Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 124, 29 March 1912 — Page 3
THE RICHMOXD PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDA IT, 31 ARCH 39, 1013.
PAGE THBfifi
10RIMER IS GIVEIi
A WHITEWASH COAT (Majority of Senate Investigating Committee Finds Senator Guiltless. WASHINGTON, March 29. Orerwbelmlng vindication on the charge that Senator Lorimer secured his election by corrupt methods was won yesterday by the Illinois Senator, when the special committee of eight colleagues. In a second Investigation, completely exonerated him of any knowledge of legislative corruption. Th vote was 5 to 3 on all points in ( favor of Senator Lorimer. i Edward Hines, the millionaire lum berman, referred to in the investigation as "the man who put Lorimer over," also got a vindication by the committee. It bad been charged that Hines raised a corruption fund of $100,000 to elect Lorimer to the Senate. Tbe majority repudiated that and passed a resolution that the evidence bad shown that he did not raise or contribute any sum Improperly. Tbe majority held that no new exidence had been adduced to Justify a reversal of the Senate's previous action In Senator Lorlmer's favor; but there was no evidence of a Jack pot in the Illinois general assembly of 1909 in connection with his election, and, flatly, that no corrouption practices has been shown by the investigation. Case Qoes to 8enate. Tbe case will be squarely before the Senate probably next week, when a protracted debate will begin. Neither side has made a thorough canvass of the situation. Republican leaders point out that thero will be about 27 new (Senators to vote on the case in addition to those who have already voted on substantially the same charges. ' Tbe basis of tbe committee's action was the plea raised by Lorlmer's counsel that the previous action of tbe Senate bars reconsideration. The majority report on the main proposition will be signed by Senator Dillingham. Gamble. Fletcher, Johnson and Jones, and tbe minority by Senator Kenyon, Kern and Lee. Senator Jones was against Senator Lorimer on the first investigation. Today he reversed bis position and presented three of the leading resoutions to ex onerate Lorimer. The contention of the minority members will be that the Senate passed upon the question of the former adjudication when It ordered the present Investigation, and that If res adjudlcata i were to prevail it should have been beifore a second exhaustive Investigation I at a coat of $50,000 was begun. Wanted Full Investigation. They contend that the new in vest Igation was ordered largely because s the former committee bad not made a full investigation and the country demanded all the facts. , Their viewpoint Is that tbe new Investigation has developed much information pertinent to Lorlmer's election which the old committee failed to discover; that doubts as to the correctness of 8tate Senator Hoist law's confession have been dispelled; that State's Attorney Wayman, of Chicago, has clearly refuted the claim that coercion was used to extort confessions, and that Representative White's confession was corroborated in many particulars. They claim that the res adjudlcata plea is a lawyer's subterfuge to ' befog the real issue. Spring, the bouse cleaning time, your .system needs cleaning as well; you I may bathe and be clean externally, 'but your whole system needs a purlfler and tonic to prepare It for the full .enjoyment of life; there is just one remedy that will do the work Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea, It puts new life into the whole body. 35c, Tea or Tablets. A. G. Luken. Life. ' Life 1" riddle because it is a fragment We are only; able to read one volume' of a story that extends to many volumes. In a word, wc knowIn part and consequently prophecy In part. Immediate Effect of Great Kidney Remedy Is Soon Realized. According to my experience I do not consider there is anything to equal Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root for kidney affection. Twice It relieved me when 1 was completely helpless. The last time I was traveling in Texas, when my kidneys became affected, j and for ten days I suffered excruciat- ; Ing pain, accompanied with severe chills. Several years previous, having been relieved of a similar attack, I naturally sought relief as before, from Swamp-Root. After, using four of the large size bottles, I was completely restored and went on my way rejoicing and praising Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. This was three years ago, and I have had no indication of the return of the af- , fllction. Yours very truly, J. C. SMITH. Jr.. 108 Johnson St. Jackson, Tenn. State of Tennessee County of Madison as. ; Subscribed and sworn to before me this 13th day of July, 1909. P. C. STOVALL, is Notary Public Letter to Dr. Kilmer A Co, Binshamton N. Y. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do Per You '. Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co, Bingham ton, N. Y.. for a sample bottle. It will ! convince anyone. You will also reiOelve a booklet of valuable information telling all about the kidneys and I bladder. When writing; be sure and mention the Richmond Dally PalisIdiom. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar Mia bottle fa sale at all drug stores.
Important Letter To All Who Suffer
"I suffered from indigestion for a long time. Last May I almost died. Tbe doctor told me it was acute indigestion and I could not be cured. Since that time I have suffered very much as some days everything I ate, even light food, as soft boiled eggs, would distress me. I lost fifteen pounds. Sometimes I felt that I could not live another day. A month ago I got a box of MI-O-NA tablets. Before I had used them a week I was better. I have used two boxes and I feel as well as I ever did, Eunice A. Peters, Jackson, Ga. Use MI-O-NA stomach tablets for quick relief from sour stomach, heaviness, heartburn, belching of gas and distress after eating. They are guaranteed. Large box 50 cents at Leo H. Fihe's and druggists everywhere. CAMELS OF THE ARABS. Various Ways the Dsssrt Nomads Use ths Animals' Milk. Nearly 00,000 camels are used in tbe vilayet of Bagdad as beasts of burden, and with donkeys they form tbo only means of carrying goods to inland points. For a common burden camel $30 is a fair price, tbongb tbe trotters, or swift messenger camels, are worth more. A young camel can sometimes be bad about Bagdad for as little as $3 or 94. Be!is its use for riding and carrying purposes, tbe Mesopotamlan Arabs depend on tbe camel for milk. Sboes are made from its tough, calloused hide, and in times of famine its brittle, strong tasting flesh is eaten. Condensed milk, made by boiling fresh camel milk until evaporation leaves only a hard, chalky substance, is prized among the desert nomnds. By rubbing this substance between the bands It reduces to powder, and when mixed with warm water it makes a refreshing drink, highly esteemed among the desert folk. "Mereesy," as it is called, will keep In good condition for two years. When made from buttermilk it tastes sour and is prized among Arabs who hare eaten much of sweet dates. Fresh, warm camel milk is also the food of many valuable horses owned by desert sheiks. Camel calves are weaned in their eleventh or twelfth month. When a camel caravan is on the march tbe very young camels are often tied upon tbe bncks of the mother animal, since they cannot endnre tbe fatigue of a long march. Valuable dogs and Arab desert hounds, called 'slugeys." also ride in the same way. Chicago Record-Herald. VIENNA DEATH NOTICES. Thsy Read Liko an Extract Prom Family History. "Don't die in Vienna. You'll be sorry if you do." writes an American on bis first visit to that city, "not because of the usual objections, but on account of the death notices in tbe papers. Tbey appear flanked by all sorts of ads. and range in size according to the desire for notice on the part of tbe family of tbe late lamented. Every possible title is mentioned, and tbe name of every member of tbe family goes to make up tbe notice. A death announcement black bordered and covering half a page of the paper Is nothing unusual. Here is a sample: "'Bruno Weiss, purveyor of lubricating oil to his imperial and royal majesty, and his wife, Amalie born Horsltzky In tbeir own and in the names of their children Hans. Otto, Minna, Laura and Hilde and their sons-in-law. Military Surgeon Dr. Lois Krobinsky and Architect Oskar Jellinek: tbeir daugbters-in-iaw. Louise, born Lederman. and Marie, born Anspncker. as also in the names of their grandchildren' here follows a long string of names 'and tbeir mother and mother-in-law, Fran Ernestine Winkler, relict of Commercial Councilor Anton Winkler, announce to their friends tbe entrance into eternal rest, after a long and severe illness, of their dearly beloved son. Arthur, In tbe twenty-sixth year of bis age.' "This is correct except as to the names." New York Tribune. Hs Was Just Thinking. "Mary," said a man to bis spouse, who whs gifted with a rapidly moving tongue, "did you ever bear the story of the precious gems?" "No." she replied. "What is it?" "It's a fairy legend that my grandmother told me when I was a boy," the husband continued. "It was about a' woman from whose lips fell a diamond 4fo a ruby at every word she spoke." "Well?" said bis wife as be pause. "That's all there Is of it. my dear." be replied. "But I was just thinking if such things happened nowadays I could make my fortune as a jeweler." Love of Trees. We And our most soothing companionship In trees among which we have lived, some of which we ourselves may have planted. We lean against them, and tbey never betray our trust, tbey shield us from tbe sun and from the rain, their spring welcome Is a new birth which never loses its freshness, they lay their beautiful robes at our feet in autumn; in winter tbey stand and wait, emblems of patience and of truth, for tbey bide nothing, not even tbe little leaf buds which hint to us of hope, tbe last element lu tbeir triple symbolism. Dr. O. W. Holmes. Above ths Vulgar Gaze. Until 1ST0 it was against the law and sacred custom for sny subject to look at the emperor of Japan. His political advisers and attendants saw only his back. When be flrsc left the palace tbe shatters of all the bouses bad to be drawn, and do one was permit ted in tbe streets. Even today. vhen the emperor has tbe privilege of Irtrlng through the streets like one. fuf his subjects, it is not considered' quite proper to cast a glance at him. Experience. "Experience is the best teacher. quoted the wise gay. "Yes. but her charges are mighty high," added the simple mug Phils-
The Theaters
"MUTT AND JEFF." "The triumph of Art in Richmond, or how we turned out to bear 'Matt and Jeff,' " is the latest installment of our great epic entitled "Richmond, the Art Center of the United States." A comic supplement "show" and hist! step round the corner so nobody will hear a comic supplement audience. That the worst fears of the pessimists who make the welkin ring with their lamentations over the degeneration of the public taste by the road of the yellows, would have been realized had they been at the Gennett w here this classic was presented last night, goes without saying. For the yells, screams, howls and bawlings of hysteric delight over the gyrations of the comic supplement stars, Messrs. Mutt and Jeff, transferred to the region behind the footlights, by the record breaking audi ence of the season at the Gennett, went to show which way the taste of this Athens of the Middle West drifts. From pit to dome was our local play house packed. No such audience has greeted a professional production in the Gennett since the first appearance of the celebrated "Madame Sherry," and it must be said that Mutt and Jeff gave no odds to the former much inflated mess of banality. Bad as Mutt and Jeff are that is bad artistically, dramatically, ethically and every other way they were at least not masquerading as something they weren't. They were frankly rank and didn't care. For, curiously enough, the ranker they were, the more nearly did they realize the ideal of their creator and their loyal following through the pages of the Sunday addendums. Last night's exhibition not on the stage, but in the audience made the aesthete shudder and the lover of dramatic art grow pale. It was an apotheosis of the grotesque. A canonization of theatric vulgarity. A deification of the abnormal. Into wbat sort of animal the Individual infant entity of the present generation, fed on this hideous grotesquerie, will evolve is a question. That the comic supplement has done more to debase the aesthetic instincts of the rank and file in this country, and Is establishing a fixed and vicious artistic standard, is admitted, and, after seeing its vizualization on the stage the most confirmed optimist must bow before its inevitability. Taken as a musical comedy the mongrel theatric anomaly which has held the boards for so many seasons and seems not to diminish in popularity "Mutt and Jeff" holds its own with the best of them, especially in its farcical aspects, for Roger Gray and Shorty DeWitt, who impersonated these notorious creations of the cartoonist's pencil, are excellent comedians, especially Gray as "Mutt." Gray, indeed, is a superior comedian, his presentation taking on individualiay and color. DeWitt amused largely because of his makeup. Gray from histrionic talents. Hie? imitation of a waiter was as clever a bit of comic theatrics as has been seen here for many a long day. The story is negligible and hardly worth the recounting, since it is one of those usual conglomerates of inanity usual with musical comedy, but the principals were all well cast and the solo numbers presented in good voice with one or two exceptions. "When I Dream of You," "Just a Little Smile," and "Sweet Land of Dreams," were all effectively sung and charming of their class, and some of the chorus dancing was picturesque, especially that of the mermaids. The music was tuneful enough although rather brazenly reminiscent at intervals, and the whole thing went off with much dash and verve. E. G. W. The Thrifty Dutch. The thrift of the Dutch has brought to Holland a fame of wealth that is richly deserved. Yet in spite of the wealth, taken as a whole, the Netherlands do not contain many great fortunes as fortunes are gauged in the United States. A feature of Dutch business is the number of small establishments or the great corporations In which shares are beld by many people. Much of the money which the country lends abroad is the savings of the masses. M's Best To Have ready to use at first sign of trouble the best corrective for any disorder of the organs of digestion. The earlier you seek relief the easier it will be to get it and the more certain it will be that the trouble will not lead to something worse. It is universally admitted that are the safest preventive as well as the most reliable corrective of stomach, bowel, or liver troubles. They bring about regular, natural, healthful action. All through the body in every organ, every nerve in actions, vigor and spirits yoo will feel the benefit of Beecham's Pills and quickly, too. You will save yourself suffering if you have this matchless aid to health Reedy On Hand
JERSEY MAN'S STORY
There is a ragged, robust. New Jersey man, George W. Thompson, by name, living in Manasquan, wbo has an interesting life-story to relate. "About two years ago," he said (in a recent letter) "my health' broke down and I felt fagged out all the time, having very little strength and being nervous, with poor appetite. "I think Vinol Is the best spring medicine on the market today, for since taking it I can say that 1 feel like a new man. I have regained my strength, eat well, sleep like a log." Right now is the time for you, if you are weak and run-down, can't eat or sleep, to. take Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron remedy. No matter whether you are a feeble old person or young and sickly, it you are not as strong and vigorous as you ought to be, Vinol is for you and it will build you up. Take it on our guaranty of satisfaction and if it disappoints you we will give back your money. But if you need new strength begin taking Vinol now. Leo H. Fihe, Druggist, Richmond, Ind. DANDRUFF CAUSES BALDNESS Keep the scalp clean and free from dandruff with Mrs. Mason's Old English Shampoo Cream, and the hair will grow long, thick, luxuriant and glossy. Nothing like it. 25c. Leo H. Fihe and other druggists. TELESCOPE LENSES. The Small Glass Magnifies ths Picture Mads by ths Largs One. People sometimes wonder why a telescope has two glasses, one at tbe big end and one at the little end. and they waut to know the difference. The glass at the big end Is to gather light. It is simply a big eye. If it is n hundred times bigger than tbe eye in your head It will gather a hundred times more light. It gathers the rays of light coming from a star and bends them all into a common meeting point called a focus, which is a picture of the star. You can look at this picture of the star with your naked eye if you like. But you can see it better and examine it more closely if you look at it with a small magnifying glass. And this is the glass at tbe small end of tbe telescope. It magnifies tbe picture made by the big glass at the other end of tbe instrument All telescopes are built on this principle. Sir William Herschel was the first to arrange matters a little differently. He took away the glass from the big end and admitted tbe rays coming straight into tbe tube in parallel lines. Then at tbe bottom of tbe big tube be placed a bright concave mirror made of burnished metal. When the entering rays fell upon this mirror tbey were again bent to a point called a focus, which was the picture of the star. To look at this picture he had to place tbe little magnifying glass at tbe side of the tube because the mirror had stopped up its lower end Louisville Courier-Journal. Something Blind. In one of the crowded streets of New York a beggar was in ths habit of taking bis stand every day and appealing to tbe charity of tbe passersby. By means of a short string he beld a dog. around the neck of whicb a enrd was fastened with the words, "I Am Blind." A very kind old gentlemnn. whb had been In the habit of i dropping a penny into the beggar's hat, passed rapidly one morning without doing so. Instantly the beggar rushed after him and asked for tbe penny to begiveu. as usual. Tbe gentleman, turning in surprise, said: "Why. 1 thought you were blind?" "Ob. no. sir'." was the cool reply. "It is tbe dog .that is blind, as tbo card says." The status of the biycle industry in England is indiated by the exportation of bicycles and bicycle parts to the value of 2,0024,199 in 1911 as against 960,398 in 1898, the last of the "boom years." Spring-Cleaning The Human System Needs It. Mrs. M. Morgan. 411 4th Ave E., Brainerd. Minn., writes: "I take from one to two bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla in the spring to purify the blood Just as regularly as I do my housecleaning, and go around light-footed and light-hearted. I believe it is the best blood purifier known." Hood's Sarsaparilla so combines the curative principles of roots, barks and herbs as to raise them to their highest efficiency: hence Its unequaled cures. Get it today in usual liquid form or tablets called Sarsatabs. CYCLONES and WINDSTORMS WILL COME but DOUGAN, JENKINS & CO. Will Protect You Against Loss From Them. PHONE 133a Room 1, I. O. O. F. Building
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CHILDREN OF UAP. T They Dent Have to Worry About Food. Clothes or 8hKr. In describing TJap, one of tbo Caroline islands. Dr. W. H. Furnees says that children become more or leas public property on that Island as soon as they are able to run about from house to house. Tbey cannot without extraordinary exertion fall off the island, and. like little guinea pigs, can find food anywhere. Tbeir clothing grows by every roadside, and any shelter or no shelter Is good enough for tbe night. Tbey cannot starve. There are no wild beasts or snakes to harm them. Wbat matters it If they sleep under tbe high, star powdered celling of tbeir foster mother's nursery or curl up on mats beneath their father's thatch? There 1s no Implication here tbat
parents are not fond of their children. On the contrary, they love them so much that tbey see tbeir own children in all children. It is tbe ease of life and its surroundings whicb have atrophied the emotion of parental love. When a father has merely to say to bis wife and children. "Go out and shake your breakfast off the trees." or. "Go to the thicket and gather your clothes." to him the struggle for existence is meaningless, and without struggle the prizes of life are beld In light esteem. Somebody's children are always about the houses and to tbe fore In all excitements, and never did I see them roughly bandied or harshly treated. Only One "BROMO QUININE" That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for the signature of E. W. GROVE. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. A Famsu? Dresser. Joachim Murnt was in his day the best dressed man in the world. Born In 17CTin a village near Cahors. the son of a day laborer, he was sent to a Jesuit school to be educated for the priesthood. He ran away, joined the army, and sixteen years after he had become a lieutenant be was a Held marshal. Duke of Cleve and Berg, with Napoleon's sister. Caroline, as his wife, and. finally, by the grace of his brother-in law, was created king of Naples. In all stations he paid the closest attention to his attire and wore in battle gold embroidered and jeweled uniforms which would have made him conspicuous at a court function and dressed himself as for a review when be was led forth to be shot. New York Tribune. Strenuous. "Life is far from being monotonous at the Twiller home." "How is that?" "The family pets include a bulldog, a cat nnd a globe of goldfish, the problem being to keep the bulldog from killing tbe cat and tbe cat from catching the goldfish." Birmingham Age-Herald. Careful About Himself. Husband I say. how many l's in bilious? Wife One. of course. You told me how to spell it yesterday when 1 was writing. Husband Ah. but I'm writing now, and tbat makes all tbe difference. London Punch. AT FOUNTAINS. HOTCLS. ON CLSCWHCRt Get the Original and Genuine HORLICK'S MALTED MILK The Food Drink for All Ages RICH HILK. MALT CRAM EXTRACT. IN POWDER Not in any Milk Trust ? Insist on "HORLICK"S" Take a packaga boot 1912 PACKARD 30" We offer our 1912 Demonstrator for sale at a great bargain. If you are interested in the purchase of a great car at a bargain. Write us at once for full details. The Ohio Automobile Co. DAYTON, O. Bell Phone 463 Main. it will pay you to look well after your teeth and not let them decay. Apart from the bad appearance such a ect of teeth presents, it is certain that they must ache at times and bother you. and equally true that you cannot masticate your food properly. It is a wise in Testment to Insure a sound set cf teeth and we can help you to possess them In a short time.
CONVENTIONS IN MUSIC fifties Which Song Composer Seam t. Feel They Must Fellow. Why is ft that all our musicians In writing a nautical song- invariably use a portion of the best known hornpipe as tbe introduction, "vamp," or counter-melody? Why do the open fifths in the bass always appear in rustic songs ? Because it can't be helped. It seems. Oar popular Irish songs always have a bar or two of a well known old Irish melody or a drone bass, otherwise tbey wouldn't be Irish. Tbe exhausted old Turkey and bis partner, the straw, come to tbe rescue of erery Tube" song or dance that is perpetrated, and our national airs must run all through the accompaniment of patriotic songs to gire them "flavor." Because all of these things are "set" tbey are conventions. Why must ev
ery song end on the tonic note, with " the preceding tone either tbe second or seventh of the scale, unless we except tbe detestable third or tbe bollow fifth? Because our audiences expect it Should one of your composers in a moment of bravery or recklessness produce a score In which be disregarded these many conventions bis first night hearers would go away remarking that the music was crazy. Tbey do not realize that they expect to bear the same old thing, served up a trifle differently, of course, but still tbe same. From "Where Dave 1 Heard Tbat Tune Before?" in Metropolitan I Magazine. Where Licorice Grows. On the banks of the Tigris and the Euphrates tbe licorice plant is chiefly grown. These great rivers flow through flat, treeless prairies of uncultivated and nearly uninhabited laud. For three months of the year hot winds blow, and tbe temperature reaches 104 degrees. For six months of tbe year tbe climate is moderate and salubrious, and for three mouths bleak and wintry, tbe thermometer golug down to 30 degrees at night. Something In the Filling. "Do you know you can tell a man's disposition by his teeth?" asked tbe girl wbo believes in signs, bumps and palm reading. "Ilow Interesting!" said ber compan ion, who did not believe in anything. "Then Jack must have a golden disposition." A lie Is a poor substitute for the tuth. but wbat other is there? i SCOURING '! For scouring pots and pans i , WHIZ" is a real delight. Pre miuin coupon in can. All deali ers, 10c. i MURRAY'S WEEK MARCH 25TH Johnny Eckert & Co. In the Musical Comedietta "Won by Wireless' 4 Other Features 4
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HO MORE SORE FEET Ask Leo H. Flh. about EZO for 1 Weary Aching Feet, Bunions and Corns. If your feet are tender, sore, burn. -and sting and keep you feeling miserable all the time go to Tueo H. Fihe's today, lay down 25 cents say 1 want a jar of EZO. It is sold on money back plan. Then rub on KZO and rub out agony. All pain will vanish like magic, and you'll have as good a pair of feet as anyone on earth. EZO is a refined ointment that quickly soothes and heals chapped hands, chilblains, frostbites. Mail orders filled by Ezo Chemleat Co., Rochester. N. Y.
The Famous Rid. Tanl Revere had finished bis famous ride and given tbe alarm which sounded the downfall of British power in this country. "Ha!" be said, with the prophetic instinct of all great men. "Where would ' this country have been if I had beeu arrested for exceeding the speed Uw-i it?" Baltimore American. Your Freckles Need Attention in March or Face Will Stay Covered. Now is the time to take special care ut tbe complexion if you wish It to look well the rest of the year. The March winds bring out freckles that will stay all Summer unless removed now with othine double strength. This prescription for the cure of freckles is the discovery or sn eminent r.kin specialist, and is to uniformly successful that it Is sold by Leo II. Fihe under guarantee to refund the money if It fails. Get an ounce of othine double strength, and even the first nights application will show a a orderful improvement, some of the rmallcr freckles even vanishing entirely. Intorootinc No wo When you are badly in need of a few dollars and happeu across an ad like this, it makes you feel a hundred per cent better to know tbat you can come to us and get what money you want, to meet that pressing obligation, and have plenty of time to pay it back, in small weekly, or monthly payments. We loan on furniture, horses, wagons, pianos, etc., without removal, in amounts' from 5 to $100. Fill out the blanks below, and mail It to us. and we will call on you and explain our plans without cost. How much can you use?...,... Tour name Address Richmond locn Go. Room No. 8, Colonial Building, Phone 1545. Richmond, Ind. Trick and Fancy SI
