Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 99, 29 February 1912 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1912

PAGE THREE.

HEADQUARTERS FOR TAFT ARE PLA1ED Friends of, President in Indiana Fear the Roosevelt Movement. .

(Palladium Special) INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 29 There was talk today to the effect that the Taft managers In Indiana propose to open state headquarters here to combat the work being done In behalf of the candidacy of Roosevelt. The active work being done at the Roosevelt headquarters in the English Motel has set the Taft managers to thinking. At present there is no central point from which the Taft organization may be directed. Fred Sims. State Republican Chairman, has promised that the Hate committee will keep its hands oft the contest between Mr. Taft and Mr. Roosevelt, and this precludes the possibility of the state Republican headquarters being used as Taft headquarters. When Edwin M. Lee, former state Republican chairman, opened headquarters from which to direct the work of organizing Roosevelt sentiment, he conferred with State Chairman Sims. He ezplained that the opening of the Roosevelt headquarters should not be construed as In any way being antagonistic to the state organization, but that In view of the fact that the State Republican Committee Is responsible for the advancement of the cause of Republicanism In general the friends of any Individual candidate should not embarrass the State Committee by identifying the cause of their candidate with the state committee. Reports have been received at the Roosevelt headquarters from several Indiana districts Indicating that the district organisations are being used to further the candidacy of Mr. Taft. Mr. Lee Is calling this fact to the attention of the Roosevelt supporters In those districts, believing that the voters themselves are entitled to know when their party organisation Is being vsed to advanee personal Interests instead of party welfare. ELEVENTH ORGANIZED. INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 29. At the t3.te Roosevelt beadquarfers It was announced today that the eleventh congressional district has completed a Roosevelt organisation and that definite progress Is being made in the selection of Roosevelt delegates to the national Republican convention, Juno 18. Nell McOreevy, of Wabash, is district supervisor and the men who are leading In the various counties are: Blackford County, Clarence Stewart, of Hartford City and Dr. McFarland of Mill Grove; Grant County, Edgar Baldwin of Falrmount and Harry Anderson of Marlon; Huntington County, E. O. King. Huntington, and J. W. Caswell, of Huntington; Cass County, 8. B. Boyer, Loganaport. and Caleb Banta, Logansport; Miami County, Edgar Poe, Kllng, Peru, and David Rhodes, Peru; Wrbash County, Dan Cooper. Wabash, and J. M, Harter, Wabash; Pulaski County, C. W. Barker of Wlnnamac. There Is no better medicine made for colds than Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It acts on nature's plan, relieves the lungs, opens the .secretions, aids expectoration: and restores the system to a healthy condition. For sale by all dealers.

From Forty-Five to Fifty Are Much Benefited by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.

The "change of life " is a most critical period in a woman's existence, and the anxiety felt by 4 women as it draws near is not without reason. When her system is in a deranged' condition, she may be predisposed to apoplexy, or congestion of some organ. At this time, also, cancers and tumors are more liable to form and begin their destructive work. Such warning symptoms as sense of suffocation, hot flashes, headaches, backaches, dread of impending evil, timidity, sounds in the ears, palpitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities, constipation, variable appetite, weakness and inquietude, and dizziness, are promptly heeded by intelligent women who are approaching the period in life when woman's , great change may be expected. These symptoms are calls from nature for help. The nerves are crying out for assistance and the cry should be heeded in time. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is prepared to meet the needs of women's system at this trying period of her life. It ' invigorates and strengthens the female organism and builds up the weakened It has carried many women safely

QUALITY OR QUANTITY Which Do You Prefer? Newbro'a Herplcide Represent Quality. Did you ever have a dealer offer you a large bottle of something and tell you it was a better remedy for the hair than Newbro'a Herplcide and cheaper because in a larger bottle? What? Certainly we know you had. Many other people have, too. What would you say to that same dealer were he to tell you a silver dollar was worth more than a five-dollar gold piece because it is larger. Such an attempt being a reflection upon your good sense you would probably say some rather pointed things to him. You would be justified. Your self-respect would demand it. Well, there are just as many good reasons for the difference in size between those bottles as there are for the difference in size between the silver dollar and the five dollar gold piece. The truth is that the large bottle isn't half large enough. There is more virtue in a half pint of Newbro'a Herplcide than a gallon of some of the so-called hair preparations. There's-a dollar's worth of results in the bottle of Herplcide, but do you know what Is in the other? No? Then why buy it? Your judgment, intelligence and the experience of your friends, if not your own, cry out against it. You know when you go into that store that Herplcide is what you need and want. You KNOW that Herplcide is the original scalp prophylactic. You KNOW that Herpicde kills the dandruff germ. You KNOW that Herplcide stopa falling hair. You KNOW that Herplcide makes the hair light, fluffy and beautiful. You know these things in the same way you know that the five dollar gold piece, notwithstanding its size Is more valuable than the silver dollar. Then Insist on having genuine Herplcide. One dollar size bottles are sold and guaranteed by all druggists. Applications obtained at the best barber shops and hair dressing parlors. Send 10c in postage or silver for sample and booklet to The Herplcide Co., Dept. R., Detroit, Mich.

"Robbing Peter to Pay Paul." That proverb "robbing Peter to pay Paul" arose from the way in which the dean of Westminster was treated at the time of the reformation.' As abbot he had been an independent dignitary, but as dean be was placed under the authority of a specially created bishop of Westminster. This di ocese after existing for ten years was 4 merged In the see of London, and many of the domains of St. Peter's abbey passed into the bands of the chapter of St. Paul's cathedral, thus giving rise to the now familiar saying. "It was by a hard struggle," writes Dean Stanley, "that the abbey was saved In those tempestuous times. Its dependency of the priory of St Martin's le Grand was torn to pieces, and Its outlying domains to the east of Westminster were, it is said, sacrificed to the Protector Somerset to induce him to forbear from pulling down the abbey itself." London Chronicle. TTlrs-Estella Gillispie ONE CASE OUT OF MANY TO PROVE OUR CLAIMS. St. Anne, 111. u I was passing through the change of life and! was a perfect wreck from female troubles. I had a displacement and bearing down pains, weak fainting spells, dizziness, then numb and cold feelings. Sometimes my feet and limbs were swollen. I was irregular and had so much backache and headache, was nervous, irritable and was despondent. Sometimes my appetite was good but more often it was not. My kidneys troubled me at times and I could walk only a short distance. UI saw your advertisement in a paper and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I was helped from the first. At the end of two months the swelling had gone down, I was relieved of pain, and could walk with ease. I continued with die medicine and now I do almost all my housework. I know your medicine has saved me from the grave and I am willing for you to publish anything I write tc von, for the good of others.' Mrs. Estkix. Grujsruc. KJ-UXNo. 4,

STRAYER A SPEAKER Before the Educational Meeting at St. Louis Today. (National News Association ST. LOUIS. Feb. 29. The discussion of the problem of standards and tests of the efficiency of schools or school systems was opened at this morning's session of the joint educational conference of the National Council of Education and the Department of Superintendence, by George Drayton Strayer, professor of educational administration. Columbia unirersity. As chairman of the Council committee appointed to study this subject, Professor 8trayer called attention to the fact that there were three fields in which standards or tests might be applied the first, with respect to the business administration of schools; second, in the field of organization and administration of the more strictly educational activities; and third, in the measurement of the achievement of individual pupils, classes or schools, in the subjects commonly taught. He argued that these three fields, although distinct from the standpoint of the method of Investigation or the type of investigator demanded, were, nevertheless, intimately related and that any complete study of a school system would involve painstaking investigations In each of these fields.

Social dance will be given at Centerville Town Hall, March 2nd. Music by Weisbrod Saxaphone Orchestra. 28-2t Amusements THEATRICAL CALENDAR. At The Gannett. March 1 "Silver Threads." At The Murray Vaudeville afternoon and night. At Earl ham. March 6th Shenk Recital, Lindley Hall. First M. E. Church. March 7 Royal Welch Ladies Choir. Special at The Palace. The patrons of the Palace have a good opportunity tomorrow of seeing President Taft walking, talking, riding, grilling and laughing. Mrs. Taft will be with him and besides other films an interesting entertainment is promised at this popular 5 cent theater. At the Murray. ..Who's who this week at the Murray? The place we go when we're net is? a hurry. Opinions may differ, they generally do What suits others may not suit you But a better team one seldom sees Than those Vaudeville stars, the two McPhees. They sing and dance in a different way And "swell lookers," well we should say, "Some class to that," and "It's some show," Are expressions heard from the boldheaded row. We vote to McPhees the loving cup They sound the alarm and wake "em up." There's Lou and Ethel and Ethel and Lou, In vaudeville they are "who's who." Silver Threads." The quaint and lovable character of a typical old New England smithy, just such a one perhaps as the poet wrote about generations ago in the famous old classic, "The Village Blacksmith" will be presented in the rural drama, "Silver Threads" at the Gennett Friday night. Uncle Ben is the life of the village, the sunshine of the community, the peacemaker in time of trouble, the oracle to be consulted on points of learning. He is wholesouled, good natured; he is a sweet singer, he is a leader in the village choir in fact Uncle Ben is the pride of the village, nothing short of that enviable and lofty position in the hearts of his countrymen. This is the part that is to be portrayed by the eminent tenor and leading man, Mr. Richard J. Jose and in this part he is said to be given a role that admirably fits him both temperamentally and physically. During the course of the play Uunele Ben sings a number f famous old songs that for generations have been dear to the hearts of the good New England folks, among them "Abide With Me," "Girl of My Dreams," "Silver Threads Among the Gold" and last, but not least "Daddy," the last mentioned being particularly appealing in its tender melody. Saved Ann a Ducking. A colonial shrew who was threatened with the ducking stool was once saved by this plea: "You wish to duck Ann Wlllott to cure her!" her defender declared. -Now, If she be not cored where Is the gain in ducking her? And It she be cured all the women who now keep a guard over their tongues through distaste to be likened to such a known, notorious and contemptible scold as Ann will do so no longer; but, although It Is not like any should become such as she. yet all will scold a little more than now they do. the check of her example being removed. Now. it Is better that Ann. being a single woman without family to afflict, should go unpunished and undecked, but despised by all. and wag her tongue as she will, standing therein for the whole town, than t&at she should be silenced and the tongues of other women mm more free."1 This argument seems to have prevailed, far As Wttlett was awrer

Cssccrels Cleanse Liver and Dowels

No Biliousness, Headache, Sick, Sour; Stomach, Indigestion, Coated j Tongue or Constipation. i Furred Tongue, Bad Taste, Indigestion, Sallow Skin and Miserable Headaches come from a torpid liver and clogged bowels, which cause your stomach to become filled with undigested food, which sours and ferments like garbage in a swill barrel. That's the first step to untold misery indigestion, ioul gases, bad breath, yellow skin, mental fears, everything that is horrible and nauseating. A Cas-, caret tonight will give you a thorough cleansing inside and straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep a 10-cent box from your druggist will koep you feeling good ' for months. Millions of men and , women take a Cascaret now and then to keep their stomach, liver and bow- j els regulated, and never know a mis-; erable moment Don't forget the children their little insldes need a good, gentle cleansing, too. The Collar of Homer. Among the curiosities preserved in the Fabre museum at Montpelier, France. Is the famous "collar of Homer." invented and worn by the great Italian poet Alfieri. This distinguished man began the study of Greek when more than forty-seven years old and made such rapid progress in that language as to astonish all who knew him. He proclaimed himself "chevalier of the order of Homer" and appeared with a collar on which were engraved the names of twenty-three poets, ancient and modern, and to which was suspended a cameo portrait of Homer. On the reverse side of this preserved relic is an Italian distich composed by Alfieri, which translated says. "Alfieri himself in creating this order of the chevalier of Homer has invented an order more divine than tftat of any king." The Pipe of Peace. The North American Indian usually made his pipes out of a kind of stone known as red pipe stone, of which there were large deposits in the old Sioux country, and the Great Spirit is said to have given bis indorsement to this particular material, which might have been n Sioux monopoly, in these words: "This stone is red. It Is your flesh. It belongs to you all. Out of it make no more tomahawks, war hatchets nor scalping knives. Use it only to make the pipe of peace and smoke therefrom when you would propitiate me and do my will." Diving Animals. One thing that none of the land liv ing animals -does is to dive. No matter how hard pressed a swimming deer, rabbit, squirrel or other purely terrestrial animal may be. it will remain above water. But the muskrat. bearer. Ice bear aftd otter, dire immediately. - -;... Very fltoUstio, First Paris Artist Vy you pot eat salt wid ze paint? Second Artist Eet is for a marine picture. I make ze paint salt; zen when ze English put zalr fingers to zair lips zay say: "Eet is wonderful; almost taste ze salt on ze ocean. Zan zay buy." Satire. A Question of Depth. "Beauty." said the ready made philosopher, 'is only skin deep.""I can't agree with you." said the positive man. "If beauty were measured by that standard the rhinoceros would be one of the most charming animals." Exchange. The Retort Matrimonial. 8he You can't ever accuse me of helping you to make a fool of yourself. He I don't know about that Tou said yes when I asked you to marry me. Baltimore American. His Groat 8chme. The aggressive young man elbowed his way into the private office. "I have a great scheme," he asserted, to hooin Tour headache remedy." "What is it?" grunted the manufac turer. "Give away sheet music with your card printed on- Itc-all the popular song of the day." "What's so great about that schemer "Why, man, don't you see? You are not only advertising the remedy, bat creating a demand for it as welL" Louisville Courier-Journal. Notch COLLAR ltff Clutt. PaWr '. Mtket. Troy. W. T. RAIGHEA Seeerlor Electric Fixtures Direct M Mala St.

AQcrMc CO. j rases 12SS,

SKATING Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday

" ECONOMY IN MEAT. Avoid Waste by the Judicious Use of Odds and Ends. The cook who broils the tough end

of a porterhouse steak, roasts the ribs in a roast, throws away the bones and i juices left on the platter by the carver and discards as unfit for use the meat from which the soup stock Is made is guilty ef wicked waste. The end of a porterhouse steak is unfit to serve when broiled. It should be cut off. This, together with the bone and juice left on the platter, a bay leaf, three or four cloves, an onion, a carrot and some parsley, will make several cups of bouillon. The ribs should be cut out of a roast when preparing it for the oven. These, with the leftover gravy, may be used in a similar way for stock. In making stock the long, slow process of gentle boiling extracts the flavor from the meat and coagulates the albumen. Only a little of the latter is extracted. Therefore the meat loses but little of its nourishing properties. There are numerous ways in, which such meat can be made appetising. Combined with rice and tomatoes a delicious luncheon dish may be made. Butter a baking dish and line with hot boiled rice. Fill the center with bits of meat well seasoned with salt, pepper and onion juice. Cover with rice. Bake twenty minutes in the oven. Turn out on a platter and pour over it a well seasoned tomato sauce. It is a toothsome morsel. National Food Magazine. HISTORIC FIRES. The Most Fateful of All, Porhaee, Wat tho Burning of Moscow. A list of great cities burned would be a list of nearly all tbe great capitals of the world. Persepolis, tbe splendid residence of a long series ol rulers whose tributary provinces extended from the Indus to the Hellespont, was burned, with all Its palaces and temples. Babylon and Carthage were so utterly destroyed that their very location has become a matter of doubt. Rome was burned eight times, Jerusalem four times, and, though they rose from their ashes The second temple is not like the first. Athens, Syracuse. Bagdad, Alexandria and Antioch now exhibit only a shadow of their former grandeur. The Phoenicians, like the Spartans and Assyrians, disappeared with the ruin of their capitals, but the most fateful conflagration recorded in the history of the world is perhaps that of Moscow. "They talk as if the fate of Europe had been decided at Waterloo." says De Bourienne in his memoirs of the first empire. "If Napoleon had beaten Wellington and Blucber a dozen times it could not have retrieved the reverses of the three preceding years. The truth is that the French Caesar and his fortune were ruined by the burn-j ing of Moscow. That city was tbe fu-, neral pile of the great nation." Ex-j change. j Farm lands in this country, exclu-' rive of buildings, more than doubled in value between the years 1900 and 1910. The gain was 117.4 per cent. Tonsiline 3? Genns Quinsy reach the deeper Prevents seated tissues by absorbftuinsv on through the tonsils, "UH,8J causing the horribly painful inflammation which results in suppuration. Quinsy is simply a development of Sore Throat to which some people are peculiarly subject. With them, a tedious or neglected Sore Throat terminates in Quinsy. With them, a quickly cured Sore Throat means Quinsy avoided and nothing else cures Sore Throat as quickly and surely as TONSILINE. Many such letters as below prove TONSI LINE'S value in preventing Quinsy. Gentlemen: I have been subject to Quinsy for the last fifteen years and have simply had to suffer from ten days to two weeks with it at every attack, never having been able to find a preventive, until I commenced using TONSILINE. Up until a year ago I had had ten attacks of Quinsy, but have been able to avoid it twice since that time by the use of a 25 cent bottle of your remedy. Hoping that others similarly troubled will profit by my experience, and thanking you tor what your TONSILINE has done for me, I re main, xours verv truly, IS. i. JUUkNA N CUet Clerk Auditor's Office, C. A. ft C. Br-, viereimna, umo. Sufferers from Quinsy should always have TONSILINE ready for instant use on first sign of Sore Throat. 25c. and 50c Hospital Size $1.00. All DrneviflK BICYCLES Just Received 1912 LINE of Bicycles and Tires, all new models, almost any style and make you desire. The best will be found here. Bring your old bicycle to the shop and let us give it a general overhauling for spring use. ELMER SMITH 426 tela Street

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TIRES

, Afternoon & Evening

BANDITS ROB BANK IN BROAD DAYLIGHT (National Kows Association) held up the Costa bank in North MarSAN JOSE. Feb. 29. Two bandits ket street today, in broad daylight, escaping with 94,000 in currency, with

which they fled in an automobile toward San Francisco. ELECTRIC FOGHORNS. Which May Be Blown Without Effort by Pressing a Push Button. Tbe time honored foghorn and still the one in most common nse on myriads of smaller boats Is of the sort that you raise to your lips and blow. Tolerably bard work blowing a foghorn. Bigger foghorns for larger boats are set In a box, tbe box containing a bellows by which the born Is blown. Attached to tbe bellows Is an outside lever by means of which tbe bellows is operated by hand. A lot of noise this foghorn makes, to be beard for a considerable distance. There are now made, used on many power boats and yachts, electric foghorns tbe operating of which calls for tbe exercise of neither lung nor hand power. In these horns there Is attached. Inclosed at the smaller end. a metallic diaphragm to which is connected an electric coil which when electricity is turned Into It vibrates tbe diaphragm and sounds the born. Electricity is supplied from a storage battery or from current generated on the boat if It Is electrically equipped. To blow an electric foghorn you simply press a button. New York Sun. England imported from continental countries last year nineteen million "great hundreds" (120) of eggs, of which Russia supplied 52 per cent, and the average price of which was 43 per cent, above that of thirteen years ago. li -JSlKO M-QI3 its IV MURRAY'S WEEK FEB. 26 JOSEPHINE SAXTON A CYCLONE OF FUN ' - AND HER X DIXIE KIDS Other All Star Feature Matinee, 10c. Evening, 10c, 20c. 25c. Low One-Way VIA c

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To the Northwest, West, Southwest, Including Pacific Coast State, etc., etc. To California and Mexico Points $3e.7S To Oregon and Washington S37.06 Selling dates, March 1st to April 15th. For particulars, call C. A. BLAIR, P. & T. A., Home Tel. 2062.

PRES. TAFT A T T H E TmmmUmmsmB viiivi ww

Thee are the first and only film picture ever taken In the Whit House and show the president and wife very prominently. Two other. films, the shew lasting more than an hour. . , No Advance in-Price of Admission 5 Cents.

TRY TO ATTEND THE M ATI KEG

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For 6 Coupons run on six consecutive days, with a bonus of 98c, you can get at the Palladium office a $2.50 Dictionary. For $1.16 on same basis as above, - you can get a Webster Revised, with index. ; ; , . - 3 This offer is only good to readers of tfcg ;lfcd3srfina.. If not already a reader, subscribe today. ; v;V . ;

$1C0 Reward, $1C0 The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there la at least ; one dreaded disease that science bas been able to cure la all ita stages, and that la Catarrh. lair Catarrh Cur -Is the only positive cure now knows to the medical fraternity. .Catarrh being a constitutional disease, require a, constitutional treatment. Hall" Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acting du-ectly upon the blood and mucous tarfacea of the system, thereby de btroying tho foundation of the disease.

and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and as slstlng nature in doing ita work. The ? proprietors have so much faith la It curative powers that they offer On Hundred Dollars for any case that It fails to cure. Send for list of testl monials. Address F. J. CHENEY Jfc CO.. Toledo. Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 75c Take Hall's Family Pills for consultation. Many barbers in Egypt are government servants. According to an edict issued by Ibrahim Pasha in 1848, rillasc barbers were ordered to examine all dead bodies and register the necessary particulars. CHICHESTER S PHI 1 siwt Ah ruW iiTiu t4 ! tU4 awl M i - milk - ' i fc sni.rian.Ahwaeiii is : GENNETT THEATRE Special Engagement , America'a Greatest Centra Teev Mr. Richard J. Jess The Sweet Pastoral Flay SILVER THREADS By Martin V. Maria A Story ef Today. Original Cast Complete Production aa Playea From Coast to Coast. Price 25, 35, 60, 75; boxes $1j0O LEATHER GOODS' The unprejudiced buyer : Id Leather Goods should Investigate the quality and price we offer before buying. HEAVY DARKESS For years we have had the reputation of putting on the market better heavy harness than others. We want you to come la and see us. Harness Store Cc!onis! Fares & o. t?elimt APTCailOOfl iwcjy AMD niatlT COUPON.

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