Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 340, 14 October 1911 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1911.

PAGE THREE

PRACTICAL FARMER IS STATtLECTURER Brown Not Located by Eaton Friende Preble County Teachers Met.'

EATON, O., Oct. 14. Frank Blackford of Eldorado has been reappointed one of the state's lecturers for service at various farmers' Institutes to be held during the coming winter. Mr. Blackford Is a practical farmer and is one of the ablest on matters of agriculture now on the Btate staff. The institute to be held In Eaton has been granted aid by the state, and two speakers will be supplied. Efforts to locate C. A. Brown, who Jnysteriously left the city a few days ago, have thus far been unavailing. Brown made numerous alleged crooked deals and left his former friends feel they are holding the sack for various amounts. His accounts with the Binger Sewing Machine company, for which he was local agent, are badly mixed. His Irregularities with this company and with others involved In transactions with him are reported to aggregate nearly $1,100. While the attendance only equaled the standard established at previous sessions, tho. interest, manifest in the meeting of the Treble County Teach rrs' association, held in the opera house Saturday, was exceptional. The morning session was taken up by an address by Prof. N. W. Ferris, presi dent of Ferris Institute, Big Rapids Mich., who touched upon many mat ters of importance to pedagogues. In the afternoon addresses were made by Prof. Ferris and Supt. E. J. Brown of the Dayton schools. A special musical number was a solo by Franw White of Camden. Long Service Rewarded. After a continuous service of twen ty-nlne years in the employ of the Pennsylvania lines John Sharkey, local ticket and freight agent, is enjoy ing his first vucation. During his ab sence from duty the affairs of the office will be in charge of D. E. Cox of Walton, Ind. Charles It. Hector, who was nearly drawned a few days ago when a boat capsized with himself and a party of friends In a river at Aroy, is a former resident of Eaton. He is a son of E. D. Hector, ex-county 'treasurer. He is a graduate of the local high school and Miami university, Oxford. Since completing the course at Oxford he has been teaching in the Troy high school. The Rev, Daniel L. Myers of Dayton will occupy the pulpit at the local Presbyterian church Sunday evening. Rally day will be observed Sunday In the Sabbath school of the Barron street Church of Christ. Rev. and Mrs. Harvey C. Bream have returned from Pittsburg and are now at home to their friends on North Lincoln street. Before her marriage, which took place Wednesday, the bride was Miss Maude E. Harbaugh of Fairfield, Pa. Rev. Bream is pastor of the Barron street Church of Christ. DO YOU WASH IN STREAKS? Some women do. They can't help it. They don't have time to wash out the streaky yellow soap. They are too tired, anyway. "There's no yellow In Hewitt's Easy Task Laundry soap. It's white and pure. Makes a quick, foamy suds that chases out dirt and sends the wash out snow white to the line. Your grocer has it. Five cents a cake. PROMINENT NAVAL OFFICER RETIRES (National News Association) WASHINGTON, Oct. J4. Captain John W. Boyer, former superintendent of the Naval academy at Annapolis, was placed on the retired list of the navy today upon recommendation of a medical board. He was retired with the rank of rear admiral. Captain Bowyer was born in Indiana and appointed to the Naval academy from Iowa in 1870. During the Spanish war he - served on the gunboats Princeton and Yorktown, and subsequently commanded the cruiser Columbia. He was the youngest commander in the famous cruise of the Atlantic fleet around the world. His retirement results in the promotion of Captain Nathaniel R. Usher to the rank of rear admiral. The average life of a railroad cross tie Is fifteen years. SCRAPS FARMER'S WIFE HAD HEAP TO DO Mrs. Shepherd Was in Bad Shape When She Could Nut Stand on Her Feet Durham, N. C "1 am a farmer's wife," writes Mrs. J. M. Shepherd, of this city, "and have a heap to do." "Four months ago I could not stand en my feet, to do anything much, but at this time I do the most of my work. I took Cardui and it did me more good than all the doctors. "You don't know half how 1 thank you for the Cardui Home Treatment. 1 wish that all women who suffer from womanlv trouble would treat themselves as I have' Ladies can easily treat themselves at home, with Cardui, the woman's tonic. It is easy to take, and so gentle in its action, that it cannot do anything but 'good. Being composed exclusively of vegetable ingredients, Cardui cannot lay up trouble in your system, as mineral drugs often do. Its ingredients having no harsh, medicinal effects, and being nonpoisonous and perfectly harmless, Cardui Is absolutely sate for young and old. Ask your druggist. He will tell you to try Cardui. N. &-VMM v UAn Advtaot- Dept. Ctetaaooca McdictaMTaiMtaiKKn TMk. for XS5icttMu4 Hww fcoofcT-Ho Tu.uam,

OWEN WISTER DEAD Famous Novelist Died on Montana Ranch.

(National News Association) CLEVELAND, O.. Oct. 14. Owen Wister, the well known novelist, author of "The Virginian" died at Wyoming today. He was on a ranch there where he got material for many of his western stories. Mrs. Mary Wister, his wife, had the news of his death broken to her here Friday when she had arrived on on a special train. She was on her way to Wyoming when she reecived the news. Mr. Wister was in poor health when he left Philadelphia for the west and he had not been well for three years. Mr. Wister was educated in Switzerland, England and Rome and as a boy displayed great musical ability. Ill health compelled him to abandon his musical studies and he returned to America. Amusements "BABY MINE TONIGHT." With a laugh in every line, and a laugh quite worth while, such as will echo in your memory as you go home with this requisite for a comedy that is destined to wear a very long time, "Baby Mine" has its first local presentation at the Gennett tonight under the direction of William A. Brady, Ltd. "Baby Mine" ran for one solid year at Daly's theater. New York, and has already reached its second year in London, at the Vaudeville theater. Productions are also, shortly to be made in Paris, Berlin, Vienna, St. Petersburg, South Africa, South America, Australia and Japan; thus "Baby Mine" will virtually put a girdle of laughter around the world. "Baby Mine" is said to raise a veritable cyclone of laughter during the course of its three rapid-fire act. Not in many, many moons have the walls of the Gennett re-echoed to more spontaneous and continuous laughter than they will tonight, lor from the rise of the curtain to its fall, the fun will not be allowed to flag for one moment. The advance sale has been unusually large and there should be a full house. "THY NEIGHBOR'S WIFE." Seldom have such amused shouts of laughter been heard in a theater as those which have nightly greeted the comic complications in "Thy Neighbor's Wife," with Arthur Byron, in the different theaters where this comedy is played. The company presenting this play under the management of Daniel Frohman, will be seen at the Gennett, Thursday night, Oct. 19. The play was received with enthusiastic approval by the Philadelphia and New York press and is a unique and unusual comedy of domestic life. The two (twin) cottageB, -shown in the first act, with their lawns, form a charming stage picture. In these houses reside two couples. The husband of one o fthe young women loves his home and his garden, but his wife, whose inclinations are not domestic, spends her' time with her wardrobe and with her personal appearance, and the husband suffers from neglect. In the adjoining house, the husband is indifferent to his home, always comes In late, and his wife is a model housekeeper. The husbands discover that each thinks he loves the other man's spouse and want to trade wives. The women suspect a trick, and the progress of the play and its development concerns itself with this comic mixup and misunderstanding, to the final curtain, when, through the shrewdness and cleverness of the wives, they win back their spouses, as each in turn has learned his lesson and then happiness is secured. AT THE MURRAY. For once in the history of vaudeville, a Richmond audience has been carried off its feet, howling with glee at thetroupe of Arab acrobats. And the beauty of it was that the Arabs yelled as loud as the people in front. One man comes to the front and yells "Aie Aie Yah." Then he makes a speech full of Arabic cuss words from the sound of it and then they all the seven of them go to it. They bob about the stage like rubber balls, and the first thing you know you are shouting at the top of your lungs "Good Boys" and as you come to yourself you see all the other fellows doing the same thing. When it's all over you feel as if you had taken about six champagne cocktails and you feel good. Describe it? It can't be done, more than to say it is like a phantamagra of muscle and one of the most striking bits of vaudeville yet seen on the Murray stage. Before this bit of desert fantasy Mil lie Clarke, the English soprano, renders three selections in a most pleas ing manner. Miss Clarke has a so prano voice most beautifully clear and sweet. Edgar Foreman and company are seen in their comedy skit, "A Dual of Hearts." This sketch was written by Mr. Foreman and contains many wit ty lines. Musar't. hps a most novel act, that of drawing pictures with his feet while playing upon the violin. For next week there are two featurds Dolly Burton's dogs and Gardner and Vincen in "The Majic Horse." Completely Hypnotized. The dentist had not advertised himself as a "painless dentist." say a writer in the Kansas City Times, but he pulled a patient's tooth so quickly and dexterously that the man said: "How do you manage to extract women's teeth without their screaming? You don't give gas always, of course V "But iny office." the dentist replied, "is. as you see. opposite a department store millinery display. When the women set absorbed in looking at bats they're lerpl jfrjMLtsV'

STRIKERS EXPECT A LONG CONFLICT

Reports of I. C. Officials that Men Are Loosing Hope Denied. CHICAGO, Oct. 14. Striking shop employes on the Ilinois Central, Union Pacific and Southern Pacific lines have settled down for what they believe will be a long siege. They have given up all hope of winning a quick victory and secretary W. F. Kramer of the blacksmith's union announced that it would be at least six weeks before the engines and equipment begin to get into bad condition and show the necessity of expert attention. Reports from officials of the companies that the strike was disintegrating were denied by officials of the union. Secretary Kramer said he had reports from every city where the Illinois Central has shops, showing that the men are standing firm and that the shops were practically tied up. "Reports that the strikers are returning to work are without founda tion," said Secretary Kramer. "The truth is that more men are going out. We did not expect that this trouble would end in a week or two. It will take about six weeks to show the full effects of the strike, when the loco motives and equipment will get into bad condition. "We are prepared to keep the fight going for months if necessary." Mother's Hat. When a woman has, in the polite cl pbemlsm, ceased to be so young as she once was it may be taken as a general rule that she will look younger if she wears a, broad brimmed hat that shades her face. But there are other considerations, for by doing so she may lose dignity, may even become a little grotesque, while if she is stout her face will gain in youthfulness at the expense of ber unfortunate figure, and she wi!'l look as if she had been squashed by having some one sit down on top of her and forget to get up for a very long time. That is why a woman of uncertain age should be encouraged to the wearing of small hats and why women of forty should not go abroad in millinery that might have come out of their daughter's bandboxes. A woman of forty is not old, but neither is she jeune fllle, and in dress she may surely be supposed to have arrived at years of discretion. Colors are often becoming, especially when the hair begins to turn gray, and Yedda tagal and rustic straws may any of them be worn with a chip for a best bonnet. The New Sweater. For fall motoring a three-quarter knitted sweater Is Just the most com fortable wrap one can wear. The il lustration shows a charming new COAT m TBRSK-gUABTEB XiXHOTH. model in russet brown wool, with collar and band trimmings and buttons of a pale tan color. The motor hood is knitted in the same shades and the long chiffon veil is of tan. When Marketing. A bushel of potatoes should weigh sixty pounds without the basket, as provided by law. The eyes of a fresh fish are bright, not glazed. The flesh is firm, the gills red and the odor natural, but not offensive. There is no blue or green tinge about the veins of good poultry. This is a mark of decay the careful buyer should not fail to observe. Yellow feet and bills are the mark of a young goose. To Finish ArfTiholes. Here is a neat way to finish the anjsholes of a very fine lingerie waist. Instead of binding it In the ordinary way buttonhole stitch the edges with loosely twisted embroidery cotton. This will conceal all the raw edge and will be Invisible from the right side. Not Always Good! Friend Why did you give your wife pearl necklace for a birthday present? Don't you know pearls are the sign of tears? Husband (significantly) In this case they were the result of them. Exc hange. otntit id ah sKAniunu. Spanking does not care children of bed jfetting. There is z constitutional canst ior this trouble. Mrs. M. Summers, Bo vV, Notre Dame, Ind., will send free to an; ii other ber successful home treatment, with mil instructions. Send no money, but rite ber today if your children trouble yoo l this way. Don't blame the child, the :hances are it can't help it. This treatmen! also cares adults and aged people troobW with ariae difirwltloa by day or aright,

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Some Gossip Gathered From The Gay American Metropolis

NEW YORK, October 14. At last the wave of higher prices nas reached the East Side and the poor, of whom there are many thousands on the East side, are beginning to feel its effects. With them to feel the effects of that wave means to suffer from it. Nearly all the small lunch places scattered through the East side districts, and almost exclusively patronized by the poorest class of people, have posted notices informing their customers that from now on a cup of coffee and a doughnut, formerly sold for three cents, would cost four cents. Extra doughnuts are still sold for one cent apiece, but, while their circumfrence is the same as formerly, the hole in the middle is preceptibly larger. During the month of September, thieves and burglars reaped a big harvest in New York City. It is estimated that during the past month silverware and jewelry worth more than 1150,000 was stolen. The thefts in the city during during the months of June, July and August aggregated $300,000, an unusually large sum, but September proved even more profitable for the crooks. The most aggrevating feature is that the metropolitan police seem powerless to arrest a single thief or burglar or to recover any of the stolen property. New York City is, indeed, a regular paradise for the crooks of the country. According to statistics gathered by the National Protective society 43 persons were killed and 234 seriously injured by accidents "due to "vehicular traffic" in the streets of New York city, during the month of September. Twenty of those killed were children under sixteen years of age. Eleven persons were killed by automobiles, fourteen by trolley cars and the rest by other vehicles. Automobiles injured 107, trolleys 67, and wagons 60. The city of New York has an official body known by the name of Inebriety Biard, appointed under a law passed by the legislature in 1910, to deal with the subject of inebriety in this city. When the board was first appointed a great deal of fun was made over its peculiar name and over the duties which it was supposed to have. The members of the board, all worthy gentlemen, who take themselves and their duties as members of that board seriously, have held many meetings and have discussed the problem of inebriety with profound learning and philanthropic enthusiasm, but an embarrassing lack of practical knowledge based upon experience. In keeping with the modern tendency to treat all individuals with abnormal cravings, be it liquor, other people's property or something else, with sympathetic kindness, the Inebriety Board has come to the conclusion that habitual drunkards could be cured and reclaimed if they were placed in pleasant surroundings and exposed to the sedative effects of farm life. Police Commissioner Rhinelander Waldo is so much interested in the work and the plans of the board that he has offered to donate to the Inebriety Board a fine farm of eighty acres near Flushing. L. I., upon which the board may establish an experimental colony of drunkards. The value of sign display space in the best parts of the city has just been shown to an unusual degree by the leasing of the roof of the Studebaker Building for electric sign purposes for a price close to $25,000 a year. Thi3 is the highest price, it is said, ever paid in the city fo ra sign privilege on the top of a building. The new sign, which will cast its blaze of light down Broadway in the theater district, will proclaim the virtues of a certain breakfast food. The Sullivan gun law, one of the most absurd laws ever placed upon the statute book, received a black eye the other day when Supreme Court Justice Gavegan decided in a test case that a pawnbroker may not be pun ished under the law for having firearms in his possession. The District attorney will take the case to the Appellate division at its next term and Decide Now to get a bottle of DOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS and assist your stomach, liver and bowels back to their normal condition. IT WILL REALLY DO YOU A LOT OF GOOD Others have proven this why not YOU, today. All Druggists.

THE CHESAPEAKE eV OHIO RAILWAY OF- INDIANA LEAVING TIME OF TRAINS AT RICHMOND, IND. Effective July 9, Westward; July 10, Eastward Subject to Change Without Notice 7:13 p. m. DAILY, Limited for Cincinnati, Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York, Richmond, Norfolk, Virginia, and North Carolina points. 8:45 a. m. WEEK-DATS Local for Cincinnati, connecting with P. F. V. Limited for the East. 7:33 a. m. SUNDAYS Local for Cincinnati, connecting with P. p. V. Limited for the East 4:15 p. m. WEEK-DAYS Local for Cincinnati. 7:15 p. m. SUNDAYS Local for 1 Cincinnati 12:00 Noon DAILY Limited for Chicago and West. 10:40 a. m. WEEK-DAYS Local for Chicago. 8:10 p. m. WEEK-DAYS Local for Chicago. 10:25 p. m. SUNDAYS Local for Chicago. Sleeping, Obserratlon-Parlor. and Dining Can on Limited Trains, fileeninx Cars oa night Train.

a decision will later be sought in the court of appeals, so that the law on the rights of pawnbrokers with respect to dangerous weapons may be definitely fixed. In the meantime almost every day brings forth some new illistrutation of the absurdity of the law. The other day a member of the National Guards was arrested for having in his possession a revolver. Inasmuch as every member of the militia is equipped with such a weapon, every one of them is liable to be arrested and punished under this law. Father Vaughan, th efamous priest.

for many years connected with religi ous and social reform movements in England, arrived here the other day from England, to study social conditions in this country. It so happened that quite a number of enthusiastic wo man's suffrage advocates crossed the ocean on the same steamer on which Father Vaughan sailed for New York. To keep in practice during the voy age the suffragettes arranged a meet ing on board ship and Father Vaughan was requested to occupy the platform. He listened to a number of rabid suff rage speeches and finally the ladies urged him also to deliver an address. The feelings of the suffragettes may be easier imagined than described when Father Vaughan told them in so many words that his idea of the ideal woman was not one who marched to the polls, but one who took care of the home and reared her children proper ly. After that Father Vaughan was not personal grata with the suffra gettes. Police court interpreters are not, as a rule, highly accomplished linguists. In most cases Jhey speak the foreign languages better than English and the result is that they contribute consider ably to the humorous side of the proceedings. Quite amusing were the efforts of the interpreter in a desertion case before one of the magistrates the other day. "Ask the woman whether her husband left her," said the magistrate. "No sir, he didn't left her," replied the interpreter, "He went away." Later, in the same case, the interpreter explained that the woman did not live in the house at a certain ad dress, but "dwelt upstairs in the yard," which, after all, is not so bad a way to describe the status of a person living in the rear of one of the East Side tenement houses. That Which Counts. What is it that counts In the celestial city? Only that good which Is done for the love of doing it. Only those plans in which the welfare of others Is the master thought Only those labors in which the sacrifice Is greater than the wages. Only those gifts in which the giver forgets himself. Henry van Dyke. First Choice. Mr. Jawback My dear, I was one of the first to leave. Mrs. Jawback Oh. you always say that. Mr. Jawback I can prove it this time. Look out in the hall and see the beautiful umbrella I brought home. Toledo Blade. Johnny's Reasoning. Sunday School Teacher What Is conscience. Tommy? Tommy An inward monitor. Sunday School Teacher And what Is a monitor, Johnny? Johnny An ironclad boat. Chicago News. Nearly thirty million acres of wheat were planted throughout India this year. CHICHESTER S PILLS ,0- THE MASSOWB BBAKK iTl Cal-ehaaaHa INaiMTBru a Bm4n "Ilia la M aaa tla : noxej. sealed wlta Blue Take ataar. Ba; imam mm ataar. Bar ar yaw , UIABo.XD BRAND PILLS, fall, yea known as Beat, Safest, Always Reliable SOU! BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWMEEf E. C. HADLEY Meat Market Phone 2591 1236 Main MOERLEM BEER Agency Office at 304 N. D St. Bottled Beer Served All Orders Given Prompt Attention A. N. COLLET Mgr.

ONLY MILLIONAIRES CAN PLMPOLITICS So Remarked Senator Sutherland, Utah, in Renewing Stephenson Probe.

(National News Association) MILWAUKEE, Wis.. Oct. 14. "No one except a millionaire can play in these new primary games." declared Senator Sutherland, of Utah today, as the committee of U. S. senators again took up its scrutiny of the expenditure of $107,793 by Senator Isaac Stephenson to secure a seat in the senate. While Stephenson was forced to foot practically all his own bills, evidence continues to creep into the inquiry, showing that the other three candidates in the 1908 primary also spent enormous sums. In fact if Attorney Chas. Littlefield succeeds in having certain evidence in his posession introduced before the committee he will show up Uncle Ike Stephenson, as a mere "piker" in the primary fight. Mr. Little field has already shown to the committee that the primary fight cost the various parties interested more than $800,000. Of this vast sum, Stephenson admits having spent about one eighth. Who spent the rest? is a question that it exciting a great deal of interest. Evidence is at hand, it is stated that the La Follette forces spent more than $400,000 in their unsuccessful battle against Stephenson. The senators in charge of the investigation are inclined to inquire only into Stephenson's expenditures, and may refuse to hear evidence as to money spent in the primary by his opponents. A new bayonet adopted by the infantry of Germany carries a knife near its base that will sever wire evidently to cut through a wire fence. Another bayonet in the same army has saw teeth on the back of its blade to cut through all obstructions made of wood. To Get Its Bsnsflrial Effect Always Buy tho Genuine ana manijfectTjred byihe Sold by all leading Dtvqqists One Size Ony, 5K o Bottle MURRAY'S Week of October 9th SEVEN SAMOIS ARABS Matinee, 10c. Evenings, 10-25c

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WIS. ANTI TUBERCULOSIS CONVENTION

(National News Association) MILWAUKEE, Wis., Oct 14. The Wisconsin Anti-Tuberculosis Association convened in annual meeting here yesterday with a large atendance of health officers, physicians, school superintendents and others interested in the movement to stamp out the dreaff disease. At the concluding session tonight, the association will meet jointly with the State Conference of Charities and Correction to listen to an address by Dr. Richard C. Cabot of Harvard University, one of the world's most eminent authorities on the treatment and prevention of tuberculosis. W want yon to prove at expense, not yours. Your drug. . gist will give you on raajaaat a i (ra aanple of EZ-UM Fm Caaafect) Rub It lightly on your sore, ttrsd, aching feet. Ei-Um nloana and strengthens the pores of the feet. It works like megle. And, if applied regvlarly for a few even lags, tt will effect a permanent cure by restoring the .kin of the foot to Its natural condition. Ei-Cm Is one of the stand! remedies of Dr. J. B. Lyoa A Son, IiOganaport, Ind. .compounders of Dr. Lynae Vegetable Oom. pound. Dr. tiynas Heady Belief, Flg-O-Lax. Sal ben and other wellknown preparations. Automobile Repair Work Our Specialty Expert Mechanics to Do Your Work. Quaker City Garage 1518 Main. Phono 1625 GENNETT THEATER Saturday. Oct. 14 MATINEE AND NIGHT . William A. Brady, Ltd, Presents The Funniest Play Ever Written Baby Mime BY MARGARET MAYO One Whole Year in New York. Six Months in Chicago. In Its Second Year in London. Now Playing in Paris. Berlin. Vienna, St. Petersburg, 80. America, So. Africa, Australia and Japan; PRICES Night, $1.50, $1.00, 75c, 50c, 25c. MATINEE $1.00, 7Sc, 50c. 25c. Seat sale opens Thursday, Oct. 12th at Murray's Theater. Phone 2792

Your Poor Feet Il ItaaVa Ptrawaul iaW aa 0