Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 107, 9 March 1912 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT.
TUB RICHMOND PAXUkBIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, MARCH 9, 1913.
FOR A THIRD TRIAL
A. Truskett Will Again Face Murder Charge.
National New Association I INDEPENDENCE, Kan., March 9 The third trial in the case of A. S. Truskett, charged with the murder of J. D. S. Neely, is scheduled to begin in the court here Monday. Truskett, a prominent business man and oil promoter of Caney, Has., shot and killed Neelcy, a banker of Lima, Ohio, and head of several large oil companies in the Kansas and Oklahoma field, in a hotel in Caney on January 7 last. The tragedy was the result of litigation over an oil lease. At the first trial Truskett was found guilty, lie obtained another trial, at which the jury recently disagreed.
FLORISfS CATALOGUE FASCIIIATIIIG FICTION
This Is the Time of Year When Garden Lovers Con Its Pages and Fondly Fancy Its Creations Duplicated in the Backyard.
Children are much more likely to contract the contagious diseases wheu they have colds. Whooping cough, diphtheria, scarlet fever and consumption are diseases that are often contracted when the child has a cold. That is why all medical authorities say beware of colds. For the quick cure of colds you will find nothing better than Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, It can always be depended upon and is pleasant and safe to take. For sale by all dealers.
FOR 1912 SUMMER.
Lingerie Frock of Voile and Blue Chiffon.
f J J: & aw ? i
A CHAHMIHO SCMalSR MODEL. This pretty frock Of white voile wt,n
an embroidered border 1m draped over
skirt of blue chiffon deeply hemmed.
The rnffs. sailor collar and sash are of
bin chiffon, the sash having knotted cods at the buck.
Wedding Place Cards. Dainty place cards' are those painted la water colors. Some of the newest show ths bride cutting the rake, and for a military wedding she can be using the sword while ber adoring spouse stands by In full uniform. Often- Just the bead of the bride is used and cat oat so it stands above an oblong card of water color paper. A pretty candy box place card Is In 'heart shape covered with white satin with bunch of orange blossoms on ton, from which peeps a diminutive Cupid. Another novelty Is small slippers of sliver paper or white satin with tiny seqnln buckle. In the top is sewed a bag of thin white silk or chiffon, and the slipper Is Oiled with candled violets or mint leaves. Pretty basket effects In chip or white twisted paper with a border of artificial flowers can be used for entree cups or for. individual salted nuts. Equally pretty for either purpose are small baskets with deep handles made of silver paper, the. handle tied with orange blossoms and gauze ribbon.
The Wife Who Nags. The worst thing that the bad fairy could wish upon a man Is a nagging, faultfinding wife. The most savory of the dishes prepared by her band tnste flat and stale If served up with
the sauce of Iter complaint, and the
rosiest of homes Is a place of unrest
If It Is the storehouse of her recrimi
nation. Even If there Is Just cause for Jealousy, nagging Is an aggravation rather than a cure.
It breeds the spirit of antagonism, and i be case of the Injured party Is
hurt rather than helped. The paly safe cure for straying af fectioos is to make oneself so attrac
tire, so agreeable, that the desired
love and attention are irresistibly held
to rbelr original moorings. Sometime! sudden evidence of Indifference awakes the errant one to the fact that the straying may be mutual. Sometimes renewed outbursts of affection, of care
and Interest. Is the tonic of weakened
ardor. Sometimes splendid results are
accomplished by wearing smart and becoming clothes and brushing up the wits and vivacity. .
BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. This is the time of. year when the seedman's catalogue Is the most fascinating reading in your repertoire. The day has been "cold and dark and dreary." Everything has gone wrong.
People have acted in the most Irri
tating and Incomprehensible manner.
Aware of your own exalted virtue in
refusing to notice their impertinences and studied Insults, their egotism and
crudities, their lack of diplomacy and I
consideration for so distinguished and important person as yourself, you still
murmur, between your teeth "Foiled again!" For you know they never knew that you were being forebearing and pretending to yourself to practice the Golden Rule. "That they never would know and never could understand." You know you might as well have
been impudent and insulting in your I turn for all the good it did you in establishing a reputation for decency ,
and Christianity. By ignoring it all you have merely invited further-depredations upon the territory of your delightful personality. The horrid feeling steals o'er you that the Mosaic law Is the only workable one in this distraught and strangely assorted world "An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth." You decide to revise some of the ancient precepts. You conclude that "when thy brothor offends thee do not turn the other cheek for him to smite but give him a swift upper cut and land it deftly in the Jaw,'" will sound well. Or, "When thy sister stabs thee in the back, biff her in the face." So pleased are you with these brilliant coruscations of your brain that you believe you will get out a book of modern aphorisms and amuse yourself conjuring up a title "The Golden Rule brought down to date," or, "Tl-sermon on the Mount with Variations," or, "Old saws reversed, a complete manuel of instructions of how to da your brother." By this time you are so delighted with yourself and your imaginary fistic and moral victories over those who have despitefully used you that you are ready to be as agreeable as the members of the family, who have been shut up In the house all day on account of the mud and rain, will permit. You turn on the light, sink into your Morris chair and pick up that gorgeous yet substantial trifle, the Florist's Guide, compared with whose Actions no best seller could ever hope to compete. You flip over the pages. No art is bo alluring, so insiduous, eo intimately appealing as that of tho Illustrator to the floral seed catalogue. Visions of landscape splendor, adorned according to Hoy Is, float before your enchanted vision. Your own backyard but you shunt the offensive, pleblan and ash-ridden suggestion your garUen you behold in your mind's eye, brilliant with oriental poppies as large as gravy bowls, larkspur raised to one million candle power, and hitting the high spots on the wood-house eaves, phlox as big as butter-dishes, fleur-de-lis known to the uncou as the "flag" in seventeen different varieties, and all of a hitherto unheard color. Roses blushing with delighted shame over their dewy debuts and n thousand to the square Inch; other roses, ardently clamboring over the unsightly places on the kitchen walls and twining the horrid old telephone wires; equatorial vines, blooming decadently but delightfully at night, rioting over everything in sight and a row Of sunflowers, with fringed faces as big as wash-tubs, cutting off visual communication with the alley. The blossom which intrigues you the most may be the scarlet flax. Its flaming beauties are indecorously and unblushlngly flaunted from the page and, later, duplicated on the cover of the seed envelope.
Your former love may have been the oriental poppy but she cannot hold your allegiance. The scarlet flax captures you you surrender without resistance. A certain strip by the walk, hitherto devoted to geraniums and cannas shall be sown with the seed of the scarlet flax, which, according to the catalogue, will flourish as the green bay tree, grow in any Boil, mount up like Jonah's gourd in the dark and yield a thousand returns in color and delight for the beggarly five cents invested. You fancy yourself languishing on a chair in your garden, watching the birds aeroplaning across the golden sunset sky, your feet set among the flowers of the scarlet flax and aesthetic contentment in your heart. If, later, you find yourself gazing with disappointment tightening the muscles of your throat at a stringy,
weed-like growth, upon which faintly and consumptively sprout miniature flowrets of a dirt'y and faded blue what of that? Didn't you get everything that could be got out of it on that bleak winter night under the hectic electric light? Did not the scarlet flax bloom for you then more surely and realistically and nonetheless gorgeously because it flowered in your imagination and not in the soli? Imagination is the savor of life. He who has it not is cursed of the gods. With it you can sail the seas, roam the world, chart the air, love and hate, enjoy and despise, possess the treasure of kings, the wealth of the nations, the Joy of the universe. It is the finest endowment of humanity. It enables you to invest what might be a grey and colorless environment
with romance. It "intrigues" you as Arnold Bennett
Nervous Debility
Trial Package of a Remarkable Cure Mailed FREE. We are giving absolutely free a trial package of Wade's Golden Nervine to every nervous, worn, debilitated man or woman who will send name to Gem Medicine Co., St Louis, Mo.
This free treatment will prove to youj
that Wade's Golden Nervine is without an equal for the cure of Nervous Debility, Neurasthenia, Insomnia. Weak Heart, Nervous Headache, Nervous Indigestion, and all weakened conditions of the system, where a restorative and up-building tonic is required. Contains no alcohol or Narcotic. ' Wade's Golden Nervine is the very highest type of medical product, and contains for genuine restorative and vitalizing power than any other
readily as from the separate beds. Their white and purple and blue and yellow faces are heralds, of the beauty and warmth and fragrance on the way. They are decorative, too, and the wonder remains, that they are not more universally grown 'since they really give more poignant pleasure than their floral fellows who follow th?m later. There are many spring flowers that bloom early and long.
The forsythia is one of these it will blossom in March or April if it happens to be warm or mild. A shrub, the forsythia, with festoons of bright yellow flowers in ornamental array. The early phlox is another welcome bloomer, and a profuse one. It is seen
in pale lilac tints shading to white. And did you ever see a Christmas rose? An exquisite, ivory-tinted, wax-petal-ed flower with a golden heart that really blooms in the cold and snow
at Christmas time. There is one in this
One of the huge stones of the Avenbury Druidical circle, which is much larger and older tiian Stonehenge, has fallen, owing, doubtless, to the effects of weather heavy rains following a
dry season. Aubrey, who acted as guide to Charles II, on a visit tfr this district in 1663, declared that Avenbury as far surpassed Stonehenge as a cathedral does a parish church. .
Troetil Remedy. For the Grip..
medicine ever compounded. Nearly t town known to the writer
all druggists now sell it. In all weak and run down conditions brought on by excesses, dissipation, worry, overwork, etc., there is positively nothing like it to promote and restore strength, vigor, and vitality. Try it today. Wade's Golden Nervine is sold by Quigley Drug Stores.
HIS ECM GONE W BOILS CUBED Eczema Began When Three Weeks Old. Arms, Shoulders and Breast a Solid Scab. Boils Broke Out During Teething. Used Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and He Was the Picture of Health.
"My son was about three weeks old when I noticed a breaking-Out on his cheeks, from which a watery substance oozed. A short time after, his arms, shoulders and breast
broke out also, and In a few days became a solid scab. I became alarmed, and called our family physician who at once pronounced the disease ecsema. The little fellow was under his treatment for about three months. By the end of that time, he seemed no better. I
dropped the doctor's treatment, and corn
mencea ine use 01 cuticura soap and Ointment, and in a few days noticed a marked chance. The eruption on his cheeks was almost healed, and hb shoulders, arms and breast were decidedly better. When he waa about seven months old, all trace of the ecsema was gone, ' During his teething period, hb bead and face were broken out fat boils which I cured with Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Swtely J must ha va been a mt sufferer. During Vt time of teething and from the tamel dropped the doctor's treatment. I used Um Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment, nothing else, and when two years old ha was Um picture of health. Bb r4"t"n ft and beautiful, and hb head amass Of silky curls. I had been afraid that ha would Btverba well, and I feel that I Vwea great JSJ1 1? theCutlcura Remedies." (Sigaed) Mrs. Mary W. Ramse- 234 . JacfaoasT. to8prlns. Colo.. Sept. 24. 1910, Although Cuticura Soap and Cuticura vefTWhere, a liberal aajnoi mt each. with. 3-pace booklet on the skin andhafr. wut
might say. With it you walk in a rose-hued mist. Without it all may be ashes and dead sea fruit. If it causes you to vibrate oscillatingly back and forth between the opposite poles of emotion consider yourself fortunate. For life is sensation. When sensation ceases, life has fled. Without it you may walk move, breathe and have your being. But you are dead. You are a mere shell. The spectre of a soul. How everyone longs for Spring. For the first timorous signs. A few snowdrops blooming by a tree, a few weeks ago, were made the subject of a considerable story in the news columns of a metropolitan paper. The planting of the earlier spring flowers should be encouraged. The snow-drops, the crosuses and their ilk which poke their .heads out of the mire at the very first opportunity. They spring up in the grass on the lawn as
The pleasures of a garden, indeed, are too many and the attendant emotions too complex, to be understood of one not a lover of the out-of-doors.
Reading Cr.araii.. Careful Parent Before I can give consefit to your proposed marriage to my daughter I must kuow something about your character. Suitor Certainly, sir. certainly! Here is my bank book. Careful Parent (after a glance) Take her. my son, and be happy. Loudon Tit-Eits.
No Change. Little Willie had been present at 8 christening of n baby cousin and had t:ikeu groat interest m the ceremony. A few days later he had to be vaccinated, and when the operation was over he inquired of the doctor, "What's my name now?"
There Is a Difference. What is the difference between a cradle and n Scotsman's baby? The one is a child's cot and the other is a Scot's child. London Tit-Bits.
Let ns believe we can and hope foi th rest. !" Flnod.
I
Slot machines were used by the ancient Egyptians in their temples to enable worshippers to sprinkle them
selves with holy water.
A Customer Leaving Your Store Must Have Done One of Five Things
l 2SV ysV V4 s Saought Goodsv Bought GoodsV FstfdMoneyV Collected yr dsjei tor Cash sy on Credit x on Account Money -Sv iCgSarC3 '
A National Cash Register insures the merchant that all cash will be accounted for and handled correctly. It prevents lost customers through misunderstandings over change. It benefits the cus-? tomer because it prevents annoyance and loss through disputes, and enables him to prove prices paid. It benefits clerks by removing temptation, preventing unjust suspicion, and enabling them to prove their worth.
A National Cash Register benefits the merchant by preventing loss through failure to charge goods sold on credit or through lost charge slips. It benefits the customer by preventing wrong amounts being charged to his account. It benefits the clerk by furnishing evidence that he has entered the proper charge and handled the transaction correctly.
A National Cash Register enforces a correct record and this insures the merchant that he gets all money received on account. It furnishes the customer proof of having paid and enables him to know that he receives proper credit. It removes temptation from the clerk and furnishes him the means of proving his carefulness in handling money.
A National Cash Register benefits the merchant, by preventing anyone paying out money without leaving a record of the amount. This enables him to balance the cash quickly and prevents bills being paid twice. . It benefits the one to whom money is paid because it precludes the possibility of dispute in the future. It benefits the clerk by showing evidence that he paid out the correct amount.
A National Cash Register protects the merchant against loss in making change and furnishes the means of advertising to those who ask to be accommodated. The customer is benefited because the merchant is willing to extend the favor of changing a coin or bill when he can do so without the chance of loss; - It guides the clerk in counting money, and furnishes evidence of his accuracy.
A National Cash Register benefits Merchant, Customer and Clerk on all of these Transactions
We have always guaranteed to furnish a better cash register for less money than any other concern in the world We can do this because:
1. We created the industry and have devoted thirty yean to its development. 2. Expert inventions departments have always been making valuable improvements to meet the merchants needs. 3. Improved machinery, well arranged factory and organization, have reduced cost of manufacturing. 4. Improved working conditions have resulted in cooperation which meant a better product: 5. We have always maintained a field force of thoroughly trained business experts capable of offering valuable suggestions to merchants.
Write or call si our nearest office for complete mf ormation The National Cash Register Co Dayton, Ohio.
6. We have for years held schools and conventions where employes are trained in their work. 7. The demands of merchants have always been our guide in building machines. 8. We have extended the cash register business to every civilized country in the world. By doing a large foreign business, we are able to manufacture in large quantities and sell at lowest prices. 9. In 191 1 we sold 136,016 Cash Registers. 41 of this business was sold in foreign countries. ' 10. More than one million National Cash Registers have been sold.
L. F. Bockhoff, Sales Agent 923 Main St, Rktaaond, Ind.
