Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 263, 30 July 1911 — Page 8
XAOE EIGHT.
THE mCiiMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SUNDAY. JULY .TO, 1911.
ALIENISTS ARE TO PLAY MAIN PARTS
Beattie Case at Richmond, Va., Is to Be Like the Harry Thaw Case. (National News Association) Richmond, Va., Jily 29. A battle of alienists Huch as a8 witnessed in th Thaw case in New York, will probably be the fealure of the trial of Henry Clay Beanie, Jr., who is accused of murdering h!s wife while they were taking an automobile ride together on the evening of July 18. It was learned today that statements of counsel fcr young Bfattie had reached a tentative state and that the insanity plea was being strongly considered as the baels of the defense. Under such conditions testimony would be introduced to show Beattie had an abnormal fondness for women and that he was an excessive cigaret smoker. Beulah Blnford, Fieattie's affinity, will probably be a witness for the defense and if the insanity plea is definitely adopted she will be asked to define the irregularities in Beattie's life of which she is cognizant. From his earliest jouth the twentysix year old prisoner has been notorious for his amours although Beulah Blnford is the only girl that remained in his affection. Today there were rumors of another woman in the case, a circumstance not at all unlikely, according to those who knew Beattie. Search for "the man with the scraggly beard" who Beattie charges shot and killed Mrs. Beattie has been abandoned while the authorities are bending their efforts to get further Information on the prisoner from Paul Beattie, who says he purchased a shotgun for Henry Clay Beattie, Jr., and Beulah Blnford.
NARCOMANIA
T OB AC U M
(Continued from Page Two)
ter thirty-five years observation and careful study of all forms of narcomania, the writer is convinced that because of its Insidlousness, slow delusive undermining of all those higher asthetlc and spiritual attributes of the human mind, tobacco, more than any one other cause of narcomania, is fast driving the people in a mad rush of hedonism, an insane materialism, palate-pleasing and pleasure-seeking. If, as we believe, tobacco-narcoma-nia is the most prevalent and popular disease in the world, the writer's experience has proved that it is proportionately tho more ameniable to proper treatment than any other from of narcomania. As a rule with very few exceptions, when a patient with tobacco-heart, nicotine stomach, chronic tobacco constipation, tobacco-kidney, nicotian Insomnia or inability to sleep, &c, &c, is shown that whllo tobacco has caused his aliment, it will also prevent medicines from properly remedying the disease by the law of supersession, or in other words the system is so saturated with tobacco that it will supercede all medical influence; when the tobacco user is very sick with any acute disease, he loses the appetite for tobacco, the vital force vaguely called "nature," now has as much as it can do to fight the disease, and simply shuts off all desire for the poisonous vitality-whipping weed; when all this is candidly pointed out to the patient, with no exceptions in our experience, he resolutely says, "well, I will Just cut out the tobacco entirely. I have no further use for that In my life;" and he means it, does so, soon is well "and lives happy ever after." This series of articles on tobacco narcomania will close with the next one, which will discuss the subject from a more optimistic view point.
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For the Children
j - Jwo Comrade Who Are Trying to Keep Cool.
ci , h 111
Photo by American Press Association. While tbe July torrid wave was felt in nearly nil sections of the country, it caused more discomfort In the big cities than where trees wave and grass is green. The picture shows two chums who lire in tbe most crowded places of residence to be found anywhere. New York children do not see many trees and very little grass, but they are not altogether unhappy. Sometimes when the sun is hot the boys jump into tbe basins of fountains in the parks and even Into horse troughs. They have to keep an eye out for tho policemen, though, for he makes great pretense of catching them. Our picture boys are sharing the breezes from a fan.
Gam of Snowballs. The game called snowballs is played very like tbe old favorite, the potato race. The snowballs are little toys, or Jokes, or favors, as you please, wrapped in cotton batting very carefully, so that the balls may be perfectly round, and then, last of all. are covered with white tissue paper, glued on. If you put a thin coat of mucilage over the outside of this and sprinkle it with frost powder It will look like a real snowball. There should be as many balls as there are guests In the party. Two baskets Just ordinary market baskets
will do are provided to hold the snowballs and are placed on two chairs at one end of tbe room. The snowballs are then laid on the carpet in two long lines from each basket to tbe end of the room, an equal number In each line and the same distance apart. A child stands by each chair and at given signal runs for the farthest snowball, picks it up and, running back, drops it In the basket, then goes for tbe next farthest, and so on until all are collected. Tbe child who first gathers all in bis row Into his basket wins the game. No snowball must be broken. If one is torn It counts as a foul in the game. The children may be divided for this game into two teams, and the side which has the most successful players after all have bad a chance to play counts as the winning team. At the end of tbe game the snowballs are distributed, and the children open them, discovering the treasures wrapped up inside. Have a Try. The bees said "Try," and turned tbe flowers into honey. The squirrel said "Try," and he went to tbe top of tbe beech tree. The snowdrop said "Try," and bloomed In the cold snows of winter. The sun said "Try," and spring soon threw Jack Frost out The lark said "Try." and he found that bis wings took him over hedges and ditches and up where bis father was singing. The ox said 'Try.T and plowed the field from end to end. No hill too steep for Try to climb. N'o clay too stiff for Try to plow. No field too wet for Try to drain. Ko hole too large for Try to mend. Do try, do you? Try trying!.
DECLARE PRIMARIES TO BE OF IMPORT Presidential Primaries in Five States Will Show People's Choice.
A PROGRESSIVE STEP
First Elections of Kind in U. S. Skeptical Politicians Are Watching. BY RODERICK CLIFFORD Washington, July 29. Growing out of the pregressive Republican move
ment, presidential primary elections !
will be held in five states next spring ! and a test of a "closer-to-the-people" government will be made. In these el- j ections delegates to national conven-1
tions which are to nominate men for president and vice-president, will be elected and instructed for whom they ! are to vote in convention by a popular preferential system. These will be the first presidential primaries ever held j in the United States. Four of these states followed the lead of Oregon, the pioneer in the field. The five states which will hold these elections, and the dates of the elections, follow: North Dakota, March 19; Wisconsin, April 12; Nebraska, April 17; Oregon, April 19; New Jersey, May 28. Scattered as these states are, and of a variety of political faiths, it is maintained among both Republican and Democratic advocates of a popular form of government that the primary election results in these states will indicate what the final result of the 1912 presidential campaign will be. The man who is pointed to as the originator of the Oregon plan, and who is an enthusiast on the subject of preferential elections. Senator Bourne.declares that the selection of convention delegates in North Dakota, Wisconsin, Oregon and New Jersey, will actually determine who the next president and vice president of the United States will be. But there is a log in the road, say some skeptical politicians. It is being
suggeseted that there is danger of the
convention delegates from these states having the convention hall doors slammed in their faces. The supporters of
the reform measures scoff at this idea, and are willing to wager that no machine dominating a national convention will dare to refuse to recognize and seat delegates selected under a popular and preferential system.
Other States Interested With the odds favoring the seating
of the popularly elected delegates, the outcome of the primaries in the states
named undoubtedly will be watched with the greatest interest. The last of these preferential elections wil be held in May, the New Jersey election,
just before the national campaign will
be in full blast. They wil begin in
' He Played the Ticker. "I offered to let him have a hundred." "That would only be a drop In the bucketshop.' Life.
SQdDWS
All coal oil and gasoline stoves and self -generating gasoline ranges go at cost
If you are looking for a bargain in a coal oil or gasoline stove, now is the time to buy.
Weiss Antique Furniture Store 519 Main Street
March, in North Dakota, and last through until the end of May, and as the pulse of the people in the five states is read slowly through a period of tvyo and a half months, the stock of different presidential aspirants Is likely to rise or fall, as the elections indicate. In June it is expected, the two most important national conventions will be held. There is one Important condition in the Oregon system which makes it uncertain that delegates from a particular state, say Neeraska, will carry out the instructions of the greater number of individual electors residing in that state. It is this: In the event it shall be determined beyond doubt in national convention that a delegation will be throwing away its voting power in carriyng out the directions of the state voters, then the delegates may vote otherwise. The obligation to represent the will of the people of Nebraska is a moral one, not a legal one. The Oregon law, adopted by the people of that state in 1910, provides that in general election years the qualified
electors shall be given the opportunity to express their choice for president and vice president, and the ballots shall be( cast, counted and canvassed in the same way that state officers are elected. The names of the candidates of the various political parties shall appear on he party nominating' ballot from president down to the last elective precinct officer. The final result of the election shall be officially cer
tified to the convention delegates who have at the same time been elected. How Plan Works. It is the right of the voter in the primary election to vote for one candidate for national convention delegate in his party for the nomination in turn of one preidential elector. The names of aspirants for the office of national convention delegate shall be placed on the nominating ballot by petition of a certain per cent of the
party vote at the election next preceding in the state for members of Congress, or the signatures of a certain number of party voters. The travelling
expenses are to be paid by the state
for each convention delegate for actual attendance upon the convention, if such expenses do not exceed a stat
ed amount for delegates. An oath of
office to uphold the Constitution and laws of the United States and of the state is provided in the presidential preference law. It is also sworn by the delegates that he will, to the best of hisability and judgment follow the will of his district. The privilege is granted each aspirant for the office of delegate whose name is placed on the nominating bal
lot, to use four pages in his party's campaign book, setting forth his plea for election as delegate. Each person nominated for president or vice-president shall be accorded four pages of space In his party's state campaign
book under the Oregon law, free of i
charge. Other candidates who are voted for by the electors of the state at large shall be charged $100 for this campaign book privilege, and this amount shall not be counted in the ten per cent of one year's salary that the candidate is allowed to spend in his campaign.
NOLLE AFFIDAVITS
N. Y. SUPREME COURT INCREASED BY DIX
(National News Association) Albany. July 29. Gov. Dix today signed the bill appointing three additional supreme court justices to the first district. The crowded condition of the calendar is given as a reason for this action.
MOORE ESTATE FILED
Affidavits charging Cadda Howard and Anna Brenner, now Howard's wife with forniaction, were dismissed on Saturday.- .
V Schroon Lake. Scbroon lake owes its name to an Adirondack Indian expression meanins "a daughter of the mountain."
CHAMPION SCULLER
(National News Association) I Sydney. N. S. W, July 2Sk RichaH Arnst, the Australian sculling chain pion. today defeated Henry Pea ret here for the sculling championship ol the world, and set a new time record for 3 12 miles. Arnst'a time was 1 minutes and 45 seconds. He won bj four lengths. j
Franklin Moore, executor of the will of the late Joseph Moore, filed the document in the Wayne Probate court today. The personal estate is of the value of ?300. Franklin Moore and Ella Moore are the benficiaries, each sharing equally in the estate.
ENTIRELY BALD
Her Hair Commenced to Grow After Two Weeks' Use of Newbro'a Herpicide "Fever caused me to be entirely bald I had given up all hope of again having hair when I was advised to use Herpicide. After two weeks my haid commenced to grow. I now have the most bentiful head of hair anyone ever saw,. Praise to Newbro'a Herpicide." Thus writes Mrs. Howard Bailey, of Bellevue, Mich. We can point to thousands of instances where the pro
per use of Herpicide has been follow
ed by a remarkable growth of hair. Newbro'a Herpicide is the original remedy which kills the dandruff germ and stops falling hair. One Dollar Size Bottles are sold and guaranteed by all druggists. Send 10c in postage for sample and bookie? to The Herpicide Co., Dept. R., Detroit, Mich.
Applications may be obtained at the
best barbers and haid dressers. A. G Lukon & Co., Special Agents.
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NOTICE! Members of Couer de Lion Lodge No. 8, K. of P., are requested to be at lodge rooms, Tuesday night to arrange for a picnic. COMMITTEE.
ATLAS
ALPHA
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SELL THESE BRANDS
UNIVERSAL
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Years of use have proven them to meet
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ESTABLISHED RETAIL PRICES
4? -V
Railroad
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of HIGHI GRAJQE
EginWatditt
KmTCHES
Contract Price IS size Vanguard, 23 Jewels $40.00 18 size Vanguard, 21 Jewels $37.50 IS size Vanguard, 19 jewels $35.00 IS size Crescent St., 21 -jewels $31.50 IS size Crescent St., 19 jewels $30.00 15 size No. S45, 21 jewels $28.00 16 size Riverside Maximus, 23 jewels. .$70.00 16 size Vanguard, 23 jewels $40.00 16 size Vanguard, 19 jewels $35.00 16 size Crescent St., 21 jewels $3130 16 size Riverside, 19 jewels $23.50 16 size Royal, IT jewels $18.00 12 size Riverside Maximus, 23 jewels. .$70.00 12 size 19 jewels $2830 12 size Royal. 17 jewels $18.00
Railroad Standai
lS-size Veritas, 23 jewels $40.00 18 size Veritas, 21 jewels $36.00 IS size Father Time, 21 jewels $31.00 lSsize34S-349 21 jewels $28.00 15 size B. W. Raymond, 19 jewels $27.00 lS-sizeB. W. Raymond, 17 jewels $24.00 16 size Lord Elgin, 23 jewels $80.00 16 size 156-162, 21 jewels $70.00 16 size Veritas, 23 jewels $40.00 16 size Veritas, 21 jewels $36.00 16 size B. TV. Raymond, 17 jewels $25.00 16 size No. 280 17 jewels $23.00 16 size B. W. Raymond, 19 Jewels $27.00 16 size G. M. Wheeler, 17 jewels $17.00 12 size Lord Elgin, 23 jewels $70.00 12 size 190-194, 23 jewels $70.00 12 sizelS9-193. 19 jewels $30.00 12 size G. M. Wheeler, 17 jewels $17X0
We can put either of the above movements in any style, Gold Of 3old filled case you desire. Call and examine our line. v HIANER. The Jeweler. 81 Main St.
HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS -In Gold, and a BEAUTIFUL PONY, CART AND HARNESS COMPLETE GIVEN AWAY Absolutely Free By t FELTMAN'S SHOE STORE
92 prizes distributed over Richmond and Wayne county; 4 prizes to each ward in the city of Richmond and each township in Wayne county, divided equally between boys and girls; and one GRAND PRIZE consisting of a genuine full blooded Shetland pony, a handsome new 4-passenger, 4-w heeled cart and fine new set of harness. The Outfit Will Be on Exhibition at Our Store Next Week. Contest Open to All Boys and Girls
in Wayne County Under 16. TO THE BOYS AND GIRLS: t
Do you want to win one of these prizes? Send us a postal card today, simply stating your name, age, ward or township and post-office address, or cut out and fill in the blank at the bottom of this ad and mail it to us, and you will receive by return mail full instructions as to how you may win one of these prizes as well as the pony and cart. It will cost you not a penny of money and very little effort. You never won a prize so easily before. Write to day. i
To Feltman's Shoe Store, . -n . 724 Main Street, Richmond, Indiana, My name is ....w.. Ago "..... Ward or township P. O. address
FeHmm's Stmt Store 724 Main St Richmond, Indiana
Good Place to Trade
Furniture ol Quality
I
Admitting that the average furniture is pretty good, we yet go to some trouble to provide furniture for your home a little better than the average to sell at the average price. So while you may have been getting pretty good furniture elsewhere, you can get better here better in quality, better in finish for the price you've been paying elsewhere. See our complete home outfits, 4 rooms complete for $ 1 64t75
Outfit for the Sitting Outfit for tbe Dining Room Room S41L.iyS $39.00 Outfit for toe Bed Outfit for the Room Kitchen
See our Solid Oak Dresser, good finish, good plate beveled Mirror, plenty of drawer room; only $8.95 Other Dressers, $10.00, $12.75, $24.50, up. Golden Oak Chiffoniers, good values at $6.75, $9.50, $14.50, up. , "v Extra big values in Rugs this week. . m .J7 We cheerfully extend the courtesy of a charge account to any responsible person. IR. O rMI EY'S 9TH AND MAIN STS.
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