Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 13, 21 November 1911 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, NOVE3IBER 21, 1911.
PAGE THREE.
WILES OF BEGGARS BET BIGJETURIIS One Tofler Carried Hand as Though Injured Regular Routes.
CHICAGO, Nov. 21. Woman, not man, Is the principal home wrecker. You wouldn't believe it, at least if you ehun courtrooms, where they keep cold flgureB on the subject. According to Joseph E. Bidwill clerk of the circuit court, here is what the figures show: About 00 per cent of the divorce suits now in the court are brought by women the other 10 percent. Instituted by men are based on charges of desertion. Immoral conduct and similar delinquencies. Men are shown as long suffering, for the average duration of married life where the husband is the plaintiff Is found to be twice the length of time shown by the suits where the women are the plaintiffs. Women, the statirtics show, seem to have less regard for their children, for the cases in which women have applied for divorce usually reveal three children In the family, whereas the auks brought by men usually have only one child. Immediately mothers-in-law are found, according to the same statistics, to be much maligned. 'The mother-in-law Is found to sympathize with her son-in-law and daughter-in-law just as often as she does with her own child. But the real evil of the divorce court Is the gossipy woman she's more of a menace to the martial community than all the mothers-in-law or fathers-in-law or bad husbands or recalcitrant wives In the land. The marrylng-in-haste nuptials last about as long as the marriages preceded by long courtship, and the Catholics, who make about 20 per cent, of Chicago's population, appear In about only 1 per cent of the divorces. CARD OF THANKS. We wish to express our thanks to our kind friends and neighbors for their helping hand in our Bad bereavement andalBO for the beautiful floral offerings. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Eliaaon and daughter, Edith. Amusements THEATRICAL CALENDAR. At the Gennett. Tonight Russian Orchestra. Nov. 22 "The County Sheriff." Nov. 25. "Madame Sherry." Nov. 27. Alma Where Do You Live? At the Murray. All Week Vaudeville. At Coliseum. Dec. 6 Symphony orchestra concert Feb. 28 Symphony orchestra concert. Madame Sherry. H. H. Frazee and Q. W. Lederer com prise the membership of the newest New York theatrical producing firm. The first named member of the duo has long been an Important factor in musical comedy productions in the Middle West. The Lederer of the partnership is the same George Washington Lederer who controlled the destinies of the New York Casino when that playhouse won Its first fame as the home of smart pieces by native writers, this in the day of Edna May and other Ledered discoveries. "Madame Sherry," now scoring its second season of success is among the new firm's productions. "Madame Sherry" will be played here by the New York New Amsterday Theater Company on Saturday, November 25th matinee and night at the Gennett theater. Special prices have been arranged for. "The County Sheriff." O. B. Wee will present at the Gennett theater on Wednesday night. No. vember 22, his new version, by Lem B. arker, "The County Sheriff," a strong comedy drama in four acts. The play has been entirely rewritten and this version is presented for the first time in this city. The play is one of the Dakota's and deals with the efforts of the County Sheriff to break up a gang of cattle thieves and incidentally to win the heart and hand of Melba. Especial attention has been given Thousands Now Use This low-Cost Cough Syrup A Family 6upply for 50o, Saving You $2 The Qulekeat, Best Thing You Ever Used, or Money Refunded. The prompt and positive results given by this inexpensive cough medicine have eaneod it to be used in more homes in the U. S. and Canada than any other cough remedy. It gives instant relief and will usually wipe out the moat obstinate, deepseated eough Inside of M hours. It quickly raooeeds, even in whooping cough and croup. A 60 eent bottle of Pinex, whtn mixed with home-made sugar syrup, makes full pint a family supply of the most pleasant and effective cough remedy that money eould buy, at a saving of IS. Easily prepared in five minutes full directions in CnlSren take Pinex Cough Syrup willingly, because it tastes rood. It stinium.tm but annatite and is alia htlv laxative both excellent feature. Splendid for v hoarseness, throat tickle, bronchitis, etc. tad a prompt, success! ui remeay zor incipient lung trouble. Phm Is a. snecial and hurhlv concen trated compound of Imported Norway White Pine extract and is rich in guaiaool ad other natural heeding pine elements. Simply mix it with sugar syrup or strained honey, in a pint bottle, and it is ready for flBH nu fjK sjsMft ijvsju uuiwswui www uvini snseeesfnlly, for nothing else will produoa the same results. The genuine Is guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or money refunded. CertlflcaSe of guarantee to wieroad In each package. Tear druggist IsM Pinex orwlU gladly get uToryou. If
All You Need is a Cascaret Tonight
No 8ick Headache, Bilious Stomach, Coated Tongue or Constipated Bowels by Morning. Turn the rascals out the headache, the biliousness, the indigestion, the sick, sour stomach and foul gases turn them out tonight and keep them out with Cascarets. Millions of men and women take a Cascaret now and then and never know the misery caused by a lazy liver, clogged bowels or an upset j stomach. Don't put in another day of distress Let Cascarets cleanse and regulate your stomach; remove the sour, undi-! gested and fermenting food and that ' misery-making gas; take the excess bile from your liver and carry out of the system all the decomposed waste matter and poison in the intestines t and bowels. Then you will foel great, j A Cascaret tonight will surely straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep. A 10-cent box from any drug store means a clear head and cheerfulness for months, cause they taste good never gripe or sicken. ; Children love to take Cascarets beto the staging cf this play. The sec- i ond act showing Dayton's ranch in the evening with the mountains in the distance, with a small camp, lights aglow, perched high upon the mountainside and the singing of the cow- i boys In the distance, never fails to bring forth vociferous applause at the rise of the curtain. A new play, new' company, new scenic production and new specialties and many other fea tures. Murray. The new bill at the Murray this week was greeted by a large and enthusiastic audience. Every bill on the show is a good one and deserved the hearty applause accorded them. The show opens with Emil Chevriel I in a trick violin act that is very clever. Mr. Chevriel using several novel objects as a bow. Jones and Walton present a very funny comedy sketch entitled, "Our Country Cousin." This is one of the funniest sketches of the kind seen here for some time, both Mr. Jones and Miss Walton being especially adapted for the parts. Scott and Wallace put on a singing and dancing act that Is very neat, both being singers of no mean ability and as dancers they are sure there. The act is neatly dressed and has a finish to it that is most pleasing. The Three Walseys, acrobats, hold down the headline position. Their work is fast and well executed and they perform their most difficult feats with the greatest ease. They have a line of comedy running through the act that is well done and very funny. The motion pictures are good and were greatly enjoyed. Russian Orchestra. The coming to this city this evening of the. Imperial Russian Court Bala laika Orchestra and its group of Imperial Russian Grand Opera singers is of particular import to people affiliated with the National Federation of Musical Clubs. They will have oppor-1 tunity of studying and enjoying at one performance, Russian music through the ages, and will be following out the plan of study of the Musical Clubs, which have decided on a Russian year. A review of Muscovite music from the most primitive times down to the present is given by the men who come under the baton of M. W. W. Andreeff and by the operatic section touring America with the orchestra. That strange looking three-cornered three-stringed Balalaika is one of the most ancient of Russian musical instruments. Long before Christianity was introduced into Russia the Slavic nomads strummed it before their goatskin tents. It was used, too, in the religious rites of heathen Russia. This latter fact, more than any other, was responsible for the almost total eclipses of the Balalaika. For with the spread of Christianity :n Russia excommunication was the penalty for those who ever listened to the enthralling tones of the instrument. No more cleaning of greasy pots and pans, says the delighted housewife, who is using the Soyer System of Cooking in Paper Bags. THE CHICAGO DAILY NEWS tells all about the system in daily articles and gives practical recipes for cooking according to the new way. The Worth While Person. Certain qualities go to the making of any human being whom other human beings esteem. Certain ingredients are as necessary to a man as flour and yeast to bread or iron and carbon to steel. Ton cannot make them any other way. There is a combination of steadiness of purpose, breadth of mind, kindliness, wholesome common sense, justice, perhaps a flash of humor, certainly a capacity for the task in band that produces a worth while person. The combination occurs lu every rank in life. You find It as often in the kitchen as In the parlor: oftener. perhaps, in the field than In the office. The people who are so com posed have spiritual length, breadth, thickness; they are people of three dl mensions. Everybody feels alike about them. Atlantic. Combining two household conveniences in cne. a Washington inventor has made an ironing board serve as the back support of a stepladder. REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD. Mas. Wimslow's SooTMtxo Srarr has bees sed (or over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WH1L8 TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES the CHILD. SOFTENS the GUMS. ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, aod is the best remedy for DIARRHCEA. It is absolutely harmless. Be sure and ask for " Mrs. wiasww-s Booming arnxp. ana tak Bo
RAILROADERS HERE TAUGHHIRST AID Valuable Instructions Given by Medical Examiner of Relief Department.
Crowds collect in the city street around some unfortunate who lies in agony on the pavement. Everyone makes vague suggestions as to what should be done, but no one does any thing until a policeman arrives. Then I he only telephones for an ambulance. By the time this gets to the scene, from twenty minutes to an hour elapses, and unless there happened to be a doctor passing who would volunteer his services, nothing has been done for the person who is hurt. As a result of the delay he may be one of those who die in the ambulance or shortly after reaching the hospital. Many people lose their lives every year from injuries that would not prove fatal if properly treated a short time after they are sustained. It is ignorance of what to do in such emergencies which makes them seem so appalling that people merely gape in pitying curiosity. It is ignorance that sometimes makes the efforts of well-meaning individuals who rush to the rescue and do the wrong thing, even more harmful. To protect passengers and employes from such needless fatalities, the Pennsylvania railroad instructs its men in the practice of first aid to the injured. Lectures are given by the medical examiner of the local relief department with demonstrations of the proper way to treat all common accidents such as breaks, cuts, burns and electric shock. To supplement these a concise pamphlet covering all the important points is issued. First Rule "Keep Cool." It is always essential that one person should take charge of proceedings in order to avoid confusion. The first statement in the pamphlet is: "The person in authority should take charge," and then, "keep cool." The next thing is to seftd for a physician. Then comes an explanation of how to use the stretcher, which is always kept where it is readily accessible. "Keep the crowd away to insure plenty of fresh air. Examine the injuries carefully before doing any thing. Don't touch open wounds with the hands; don't attempt to remove dirt, or apply unclean dressings of any kind, as infection may be introduced by so doing." Following these precautionary directions comes a description of the contents and use of the various articles in the First Aid packet furnished by the Pennsylvania. After this, the specific injuries are taken up separately. Hemorrhage, fracture, burn, shock, unconsciousness, fits, heat exhaustion and sun stroke are discussed and the proper treatment explained. In the system developed by the relief department it is recognized that in many cases there will be very few facilities at hand for caring for the injured, and directions are given for making use of such things as are always readily to be had. Startling to the layman are some of the devices which are employed. How to Make Splints. At the lectures the men are shown how to make use of a newspaper, a piece of scantling, or even a cushion from a cabin car, for splints. A safe way to disentangle a man from a live wire by slipping a coat under it, is shown. They are taught the proper awy to lift an injured person to a stretcher; the way to adjust a sling with a triangular bandage from the First Aid packet; emergency treatment of injuries to the scalp, and methods of bandaging. Special attention is given to electric shock. The time tables issued to employes of the New York terminal di vision, where all the equipment is electrical, contain detailed explanations Throw Away Ilia TRUSS! Strenuous Old Sea Captain Fools the Doctors And Cores Himself. No man or woman who is ruptured no matter how severely or at what age need despair of being cured. Throw, Away the Truss. The case of Capt. VT. A. rollings gives encouragement for all sufferers from rupture, ('apt. Collinses suffered a double ruptureana was confined to his bed for years. No truss could bold such a rupture. Many physicians examined his case and pronounced an operation necessary. Capt. rollings kept experimenting: on himself and Anally to the astonishment of all he cured his rupture. He has never had any return of the trouble. Capt. Colllnirs sends his discovery to all people who are ruptured. If you will send the coupon below, he will mail you entirely free a one week's trial treatment so you can test It on your own case. This costs you nothing and you are sure to be benefited. So mall the coupon now. FREE TREATMENT COCPOJT. Capt. W. A. Col I in frs. Inc.. - Box sil , Watertown. X. Y.: Please send me One Week's Test Treatment for Rupture. This test to be FREE. I will commence Using It at once. Name Address - Town State CREAM TO WHIP H. G. HADLEY 1035 Main St. Phone 2292.
Parisian Sage Banishes Dandruff It quickly kills the dandruff germs, that's why dandruff vanishes so promptly when PARISIAN SAGE is used PARISIAN SAGE is Guaranteed by L. H. Fihe
to eradicate dandruff, to stop falling hair and itching scalp, or money back.; Get a fifty cent bottle today and be- j come acquainted at once with the most j delightful hair dressing in the world, j "I gladly recommend it as the best ' hair tonic I have ever known. I find j it the only hair tonic that will cure dandruff, cleanse the scalp, and make the hair grow long and beautiful." j Miss Signa Ahl, 2 Farwell St., W. Worcester, Mass. for the treatment for electric shock accompanied by photographs. The men fall in heartily with the ' work, realizing that they may be called on any time to minister to a passenger or fellow workman. As a result of this teaching which the Pennsylvania has been conducting for some years, there is rarely a case of injury in the shops or oa the road, which is aggravated either by lack or care or by misdirected care before medical attention can be secured. Sale on all millinery goods untrimmed felt hats at half price. Mae Newman, Parlor Millinery, 69 Ft. Wayne Avenue. iil-lt Norwalk, in Connecticut, derived its name from the Indian custom of measuring distance. The land purchased from them, on which the city was to stand, extended from the sea northward one day's walk.
No Need for a Pastory Floumr If you buy flour from lowgrade wheat Flour imperfectly groundFlour not properly sifted Then you'll need another flour a better flour when you come to make dainty desserts. But, if you buy Gold Medal Flour Made of premier wheat 20 times ground sifted 10 times through silk You'll need no better flour for anything. You can't get any better. It's a bad mistake, for any purpose, to get inferior flour. You save nothing by it You get less bread immensely poorer bread. And part of it can't digest. Flour b all-important. If you knew as we know, all the vast dif
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The Theaters
At The Murray. There is nothing particular to be said about the Murray this week, except that it is more or less mildly amusing. The acrobats are the best seen here for a long time, however, and go through a number of gyrating genuflections that are now and then startling. Their comedian is funny, after the order of such funny men, but the wonder is that aggregations like this bother with this sort of vaudeville concession. These people can go on their own merits without the addition of clowning. They are, in short uncommonly good. The trick violinist is more skillful than the generality of his class and its because he happens to be an innate musician. Whatever his technical accomplishment may or may not be when he pulls the bow across the strings you say "a musician." The writer has no program at hand so the identity of the two people who sing and dance is unknown, but the masculine personage has certain talents as a comedian that should stand him in good stead in something less light-weight than the present "offering." When he gives an imitation of Sore Throat Prudence. No family medicine chest is well stocked without a bottle of TONS! LINE, for you don't know what moment it may be needed to cure a suddenly developed case of Sore Throat. Don't take unnecessary chances, because Sore Throat seems a little ailment. It may be Tonsilitis, Quinsy, Croup or Diphtheria tomorrow. Cure the Sore Throat by taking TONSIL1NE, the one. exclusive throat remedy, ana pre vent these dreaded diseases. One dose of TONSIUNE will give relief, and a very few doses will core. It is the stitch in time. 25 cents and 50 cents. Hospital Size $1.00. All Druggists.
ference, you would always insist on the leading flour of the world
WASHBURN-CROSBY'S
LPiL0r
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j Eva Tanguay he is funny enough and jis reminiscent of Miss Tanguay when
she gives an imitation of her imitators. A sketch of the country-cousin-visit-ing-the-eity-relations class amuses the audience, the young woman of the two who present it dancing cleverly. E. G. W. CHANGE OF ADDRESS. Dr. Mora S. Bulla has moved his office from 47 South Tenth street to :VJ South Ninth street. 19-St Potatoes and rice are cheaper in i London now than they were in 1900. but almost every other article of diet now costs a great deal more than then. FRECKLED GIRLS I have just received a stock of WILSON'S FRECKLE CREAM, product of Wilson treckle Cream Co., Charleston, S. C, It is FINE, is fragrant j and harmless and positively removes ; freckles, tan and brown moth, bleaches dark faces light. Will not make hair j grow. You have my guarantee that it i will take off your freckles and tan or I ! will give you back your moncv. Come in, see and try it. THE JARS ARE LAKUt- and two at most are sufficient. I send them by mail, if desired, price 50c, Wilson's Fair Skin Soap, 25c Earlham Seal CLASS PINS We've a full new line of gold and silver Earlham seal jewelry in class pins, scarf pins, hat pins, fobs and cuff buttons. Prices range from 50c upward. E. L Spencer Jeweler and Engraver, 704 Main o
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(an (nt" . 41 It dfl (Hsu WfflQfl GENNETT TUESDAY, NOV. 21 The Musical Sensation of the Season): Imperial Russian Court BALALAIKA ORCHESTRA MR. W. W. ANDREEFF, Director And GRAND OPERA Section In National Costume. Liubov Orlova, Soprano: Olga Scriabina. Contralto; Nicholas Vasiliev, Tenor; Ivan Tomashevitch. Basso. Prices 50o-$2.00. Seat sale at Murray Theater Box Office. GENNETT THEATRE WEDNESDAY, NOV. 22 O. E. WEE Greatest and Best Play THE COUNTY SHERIFF New Version, by Lem B. Parker In Four Acts. A play yau will wish to see again. Prices Evening. 10, 20. 30, 50. Seats on sale at Murray theater box office. URRAVQ WEEK OF NO&QtO Three Walslys Emil CheveHoI Scott and Jones and t WATC1 Bi Paris Clk &S0it Co. r ; ' ftiTecfjbitss X for Wtea - v av ya a M z. I 533 Main utec j "",M Let We) tnomit froa flCU mat mtS household goods, pianos, etc., without removal and your payments can be arranged to suit your income. Mail or phone applications receive our prompt attention. If you are in need of MONEY call at our offices, write or phone; all business dealings confidential. Phone 2960 Take Elevator to Third Floor. Worm Destroyer, Digestive and Conditioner For Sheep, Hogs, Horses, Cattle 10 lbs 75c 20 lbs $1.25 40 lbs $&2S 100 lbs. $5X0 QUIGLEY DRUG 8TOREO TORIC LENSES Many nervous people who have trouble with ordinary lenses wear Toxic Lenses with Perfect Ease. Let tis fit yoti with a pair Special Prescription Ground. ' MISS C. F.LSWEITZER Optcsnetrist. PHONE 1099 92V2 MAIN ST.
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