise. Five members of the club will be appointed by President F. L. Torrence to make an impartial investigation of both proposals and canvas the business men and citizens generally to determine their sentiments re

garding the two propositions submitted. It will report to the club and point out the advantages and disadvantages of each proposition submitted and likewise probably make suggestions and recommendations. The report of the committee having in charge the matter of the installation of cluster lights in the business district reported that sentiment favored the idea, but, that stone, rather than iron posts were preferred for the support of the lights. The exact cost of stone pillars will be ascertained and reported at the next meeting. President Torrence and John Zwissler will visit Lafayette some time during the week of August 7 to attend the state encampment of the Uniform Rank, K. of P., and the subordinate lodges . Richmond likely will put in a bid for the 1912 encampment of this order. Fire drills will be urged practiced in the local factories and retail and

wholesale establishments particularly where a large number of girls are employed. It is probable that council will be asked to pass an ordinance making fire drills compulsory in all shops, stores and factories. The meeting was held at the Westcott hotel and preceeded by a banquet.

MAD

E A

CONFESSIOF

Implicating Beattie for Mur- . der of His Wife.

(National Xews Association) Richmond, Va., July 25. Police today announced that Beulah Binford had made a complete confession showing the motive for the murder of Mrs. Henry Clay Beattie, jr., whose husband is charged with the crime. The confession, which the police declare is sufficient to send Beattie to the electric chair, embodied statements made by Beattie to Mis3 Binford indicating he wanted to get rid of his wife and live with the Binford girl.

A' PEACE PREACHER.

Mrs. Elmer Black, Who Has Gone Abroad to Spread the New Gospel.

QUEEN OF BELGIUM IS CONG RxVTU LATE D

(National News Association) Brussels, July 25. Queen Elizabeth, who has but recently recovered from a very serious illness, received worldwide congratulations today on the thirty-fifth anniversary of her birth. Before her marriage ten years ago. her Majesty was a princess of Bavaria. She is the mother of two sons and a daughter, her eldest boy, the heir to the throne, being now in his tenth year.

FARMERS OF TEXAS IN MEETING TODAY

TRIVIALITIES. It is m. those aclspjed tropabties that the SAgds erjoy are forever wasted uftaf men and woman )qok round with haggard faces at the devastation their own waste ' has made and say the earth hears,, no harvest of sweetness, calling their denial knowledge. GeotgetQiot.

f National News Association) College Station, Texas, July 25. Members of the state orgniEations of cotton growers, corn growers, swine breeders, dairymen, fruit growers and other agricultural bodies rounded up in force here today for the annual session of the Texas Farmers' congress, with which they are affiliated. More than 50 papers and addresses are to be presented during the three days' session.

MANUFACTURERS OF LUMBER MET TODAY

(National News Association) Wasau, Wis., July 25. Wages, insurance rates, uniform accounting, the new workmen's compensation law and and the general outlook in the lumber trade were among the subjects discussed at the summer meeting of the Northern Hemlock and Hardwood Manufacturers' association, which met here today.

FROST PREDICTED FOR THIS EVENING

Cold Spell General Througout Middle West Was Some Snowfall.

MRS. ELM SB BLACK. Mrs. Elmer Black is one of the persons who do uot agree with ex-President Roosevelt in bis opinion of the impossibility of settling international disputes by arbitration. Mrs. Black is an apostle of peace. She talks and writes peace. One of the most" interesting addresses made at the recent peace conference in Baltimore was hers. Mrs. Black is vice president of the congress. She is also editor and publisher of the Editorial Review, a magazine that advocates universal peace. In regard to her peace views. Mrs. Black says: "I would not-have much faith in arbitration treaties or even Hague courts if evolutien had stopped with nationalism. If patriotism bad only passed from a devotion to the state to a blinder devotion to one's country. But because 1 see everywhere this new habit of thinking in werid terms, this growing oneness of all humanity, this deepening sense of brotherhood and a kinship of soul stronger and more enduring than mere national distinctions because of this I believe tbat the promise of world peace and the reign of law is both feasible and certain of fulfillment."

(National News Assoolarilom Indianapolis, July 25 Danville, 111., Findlay, Ohio, and Ft. Wane report slight snow flurries late yesterday. The mercury here was 4S below early this morning. Frosty atmospheres are predicted for Tuesday night.

GALE HITS CHICAGO. Chicago, July 23. Chicago and the middle west but a few days a,cc sweltering in a death-dealing heat heat blast today are in the midst of a far more unseasonable cold wave. The sudden change from almost the hottest weather, locally, in history, tc the lowest July temperature on record along with a teTrific gale that ble over the city and lashed the lake into afury, wrecking yachts and stopping marine traffic, probably will make tut cold wave as costly as the furnace liki hot wave that preceded it. Probably the most important fea ture of the weather situation just nov is that the corn trop, which threatenec to burn up for lack of water, now i: threatened with blight for lack o heat. The most serious results of the ter riSc gale were reported from the east era shore of Lake Michigan. The win. that whistled over Chicago at the rat of 44 miles an hour swept everythin; on the water before it. Many yachts participating in the yacht race nat rowly escaped being wrecked. The bij passenger boats encountered difficult? in making harbor. Making damage tc the fruit crop is reported from Micht gan.

CABINET GOT REPORT ON WILEY CASE

(National News Association) Washington, July 23. Secretary of Agriculture Wilson today presented tc President Taft his recommendation lithe Wiley case. His report was sub ject to discussion at the cabinet meet ing. No definite action is looked foi until the Moss committee makes s thorough investigation.

W. E. PICKETT BUYS u

COMMISSION HOUSE

Announcement that If. V. McXeland, the well known commission merchant had disposed of his interests to W. E. Pickett, formerly of the grocery firm of Pickett and White of West Richmond was made on Monday evening. Edward Sudhoff succeeds Mr. Pickett in the grocery firm.

CANADIANS TAKE UP TREATY BILL

(National Nws Association) Ottowa, July 25. At a government caucus it was decided that morning sessions would be begun tomorrow ind the reciprocity measure should e rushed to the exclusion of all othr matters at the morning, afternooa ind evening sessions.

FORMER LOCAL GIRL DRANK DEADLY ACID Miss Ruth Conner, a former Richnoud girl, and daughter of Mrs. Frank -onner Cole of Indianapolis, who wai mried in liarlhatn cemetery on Monlay, committed suicide according tc ndianarolis authorities. She drank hree ounces of carbolic acid on Frl lay evening and died within thirt minutes. The Indianapolis polic earned the girl and her mother dia .ereed over a trivial matter. The girt vas but sixteen years old. Loca' ;ealth officers did not issue a burlai ermit and the allegations of Indian spolis authorities could not be proven

Defoe end Ciii.vj C-nks-Thougy Iuiu.;a f iJuihv.ell waa tj juuder of our Crst savings bank. th rst suggestion came from tianlel I) h. When he found himself conipellcJ hide from the bailiffs in a sm:i!l Bristol Inn lie turned his enforcH Msure nml financial failure to acccuul y writing the Esay on Projects." It icals with Havings bunks, friendly i ictles. Insurauce. academies and buuliupts. On ail these subjects Defoe of-' rs from his f.-rtlle brain suggestion! that startle the reader by their modern ring. On bankrupts and savings bntitu Defoe naturally wrote with fpeliu During his stny iu Eristol he win knowu as "the Sunday gentleman." owing to bis natural uu willingness tc take the air except on that day of thi vek which deprived ' balHCs of thUi stng. London CLrouiele.

Palladium Want Ads Pay.

Simple and Very Helpful Exercises, Try Them in Your Room Every Night and Morning

my toes, and itretch as though I vWW..fi i"n ' ' - !fr - A J I &' were trying to reach eome InvisibU f SwN-l ? :N ;ca..V ' 'TJ I II point with my foreflngera. . , :JyJjtfX ? X X I f:. ',vw-v I A valuable variation of this la ly- i 'K "11 1 , ' X I '' v", '-11, I tog face foremost and. witi hands PfJi?A " V b - " N J I H A : ? " " clasped behind . i'tihX Wf&& j f - I ' . lf VV t ' f I U

for ; ' - ' 4 t women . ''f llA of X:- ,XSs:st 'A' :l I - undeveloped W with j 4VA H hollows II nr: in . fpr pV '"' II ' V :

By LURA BENNETT.

ir cymnaaiom, or special athleuo

1

xercUea, be out of the reach or meana of thm rir who wants to

bm strons, there are. exercises which can be practised at home, and in her own bedchamber that will excellently develop her muscle and raise her health to a much higher power than she has ever enjoyed. One of the most valuable exercises, because It corrects a condition almost universal with women. Is that for which Z have posed in what 'looks like an arrested or Interrupted backward somersault. Lie flat upon your back on a rug or on the bare floor. This is much better than the bed because the hard floor offers resistance. Then draw the knees up to meet the breast Clasp the knees In your arms.' At the same time slightly raise the bead, say to a distance of three Inches above the floor. Hold this position -while you count ten slowly, then relax to the first position, lying limply upon the floor. Rest for an Interval of three counts. Then repeat Do tbtJ every morning from five to twenty times. Valuable, too, for the woman ot undeveloped chest and a "beauty exerette" most helpful to the woman who complains of the ugly hollows In her neck. Is that ot alternately crossing the arms in front, then winging them behind in the same fashion. Note that I did not say

fold the arms, but cross them, the point of crossing be near

lbows. A serious defect marring the symmetry of the figure ot both English and American women Is the disproportionately large abdomen. The exercise for this Is another modification ot the somersault It Is the backward somersault sustained at bait mast eo to speak. The weight rests in part on the head, partly on the shoulders, and a portion of It Is shifted to the palms ot the bands. This exercise Is a difficult one, requiring much practice. A halt dozen alow repetitions of It are enough for one morning. Stretching Is an exercise that cannot be overvalued, for It awakes sleeping muscles and stimulates lareak ones. It Increases the amount t air taken Into the lungs. It has even in youth, caused girls to grow taller. I rates my arms above my feead, rise en tiptoes, balancing on

Let the

bead and should

ers from the mat using only the muscles ot the neck and shoulders, getting leverage by pushing into the mat with the toes. I have often rigged up in

my room a punching bag. or a pair of them. This Is another much needed exercise for women who are deficient In chest development and active vigor. I recommend it too, for another common feminine ailment defective circulation.

The exercises which I have

ecrlbed to you are among the more difficult ones and are especially used by those with muscles well trained by previous simpler exercises. These simpler exercises are numerous, and most well Informed women not only know of but practise them. For instance, the Emerson exercises, used without apparatus, are in vogue in some of the public achools. Any person with four limbs, moder

ate intelligence and concentration.

can use them to advantage.

movements are far from difficult

The first taught Is that of clenching the hands and resting them upon the chest near the collar bones. Raise the right hand with a straight upward movement above the head. Raise and let them fall to position again with regular rhythmic movements, keeping in mind the regularity of a clock. Repeat with the left arm, then with both together. In the same way let the clenched hands fall to the sides. These exercises, though elemental, are most useful la giving the body poise. In developing the chest and in training to deep breathing. Dr. Belle Macdonald. the New York physician and member of an American Board for Education for Public Health, lately advocated the use of the roofs in New York for preserving the health of iu realdents. That was an excellent idea. : am glad to follow In Dr. Macdon-

One of the most rateable exercise is that which looks like an arrested backward somersault."

"The greatest known exercise for arms and -shoulders is that known as pushng the mat

The

rJ

'With hands clasped behind me, I raise my head and shoulders from the mat, using only

or my necs ana snouiaers. ' the ,fl0ner footstePs advise and Is freer from dust Also it is On the roof you can practise e city girls and women who read cooler, especially when the roof is dancing or ropeskipping. You can us to go to the roofs for their dally protected from the midday rays of practise running or brisk walking. Xr e t&e sun by awnings, or even an old Gtl a mat or quilt you can practtoa The ir is much surer on the roofs auHt or sheet rolling if yea are overplamn, or

oa:eriaults if yoa are of heavy and course I do not counsel your beginunwieldy movements. And what ning with eight miles if yoa have Place except a mountain peak or the 0' ld - f - beach of fiMw- f 5" a mOe. In the course of a -

" v wees: or two you cau easily extend

it to two or taree. And In a .few months the one mile will easily become eight. Wear the right sort of shoes and - there Is but one rigat sort of shoes tfiose with soles

oroaaer u-an tfle feet and with lo ;

daily deep breathine exercises T

Oh, no, dear reader, that Is not a misprint I mean eight eifffit. eight. Women would all be healthier

and happier and .handsomer if , they

- - --- w. viuwer tun uu ieet, ana took those eight miles J, day, ot cr moderately high heels.