Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 199, 25 June 1912 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT.
THE IUCII3IOND PALLAD1U3I AD SIJX-TELEGKAai, TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 101t.
MURPHY
AND
HEARST AND BRYAN LEAD
Whatever Agreement This Trio Can Reach, the Convention Cannot Do Anything but Ratify It.
(Continued from Page One.) the proper ballot clasped Irmly in in their hands. It was stated that Mr. Hearst and Mi. Murphy are on the verge of an 'amalgamation that must result in the early selection of Champ Clark as the 'convention's candidate. This was the I most interesting feature of the day inasmuch as what Mr. Hearst has said of Mr. Murphy and what Mr. Murphy, not j having the same facilities of i Hearst, has thought of Mr. Hearst, has !j:ot conduced to much else than sim!u!taneous attempts at murder when the two belligerents should meet. Mr. Hearst appeared at the Belvedtre hotel during the day neatly attirici in a long black coat and a black hat itnd an expression of heavy responsibility. He went to the modest room ! occupied by Mr. Bryan and the two ! conferred long and earnestly. It was ; said Mr. Murphy was present, but that later was proved one of the choice 'canards of the day. However, with Mr. Bryan and Mrs. (Hearst in accord, and Mr. Murphy (coming into accord, there seems to be jrothing much left for the convention to do except to ratify whatever agreen'.rnt they may make. . It is probable that if Mr. Murphy and I Mr. Hearst have resumed amiable, not jto say amicable, relations, the nominee I or the convention is likely to be whomi coever Mr. Hearst and Mr. Murphy and I n - j i J . xt i
iir. tjryau ueciae upon; ior nearBL uas
more or less interest In the Clark delegates and Mr. Murphy has ninety choicely assorted and hand-picked delegates of his own ready for instant delivery.
s The potentialities of such an alliance are enormous. The firm of Murjpby, Hearst and Bryan can do about lThat it pleases, provided the active j partners are a patriotic unit for the good of the party and the country, and ire not beset by personal ambition. McLean Boomer of Hearst? Along late in the day it was stated that John R. McLean had appeared in , Baltimore with a carefully matured iplan to help Mr. Hearst to the nomin;at!on. It is said that Mr. McLean had Jt In mind to cause a switch of the Clark delegates to Hearst on the second ballot, and Mr. Murphy was to assist with his ninety, and Mr. Bryan to lend the movement his support. This detail -was believed by many,
,and the news of the Hearst-Murphy j reconciliation and the Hearst-Bryan conference all tended it was said to .prove that Mr. McLean's duties in Baltimore are not social, as he said, but iPolitlcal, as others Baid. There were hundreds of other storiles of the same general confirmation, 'and the same general lack of confirmation, but and this is important jthere is no doubt that Murphy and 'Hearst are close to an agreement, if, indeed, one has not been reached, and Iwlth Murphy and Hearst working together, a good many other leaders ight just as well have remained at home. Taggart Delays Crimping Bryan. Mr. Thomas Taggart, of Indiana, the "well known advocate of universal ;leace, seems to have delayed the put-
Suf f ers No Longer With Stomach Trouble Monnett's Kan-Do-Its, the Liver and Kidney Remedy, Drive all Poisons From the System. Conkey's and A. G. Luken's Pharmacy Guarantee It. "For years I suffered with stomach trouble. I had tried many remedies when the Monnett Medicine pamphlet came Into my hands and Monnett gave me a box, and I concluded to try the remedy, Kan-do-Its. I have taken several boxes and now I am not suffering at all, and have not been for several months. I write this in the hope that it will attract the attention of others who suffer as I did." S. L. SHANK, Mayor of Indianapolis. ting of that crimp into Mr. Bryan. After A. B. Parker had been named in committee meeting for the temporary chairmanship, and Committeeman Hall of Nebraska, speaking more in sorrow than in anger, had told the committee that, much as he regretted it, Mr. Bryan would become a candidate for temporary chairman of the convention himself if the committee persisted in foisting Mr. Hall laid much stress on that word "foisting" Mr. Parker on the convention and thus starting a battie that might result in frightful losses to all concerned, including the Democratic party. Mr. Taggart, speaking from the bottom of the heart full of the sweetest milk of human kindness, suggested that it might be wise to tif lay the surgical operation on Mr. Bryan and appoint a committee to see if it could not be avoided. Mr. Mack and Mr. Hall were designated as the doves of peace, and those who were gathered at the armory to hear the hoarse cries of the wounded as the contest progressed, turned away sorely disappointed. Insist on a Progressive. The day developed nothing of great importance save the emphasis of the fact that the nominee of the convention must be a progressive. It was a day filled with a blare of bands, arrival of delegates, the cheering of Democrats who see themselves already victorious, and there was much color end enthusiasm about it all. So far as results are concerned, the two factions radical and conservative worked steadily on the delegates and
each claimed to have held their own
and to have gained additional strength. The conservative forces were ably assisted by Mr. Thomas Fortune Ryan of New York, one of our best known and most successful reactionaries. Ryan is understood to favor a safe and sane candidate. Whatever the outcome, the leading candidates subject, of course, to the result of the juncture of Mr. Murphy, Mr. Hearst and Mr. Bryan continue to be Clark, Wilson and Mr, Bryan 1-imself. The Gaynor boom arrived cud made an imposing display in about all the hacks the city boasts, and the Tammany delegation added to the gayety of the occasion and the congestion at the bars. It was a lively day with a lot of action, a lot of enthusiasm, and a lot of manipulating, and it closed every Democrat in the city maintaining that whomsoever is named by the convention, that man will be the next president.
The Theaters
AT THE MURRAY. "Camille," the famous play metamorphosed from the novel of the same name by Alexander Dumas, the younger, is one of those theatrical rocks upon which many a reputation has been wrecked. Every actress tries her hand at "Camille" as every actor makes an essay at "Hamlet." It is one of the greatest emotional roles known to the modern stage and has been made notable by many celebrities. Among them Bernhardt, Duse, Clara Morris and every minor actress who has more or less successfully trod the boards. And it is, in turn, a play which has been the subject of much scathing denunciation by moralists on the one hand and dramatic critics 'on the other for obviously dis-simllar reasons than any other.
But it survives. And because it has what is called nowadays "human interest." Because it is the picture of the life of a patrician demi-mondaine, it is denounced by the moralist who says that it makes vice attractive. Because it is full of bathos and stilted phrasing it has been jeered at by the elect among the critics and theatric aesthetes. But still it lives. In fact it is one of the greatest arguments for monogamy that has ever been written. And a tribute to the existence of the desired of the whole world Love. It is, in truth, of the highest moral significance if that's what you want at the theater. For it goes to show that even a woman without the social pale is capable of a grand, self-sacrificing and renunciatory passion for one man. "The Lady of the Camelias," is socalled because the heroine always wore a camelia, whose significance in the intrpretation of the play is stated by the heroine herself In the line which refers to its fragility and its sensitiveness. That the summer stock players at the Murray put this celebrated drama
on witn tne genuine tneainc eciai with which they did yesterday goes to prove that the chasm that separates the celebrity from the more obscure of his art is neither so wide nor so deep as the public is sometimes led to believe. Miss Frost, as "Camille" gave the role a refined and convincing interpretation which holds its own with greater impersonations, for she has the incalculable asset of youth and slender-
ness to give the portrayal verisimilitude and she at no time takes advantage of the opportunities for exaggeration which shows her an actress of discriminating taste. In the crucial scenes the departure and the death Miss Frost handled her theatric medium with skill and gave, altogether, a very satisfactory and effective Interpretation to this celebrated role. Jack Carrington as "Armand" the ardent and ingenuous lover, a difficult and trying theatric characterization in that while really the biggest "part" it must be made subordinate and since a masculine emotional role is one which calls for the deftest handling to remove it from the effeminate and the absurd gave an exhibition of histrionics which deserves a place with the most sophisticated of his dramatic confreres. That he also "looked the part" was almost of no moment since his conception and his ability to Interpret that conception was dominant. The
writer has seen a number of Armand s. including those with the celebrated Camilles above referred to, and has seen none better than Mr. Carrington's. i The others of the cast were good, Edwin Wolcott as the Count, Edward Williams as the father of Armand and Ralph Jool as "Gaston," giving sophisticated theatric impersonations, while
"Madame Prudence," the good-hearted but sordid worldling, was played well by Miss Van Orden. E.G.W.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
There will be a meeting of the Richmond Commander' Knights Templars at the Temple Tuesday evening at 7:00 o'clock to make arrangements to accompany the body of Nicholas Druley to Boston,
Indiana.
it
Warren Diadena to Elix B. Helney. Aug. 17, 1910, $S00, PL lot 3, Blk. 3, Milton.
Walter Uhde to Mary C. Barton. Tr, June 17. 1912. $1. Pt. lot 26. O. Kinsey
Add., Richmond.
Mary C. Barton. Tr.. to Ida J. Lanman. June 17, 1912. $1. PL lot 26. O. Kinsey Add., Richmond. Adam Boes to Ernst Bode, July 22.
1911. $115. lot 701, "02. 703. 704. Beallview. Minnie E. Hunter to Jos. P. niff. June 22. 1912. $650, Pt. lots S-36. W Bickle Add. Richmond.
Treubl. The worn, gray haired mia met a mysterious stranger. "And who might you be? asked the man. -My name is Trouble. replied the stranger. Strange that I got these gray hairs lodging you and never met you before." said the man. Cincinnati En-
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If your doctor says this Is all right, remember it !
Lgwlt. Mm!
It is now well known that not more than one case of rheumatism in ten requires any internal treatment whatever. All that is needed is a free application of Chamberlain's Liniment and massaging the parts at each application. Try it and see how quickly it will relieve the pain and soreness. Sold by all dealers.
His Suggestion. Blobbs Guzzler isn't very talkative. Is be? 1 don't seem able to draw him out Slobbs Try a corkscrew. Philadelphia Record.
Men blush less for their crimes than for their weaknesses and vanity. La Bruyere.
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TcsepHs Factory Sflmoxe
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ROCK OAK LEATHER Men's Shoes Sewed 75c Ladies' Shoes, Sewed 50c Men's Shoes, Nailed 65c Ladies' Soles, Nailed 45c Children's Soles, Sewed, 40c up Children's Soles Sewed, 30c Up. Ladies' Heels 20c Men's Heels 25c
OUR PRICES
BULLET PROOF LEATHER Guaranteed to Give Double Wear. Men's Half Soles, according to weight 80c to $1.00 Men's Full Soles $1.75 Boys' Half Soles ,75c Children's Half Soles. .60c to 75c We feature Full Sole Work, Rock Oak Leather, 0 at $1.35 & $1.50 Cat's Paw Heels Men's, 50c; Ladles' 40c
ALL SOLES SEWED ON WITH GOODYEAR STITCHER. Either leave your shoes with our nearest agent or bring them to us. Call Automatic Phone 1242 for any information. TEEPLE SHOE CO. ffigffiERRfa 718 Main f.
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M
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OLIVER VISIBLE TYPEWRITER For Sale Cheap. fvifecv condition and does splendid writing. Could ship on approral and trial. Write to Charles W. Rlckart. Rosedals. Kan.
