Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 306, 29 October 1912 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PAI.IADltJ3I AND SUN-TEL.EGRA2I, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1912.

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BREAKS ALL RECORDS FOR CLUB MEMBERS

f;prRT;piai uiuD Largest in

tV VT Wr Size of the City 1 ? I AkHas 600 Members.

. "Not 600 but 600 members," was the jcry that resounded through the ComImercial club rooms last evening when bhe committee of sixty reported that It lacked but thirty-four members of jhaving 600 members. The number lacking to fill out the 600 were secured today, and Richmond today boasts of having the largest Commercial club for a city its size in the state of Indiana. One member out of every forty en, women and children, in Richond li the standing today," announcSecretary Charles W. Jordan with lee as the results were announced. It is believed that there 1b not a city ith a population of 25,000 in the fUnlted States that has the large enllment which the Commercial club ow enjoys. A total of 112 members were added to the club roBter yesterday by the committee; thirty-four were added today, and the club now numbers 600 (members. It was announced that Dr. E. A. Rumely, head of the M. Rumely com pany, of Laporte, would speak before ithe club on November 4. His subject will be "Conservation," and will be the same address he delivered before the National Conservation congress In session in Indianapolis early this (month. A reception for new members will also be held in connection with

, jthis meeting. The following members have been s i appointed delegates to the Indiana r'ct hL rer Roads association, meeting at 1 ! ! I . inannliH. December 10-12. and tn

I ' ' 1 1 tt ' f. American Good Roads congres,

v. snMung at tjincinnau, uecemDer &-. ' " H. A. Dill, T. P. Butler, L. S. Bowman, ,. ,!R. Sedgwick, D. C. Genn, and Mayor Zimmerman. The alternates are E. M. Haas, S. L. Kuth, G. B. Dougan and y. H. Mills.

Hostel and Inn. 'At on time the words "hostel" and inn" were not confined to licensed houses, but were applied to lodging houses. The "inns" of Oxford and Cambridge, very numerous before the Introduction of colleges, were regulated by the college authorities. The Inns of court were provided for the accommodation of law students. In olden time country houses of the aristocracy, during the absence of the owners, were used as "inns," or guest bouses, tt was .then the rule to hang out as signs the arms of the owners; hence the origin of public house signs, -London Globe. Making H Easier. "George Dinglebat, isn't this the ninth time you have asked me to marry you?' "Very likely, Laura. And say, why can't we have an understanding in the ', matter a division of labor, as it were? I'll do the asking, and you keep tab." Cleveland Plain Dealer. tv The Real Thing. Jttttese emotional actresses ever ( tai tears r as&ea jars, wouen. i" aeta

' I - r " .., replied Mr. Grouch. "Ever J - " -" nd then they hit a bum town

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Acquiesced. Charlie The doctor says I have a to ibaeco heart. Madge I knew it all along, dear. Ton always cared more for your old pipe than you did for me. Judge. I ' A Born Ananias. I Blobbs Does Longbow ever tell the (truth? Slobbs Well, I caught 'him in the truth once, but he tried to lie out ief it Philadelphia Record. USE SOME WORKING GIRLS LOSE TOO MUCH TIME Two Girls Tell How To Avoid It. There is nothing that teaches more tthan experience. . We therefore quote )xrom the letters of two girls who suf fered and were restored to health. The (flame remedy is within reach of all. Brooklyn, N. Y. " Prior to takinsr the first bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I suffered agony tovery month, but after your wonderful (medicine had been taken a while I felt a little better, and after taking seven bottles of it I feel that I can truly say I jhave no more pain or inconvenience. I "An T . u : i i j m uuw in uic uusuina wunu aa i stenographer, I come in contact with imany girls,and when the opportune moment arrive tell them about the Vegetable Compound and I know that quite a few are taking it-" Helen Canet, 656 Dean St. Another rfs Experience. Tishomingo, OUa. "I am a stenographer and bookkeeper, and Lydia E. wuPinkham s Vegeta ble Compound has tved my life. I am goying the best of nMth now.but I was 8UJ?ering from femaV troubles and PaHful periods, andWould have bcWie, headache nd 'minting spells. Ii ioman would like U n mo I will gladly answer her ltfer tell ber what Lydia E. Pickhai8 veg.table (Compound has done for Mrs. JilATrnc CorEKHAVE-, TishoMjjgo

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Clergyman's Son Had Tuberculosis; Now Well

People who have Consumption are often filled with bright hopes of recovery, only to realize that improvement is but temporary. Consumption is dreaded by everyone. Those who had it and used Eckman's Alterative can testify to its beneficial effects. No one need doubt It there is plenty of evidence from live witnesses. Investigate the following Amenia, N. Y. "Gentlemen: Prior to February, 190S, I was located in Rochester, New York, suffering with LaGrippe, which developed into Tuberculosis. My physician gave me one month to live. I was having terrible night sweats and mid-day chills and losing flesh rapidly, having gone from 155 pounds to 135 pounds. I coughed and raised continually and became bo weak that walking a few feet exhaused me. On my return home my regular physician gave me littel encouragement. My father, who is a clergyman, heard of Eckman's Alterative and induced me to take it. The night sweats and chills disappeared, my cough became easier and gradually diminished and in a few days I developed an appe tite, the first in months. I am now in perfect health, back to 155 pounds. I feel certain that I owe my life to Eckman's Alterative." (Signed) E . H. COWLES. "Gentlemen: I can not find words to express my appreciation of what your remedy has done for my son. It changed despair into hope within two weeks after he began taking it, and without any doubt in my mind, it saved his life. I wish to add my endorsement to every word of his testimony." (Signed) REV. J. J. COWLES. Pastor Presbyterian Church. Eckman's Alterative is effective in Bronchitis, Asthma, Hay Fever; Throat and Lung Troubles and in upbuilding the system. Does not contain poisons, opiates or habitforming drugs. For sale by leading druggists. Ask for booklet telling of recoveries, and write to Eckman Laboratory, Philadelphia, Pa., for additional evidence. (Advertisement) SPECWLJOPICS AT THE CHURCHSERV1CES Anti-tuberculosis, Temperance Cause and Reformation Day Discussed. Church goers were treated to various topics in the pulpits of the Richmond churches Sunday. The day had been set aside for a consideration of tuberculosis by the State Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, and a number of churches considered the problem. Dr. D. W. Stevenson, in an address at the First M. E. church Sunday evening, outlined the methods of preventing tuberculosis and pointed out the cures. He said that fresh air, substantial food, and sane living were preventatives, and that each individual has it within him to battle against the disease. Dr. W. W. Anderson, a colored physician of the city, spoke before the Bethel M. E. church on the same topic. He emphasized the necessity of proper precautions against the malady and urged the people of his race to be insistent in their warfare against a disease which claims many of them. Speaking on "Some Practical Phases of Health" the Rev. T. J. Graham pastor of the First Presbyterian church, Sunday morning told his hearers that it Is their duty to look after their physical welfare as well as take care of their spiritual life. Mr. Stanley Here. Speaking on the work of the W. C. T. U. at the North Fifth Street church Sunday evening, Mrs. Stanley of near Liberty, Ind., vice president of the state organization, asserted that the work of the temperance union is advancing each year. Mrs. Stanley spoke of the work of the W. C. T. U. in Japan and China and about its work in Ohio in the suffrage movement. She said that the W. C. T. U. is organized in sixty-four counties. She also spoke of the large electric light said to be the most expensive in the United States which hangs over the W. A. Cook brewery at Evansville. The sign is in the form of Old Glory and the speaker declared that this was an abominable shame. A large crowd heard the lecture. Reformation Day. The Lutheran churches of the city celebrated the Reformation festival, an annual event in which the church recalls the work of the reformer of the sixteenth century and calls attention to the problems that today confront the church. MR. E. Z. MARK Has had an awakening pays us all to wake up occasionally. "Nothing doing" for the chap who won't keep in touch with the head of the procession Mr. E. Z. Mark has been easy picking then he woke up, dropped in and got acquainted with the Douglas Tailors left his order for a suit and overcoat $15 no more, no less. He's convinced he saved $10. Woke up you see at 10th and Main, Westcott Hotel corner. Al Rost, Mgr. Advertisement, Amendment Rejected. "Laura." said Mr. Ferguson, hurriedly explaining matters in the kitchen. I didn't want to bring the man home to dinner, but he kept staying and Btaying at the office, and I just had to ask him. . Yon will have to put as good a face on it as yon can." -If you think I'm goto? to chaos my face his accowt George Ferguson." said his spouse, red anal angry, "you'll have to think aain! Ten may Mmg him oat to dinner right now !" Chi cairo Tribune.

III I Ofllll Q ft LL OUULu

I DAY IS OBSERVED HERE Catholic Societies and Members Honor Dead in St. Andrew's Cemetery. Headed by the uniformed Knights of St. John and the Young Men's Institute, a procession of 1,200 Catholics Sunday marched through the drives of the St. Andrew's cemetery, honoring the dead and praying for the repose of their souls, the customary celebration of All Soul's day. The procession started at the St. Andrew's church and proceeded directly to the cemetery. A Latin song "De Profundis" was one of the numbers sung by a male quartet. A choir of men also sang the famous German hymn, "How Sweetly They Sleep, All the Blessed." On a platform erected before the chapel in St. Andrew's cemetery, the Rev. Frank A. Roell preached upon "The Resurrection of the Soul." Here is a woman who speaks from personal knowledge and long experience, viz., Msb. P. H. Brogan of Wilson, Pa., who says, "I know from experience that Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is far superior to any other. For croup there is nothing that excels it." For sale by all dealers. Advertisement. HISTORIC FIRES. The Most Fateful of All, Perhaps, Wai the Burning of Moscow. A list of great cities burned would be a list of nearly all the great capitals of the world. Persepolis, the splendid residence of a long series ol rulers whose tributary provinces extended from the Indus to the Helles pont, was burned, with all its pal aces and temples. Babylon and Carthage were so utterly destroyed thai their very location has become a matter of doubt. Rome was burned eight times. Jerusalem four times, and though they rose from their ashe The second temple is not like the first. Athens, Syracuse. Bagdad, Alexan dria and Antioch now exhibit only a shadow of their former grandeur. Th Phoenicians, like the Spartans and. As Syrians, disappeared with the ruin oi their capitals, but the most fateful conflagration recorded in the historj of the world is perhaps that of Moscow. "They talk as if the fate of Europ had been decided nt Waterloo," says D Bourienne in his memoirs of the first empire. "If Napoleon had beatec Wellington and Blucher a dozen timet It eould not have retrieved the reverses of the three preceding years. Th truth is that the French Caesar and j his fortune were ruined by the burn- J ing of Moscow. That city was the funeral pile of the great nation." Ex change. Diplomatic. "How did you get rid of that Incompetent typewriter girl?" "I guess I told you I didn't want to hurt her feelings by disparaging her work." "Yes. How did you fix it?" "I told her she was altogether too pretty to be working in a public office, and she went nway as pleased as could be." Cleveland Plain Dealer.

(Advertisement)

Foods that Bind Little Children

Start them off right with a good laxative and then wacth their diet. Mothers are often unconsciously very careless about the diet of their children, forcing all to eat the same foods. The fact is that all foods do not agree alike with different persons. Hence, avoid what seems to constipate the child, or to give it indigestion, and urge it to take more of what is quickly digested. If the child shows a tendency to constipation it should immediately be given a mild laxative to help the bowels. By this is not meant a physic or purgative, for these should never be given to children, nor anything like salts, pills, etc. What the child requires is simply a small dose of the gentlest of medicines, such as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which in the opinion of thousands of watchful mothers is the ideal remedy for any child showing a tendency to constipation. So many things can happen to a constipated child that care is necessary. Catching cold, piles, headaches, sleeplessness, and many other annoyances that children should not have can usually be traced to constipation. Many of America's foremost families are never without Syrup Pepsin, because one can never tell when some member of the family may need it, and all can use it. Thousands endorse it, among them the mother of Albert Adison Spence, Reeds Springs, Mo., and Mr. Frank Nagel, Notary Public, Dorchester, Wis., who buy it regularly of their druggist at fifty cents and one dollar a bottle, the latDR.

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LAMES Have Lovely Hair If you want to make your hair so beautifully lustrous that people cannot help but exclaim "Oh what lovely hair!" bet a fifty cent bottle of PARISIAN SAGE to-day.

It's a most uelighttu., refreshing hair dressing, daintily perfumed, and free i from poisonous lead or other dye. The girl with the Auburn hair is on every carton and bottle of PARISIAN SAGE. Be sure and get the genuine. PARISIAN SAGE will banish dandruff, stop falling hair and scalp itch in two weeks, or your money back. That's a pretty square offer all fair minded people will say. Large bottle 50 cents at Leo H. Fihe'b and dealers everywhere. (Advertisement) THE "GOBLIN FRIAR." On of the 3pecters That Are Said to Haunt Newtead Abbey. Newstead abbey, the home of Lord Byron, has the reputation of being; haunted by more than one specter, and many curious noises and strange sights have been heard and seen by residents and visitors there. But the best known and most noted specter connected with the place and Immortalized tn Byron verse is the "tJoblln Friar." The particular chamber which this specter is supposed eso-lnll.v to frequent and which Is known par excellence as the "haunted chamber" adjoins Byron's bedroom. Lord Byron and many others not only believed in the existence of the Black Friar, but asserted that they had really seen It It did not confine its visitations, however, to the "haunted chamber," but at night walked the cloisters and other portions of the abbey. A monk arrayed In cowl and beads and dusky garb appeared. : Now In the moonlight and now lapsed In shade. With steps that trod as heavy, yet unheard. This apparition is the evil genius of the Byrons, and its appearance portends misfortune of some kind to the member of the family to whom It appears. Lord Byron fully believed that he beheld this apparition a short time before the greatest misfortune of his life, his ill starred nnion with Miss Millbanke. Alluding to his belief in these things, he said: 1 merely mean to say what Johnson said That In the course of some six thousand years All nations have believed that from the dead A visitant at Intervals appears. And what Is straneest upon this strange head Is that whatever bars the reason rears Galnest such beliefs there's something stronger still In Its behalf, let those deny who wtlL Kansas City Star. 4 ' . ALBERT ADISON SPENCE ter sire being bought by those who already know its value, and it contains proportionately more. Everyone likes Syrup Pepsin as it is very pleasant to the taste. It is also mild and non-griping and free from injurious ingredients. If no member of your family has ever used Syrup Pepsin and you would like to make a personal trial of it before buying it in the regular way of a druggist, send your address a postal card will do to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 413 Washington street, Monticello, Illinois, and a free sample bottle will be mailed you. Results are always guaranteed or money will be refunded. JL A. WALLS SPECIALIST wo, rmx DATS MOXDAT, DAT. AT OB BACH &nd en month's Treav

TREATS DISEASES OF THE THROAT. LCTfQf lODNETS. UVER and BLADDER. RHEUMATISM DYSPEPSIA tad DISEASES OF THE BLOOD. ES

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aUABANTJ

The Old Story

Ever since I can remember the people have been going out at election time, parading up and down the streets with torchlights, and transparencies, shouting for the politician candidates, making a great ado, then going to the polls and voting for those men and then going home to bed. Legislators hare held sessions. Congresses have sat, governors have ruled, senators have formed their little rings, and then there has been a pause in the interest which we have taken in governmental affairs. Elections pauses elections. That has been our way of governing ourselves until our legislative hallB have run with the scum of the gutter. Pause after pause, each one worse than its predecessor, until our government has been the shame of every decent citizen. It has not made much difference which one of the old mossback parties gets into power we're done. William Gillette.

Amusements THEATRICAL CALENDAR. Murray Theater. Vaudeville Matinee and Night. Gennett Theater. Nov. 1 "The Bell Hop." Nov. 7 and 8 Elks' Minstrels. A. M. E. Church. Nov. 1" Harrison recital. The Murray. The current bill at the Murray is commented on today under the head of "The Theatres." "The Bell Hop." "The Bell Hop" which will be the attraction at the Gennett on Nov. 1, is one of this season's new musical plays and from the press notices that have already been written in the cities where this company has been sen it is undoubtedly a success. The principal character is taken by E. Manley who plays Willie Hurry, the bell hop, and the comedy that Mr. Norris makes out of this part makes the audience scream from start to finish. Lula Lynn Norris has a prominent part and all that remember her in the novelty musical act "The 12x2 Band," which has played all the larger vaudeville houses throughout the country, need no vtm tafaiti n nuirvi v H 1 CURE IT. 5 V A quick, safe, soothing. heUns, astlseptte cut tor Sore Throat, brieliy describe TOWSHJMC. A small bottle of ToaaiUna laets longer tbw moat ar cass ot Bmrm Thrash TONSiLMU curea Bora aloat!i and Hoarse neaa ana prevents Qufeur mud Diphtheria. 26c and 60c. NeseHal Site tl.OO. All Drawjisb. Ladies Penny Club, of Richmond, Indiana, presents SOFIA STEPHALI in concert lectures at high school auditorium North Eighth street. Influence of Music, Wednesday, Oct. 30, 1912, 8:30 p. m. Music and Childhood, Thursday, Oct. 31, 1912, 3:30 p. m. Music and Life, Thursday, Oct. 31, 8:30 p. m. Tickets at door. WE PAY SI per set for TPFTI?TrE OLD FALSE B. TtTt A P. which are of no value to you. Highest prices paid for old Gold, Silver. Old Watches, Broken Jewelry. Precious Stones. Money Sent by Return Mall Phila. Smslting & Refining Co. Established 20 Years 863 Chestnut St., Philadelphia. Pa. GENNETT THEATRE Friday, Nov. 1 The Bell Hop Musical Farce Comedy Prices 10, 20, 30, 50 JUST TELL US The AMOUNT of money and the TIME you want to use the same and we will make you RATES that can not be anything but satisfactory to you. We loan from $5.00 to $100.00 on furniture, pianos, teams, wagons, etc, without removal, giving you both the use of the money and security. Your payments can b made in small weekly, bimonthly or monthly installments to suit your income. Call at our office, write or phone If In need cf money. .. v. .

EVEN IF NECK Ml) AS LONG AS THIS BM FELLOW AND H AO M sonE IP1 THROAT

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introduction. The cast throughout has been carefully selected and the bevy : of pretty girls that go to make up the chorus is without a doubt the best

looking set of girls that has bven teen here this season in an attraction of this class. Stephali Concerts. The two concert lectures to be giv en by Sophia Stephali in the high j school hall under the auspices of the j Penny club on Wednesday and Thurs-', day evenings, promise to be largely attended as there was a large advance J 6ale. Her lectures are not only . thoughtful and suggestive, but enter-; taining as well, and she everywhere They Make Good vrho keep themselves in fine physical condition. Regular Dowels, active kidneys and liver, good digestion, and a greater natural vigor foliow the timely use of the reliable BEECHi&M'S PIMiS SeU

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painting or other protection, this wear and tear for nearly a quarter good condition today. summer and cola in winter, cover them with J-M Asbestos Roofing. Writ r cult ttJsi fr tomtit J-M A$lm Rfimi and hamdMtmth iliattrattd feei. Jones Hdw. Co. 1342 I r ALL, Prop. Phon?1 Works: Seventh and Sc: Overcoats, Cf Plain Skirts; ' Palm Beach. Fla. $5435 St. Augustine, Fla. $3835 St. Petersburg. Fla. $4735 Tampa. Fla $4735 Havana, Cuba S7&L50 C. A. BLAIR, City Ticket Agent. T1T1 JU S mm mm w.mm

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