Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 209, 12 July 1920 — Page 7
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YS
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TE LEGK AM, KiCHMOND, lNUMUWUAY, JULY 12, VJ'ZO.
XAGE SEVEN
DEATH OF
b RECALLS GLORY QF IWPOLEON'5 FAME
MADRID, July 12.--The ex-Empress Sulfate of France, idled "here 'Sunday jncTnlng. ' SHeame to"Madrld several months ago to visit the Queen. "- Born on May 5, 1825, Eugenie Marie DeMontlJo,'" former Empress "of the
I ji r5ncn, was uestcnucu uu ner iaiuer s j tide froni a Spanish family -of hlRh no-1
Wllty, the head "of which in 1492 received the title of Count de Teba-at the hands of Ferdinand and Isabella. After the marriage of the elder daughter the countess in 1849 took -up her residence with Eugwnle in" Paris. Here" the young ldy became cele
brated for her beauty, her amiability and her rare mental gifts." " She Meets Napoleon III. Eugenie made the acquaintance of Prince Tfapdleon.'as he "was then called, when ho was living at "the Elystfe in his character of President-of the French Republic:- From -the flrst he waB attracted to the brilliant young Spanish girl. ' " - ""' ' " "Early in January, 1853, he startled Ms ministers by announcing that' he hd "determlnetr on an alliance wfth Mile. DMontlJo.The news excited jntioh opposition; " - Three" years elapsed between the Emperor's marriage and the birth of his ,only child. This occurred March 18, 1856: teKh the"birth-of th Pidee
Imperial ftotlWM'aWs !etwnrEiF
genie ahoTThe Bonlparte ramiry. She was JealousUnd s'u'spiclolirTSf 'all poss WtfretendeYB'to tlv6ufct!es1otariw Interested -ftr PuHtteg.
She too Keen friterefo in political
matters, "and greatly "ttntroVefl thS'EtnDeror's ministers by fnsfBtfng' Ch "being
present at the state councils.' shglfes O three flrflrea"Trp0TrttC"3 VV'ilt 'lil'lOBS, during tbe -lUMan -war to- 1865, -awl
when th Emperor started on the last
disastrous expedition which ended at edan. The royal refugees made their home at Chiselhurst. England. Here the Eroiperor died Jan. 9, 1873. The Prince of Imperial gained the consent of his mother to Join the Brltfeh expedition fto South Africa in 1879. " In an ehgh'genent with the Zulus In June of . that year, he met his death. His remains were interred beside those of Napoleon III at Chiselhurst. A few years later Eugenia made a pilgrimage to Zulu-
land and visited, the spot, where her son met; ki -death.'- ; ,v-" Llved-Jn Splendor. For 17 years the llfe'pf the Empress Eugenie waa -oroof splendor ad' enchantment. Known -as. rtheiost beautiful woman. Ia Europe,". and-Jdolifced by all t France, she 'received the homage of .the worldVsoverelgira. i5uddenly everytWS crumbled.- popularity, happiness, poiJtlon, wealth and even her home vanished and she became, to use her own, words, "merely an echo of a glory that ha faded living in the memories of the long ago."
The Theatres
t . MURRAY,-" ' "Cha'ity chile? Nebah!"Bald Mam
my, which, - translated, ' means ..that
Mary Ann Hubbard's faithful-old servant would fight if necessary to keep her beloved chaTge, the same Mary
Ann, from being taken in -charge by
the Ladies Aid Society and placed in
a charitable organisation?- - - -
To escape such disgrace to the hon
ored name of Hubbard of which Mary
Ann was the, eole, and penniless survivor Mammy used her -few -savings
to send Mary 'Ann to -New-York and
Dick Allison. wh6se acquaintance they had'nlade'whne he'was seeking health
in t he-Soth; W" " .
Dick had, almost forgotten about his
littla Southern friend whenIn walked
Mary, who certainly hadn't forgotten him, . and - who- couldn't.- understand
why is wasn't' all right fr her, though
proposition Did his love for the girl directed, and it is a
y fruaioui-i? ins ioe iqr ms couniry . 1 1 run ijiv.-i.uji-
Was the girl, -too, willing to make the
Paramount Art-
unchaperoneg, tpvjslt a bachelorjBut, as pick was abeju't to 'rnarffr & widow whothbueh ih lbvVwIttf another? w&
tnVrrylifg pick for his TjradStreit fating, jf was lucky, for hiniythat Miry Walked In when she did.'"- - - tyTiaV .happened when "In Walked Mary'' is stibwlng" at" fh Murray
in
sThd- Blood Barrier," the J. Stuart
Blat:ktoiJPatBe'vfe'atare picture on' the programs Hhe'fltfunrette Theatre the flrBtniatf.-presefatanmteresting slthatton aa"that-boV.',Th6- principal
figurea,inJJtr arw played""' by Sylvia
Breanrer and '"Robert. Gordon, . with William- R.-Dunh, .-Margaret Berry. Louise ' De an.dfay -Dunn and "Gus Alexander playing Trominentparts:
vf- ..'''WASHINGTON. - Bebe, DanelsTthepretty motion picture play.er Whojs Wallace Jleid's leadingwoman at tte Washington Theatre this week ;n,"The Pancin' Fool.',' made her debuf In dramatic at the "age pf ten Tyeeks. Her .mother -and father were , both actorp, anc Bebe was cartied on the stage in her mother's arms. At the age of eighX Miss Daniels abandoned theatricals to enter a convent.
Four years ago. Miss Daniels receiv
ed her diploma from the convent school and immediately satisfied a long-cherished" ambition by "breaking into motion pictures.' Untif recently she specialized "In' etimedy, serflng as Joll f51r' one Vf the Reading slapstick artists. Then came the opportunity to do more serious work unde"f Ceril'B. De Mille's direction, and Miss Daniels accepted it eagerly.'1 Her work In the Babylon eptsbarin Wr) De Mille's "Male and Female" ana as "yie "bther woman" in "Why Cnanfe Youf WifeT"'esU"bllshed het"aa a' character actress of extraOrdinary ability. " ' ; As he "girl-heroine of "The Dancln
Fool," Miss-' jpaniels has one of the most congenial mparts of her career.
is really a modest, Tiomelo vine ' gtrl SaVS MfS. Ovenstein. So Other
WASHINGTON
The new Wallace Held 'picture, "The Dancln Fool," coming to- the'Washlngtori Theatre ' Sunday Monday- and Tuesday, i8 ?a'vtftUaDle revue" of the latest 'jazz dance Bteps asWell asaH unusually'entertalnlfig screen colncdy. ' AS a country youth lately come to New" York atr a ' Ix-dollar-a-weelt job in his Uncle Enoch's factory, Mr. Reid as -'"Ves" Tibbie.--discovers that his fortune lies in his feet -and blossoms forth as the sensation of. a Broadway cabaret. 'With pretty- Bebe Dafflels as his 'partner, Wallie-exhibits a choice
variety of unique dances, ' ranging from an Aapache number' to a Jfczzical
expose of the manner iu'whlch the cave man used to woo his mate. " The latter dance required the hand
some star to don a costume of animal
fikins.
"The animal used for my outfit must
have been very small," laughed Wallie 'afterward. "The scene was made oft
an outdoor stage at the studio on a
February morning. If my cave man's dance degenerates into a. quite modern ehimmy, please blame it on-the cold."
Heroic Doctor Performs
Operation on HimseU CHJCAGP, Vniy Vl'2.With- steady
hand and nerve, and calmly going
about his business as 'if 'ler'was performing the 'simplest of operations. Dr. Orlando F." Scoft.of phlcago, a
well known surgeon, today cut strip
after- strip of flesh from his own thigh and grafted- them on ' to his wife's foot and ankle, as he rested on a portable lable ..at, bja wife's bed-
ide. .
-. T4ie entjre operation was performed without a single administration of anaesthetics and in tb,e presence of a
I number of physicians and nurses." ' f - . 1 . M Jlf, . . ,
ods came irom uuiereni parvs ui
the room, as Dr. Scott, witnout bo much as a wince of pain, drove the surgeon's knife into his own flesh, and then speedily grafted the strips upon his wife's foot, ' A fellow physician stood by him to dress his wounds. Several times, as Dr. Scott drove the knife Into his thigh, he turned to the witnesses of the operation. - explaining technical points of the operation to them. Many were blinded with tears. "Dr. Scott's act of self-sacrifice and heroism was 'performed to save his wife from Mlsfigurenient and possible ,lbss of hr right leg. Mrs, Scott -was
injured when in an automobile accident six weeks aso .Her rigUt leg was crushed and the flesh jstrjpped from it in long gashes 'Gangrene set in later, and in order to avoid ampuation a skin grafting was decided npon ' '
IT
S3
Money bacfc without' queaoon "if HUNT'S Salve Tail ta tbe treatment ef ITCH. ECZEMA. RINGWORM. TETTER or ether itching kia dtie e. Try . a 7J cent bas at our risk.
D. & .S.Drufl Co, Cor. .Sth and Malji
It is said that wealthy French women use extra -dry champagne as a shampoo. . - . . -
eatre Monday "with June Caprice
Btarrlng as Mary Ann. -
your country, your me ana pernaps
TITaT of thgIrTyouTbVed? ' KOTJyrtl
MY RHEUMATISM WAS ALWAYS BAD IN RAINY WEATHER Richmond, Ind. resident declares sore muscles and aching joints foretold when bad weather was coming. Limbs got stiff and back ached. ' Since taking Dreco, the rheu
matism has been entirely re
lieved.
Trevor had been accused by a dying man of murder. The dead man's wife
was also incriminated. At the eleventh hour an agent of a foreign country
offered to testify that ho had committed the murder if Trevor would turn over to him rta-in dyft- formulas belonging, ta , the! United States and
wanted by tbe spy's country.
What did Honert -Trevor say to tnat
PUBLISH MY LETTER
&$iI&tsTti& Suffering Worten MayLearn
by Henry. PaysOn ttowst.' Sam Wood
How to Get Well.
FOR BURiiMn Apply Zemo, the Clean, An-' tiseptic Liquid Easy to Use J Does Not Stain Greasy 6alves and ointments should not be applied if good clear skin ,is wanted. From any druggist for 35c, or $1.00 for large size, get a bottle Of Zemo. When applied as directed it effectively removes eczema, quickly stops itching, and heals skin troubles, also sores, burns, wounds and chafing. It penetrates, cleanses and soothes. Zemo 13 a clean, dependable and inexpensive antiseptic liquid. Try it, as we believe nothing yo have evef used as as effective and satisfying. Tbe E. W. Rooe Co.. Cleveland, O.
"I could always tellfwhen we were
going to have a bad spell of weather
by the way my rheumatic joints and
muscles acted," said Mr. E. M. Mil
ler, living at 222 S. 12th St., Richmond,
Jnd.
"I have been a patient sufferer from
this dread disease for years. My
muscles would become sore and drawn.
especially the muscles In my shoul
ders and limbs; my Joints seemed
stiff and dry; you could hear -them jop and crack at times" and my baclt was so stiff I couldn't bend over" to
the floor nor turn around quick; look
ed like I was full of rheumatism all
over. I took a lot of medicine for this
trouble, which must have been hard on my stomach, for it, got 'weak so that it did not digest my food, but lay
heavy and formed sour gas that bloated me terribly. My bowels were constipated and my kidneys often had me up several times during the night. "Dreco sure has knocked the rheuanatlsm out of me. My muscles no longer feel drawn or tight; my joints are free from pain and I stoop over, bend about and climb steps without ny difficulty at all. I no longer have tras to bloat me; my bowels act regular and I haven't had to get up one rtlme 1vlth my kidneys since I started taking Dreco. This sure is one grand medicine." Dreco is composed of the Juices and textracts of many different roots, herbs, (barks and leaves, which act on the stomach, kidneys liver and bowels (and purify the blood. It relieves constipation, prevents gas forming in the ctomach, Increases - thn appetite, lnBures sound, refreshing sleep, banishes catarrh of the head and takes the pain out of rheumatic joints. Dreco is sold by all good druggists and is highly recommended in Richmond by Clem Thistlethwalte's seven dru stores. Advertisement.
RICHMOND THEATRE Coolest Theatre In Town TODAY and TOMORROW Bernard Durning "THE GIFT SUPREME"
Also
A Mexican Mix Up
it
Enjoy the Ocean Breezes at the ' RICHMOND Cool and " Comfortable
Chicago, jji.- fi suffered for four fears with pains in my. sides, tips and
legs ana a terriDie irticfcaetoe. I could &ot do any work at all. I was treated by many physicians but they did not help
me. 1 read in ne
Name "Bayer" on Genuine
of your books where other women ha d
been helped by Lydia E. Pinkham a Vegetable C o mpound so I tried it and it helped me
very much so that now I can do everythingin the house. I have told my friends about your wonderful Vegetable Compound and vou have my permission
Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" is genu-4to publish my -letter so other women who
Sutler may learn how to get well. Mrs. Ida Ovenstein, 902 S. Marshfield Ave., Chicago, 111. This good old-fashioned remedy is made from native roots and herbs and contains no narcotics or harmful drags. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will help you. write to Lvdia E.
"Bayer packages." Aspirin is trade ! a inkham .Medicine Co. (confidential), mark Bayer Manufacture Monoacetic- j Lynn, Mass., for advice. Your letter acldester of Sallcylicacid. Advertise-'"ij he opened, read and answered by a fives tr-" -z " " " 'woman, and held in strict confidence.
ine Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for over twenty years. Accept only an unbroken "Bayer package" which contains proper directions to relieve Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, "Rheumatism, Colds and Pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger
TRACY'S COFFEE Roasted fresh dally. .Have you Tried It?
Klehfoth-Niewoehner Co. COAL BUILDERS' SUPPLIES Phone 2194 N. 2nd A A Sts.
PALACE
-TODAY-
yjM. S. HART in "Border Wireless" A 6tory of the Southwest Also a big comedy full ot laughs
ti
OH BABY"
TUESDAY NORMA TALMADGE in "The Secret of the Storm Country"
PIPE ORGAN FOR MUSIC
Now SKowing Je
Today and Tomorrow
sse L.Los ky pre sen ts
mm iTv.
7
DDANCON
OFOdDDI
jQammouittfrteraftQicturei
Just a lonesome "small-town guy" trying to sell jugs in New York. One night, while passing a little cabaret; he smell fresh country eggs a-cook-ing. A regular meal a regular fight a regular girl! Then the dancin' fool landed and the jug business won on jazz.
With Bebe Daniels Story by Henry Payson Dowst Directed by Sam Wood Scenario by Clara Genevieve Kennedy
Admission , Matinees, 10c and 25c :: :: Nights, 15c and 35c
tow (On&QIlinn(B
2147
are the reasons for the ; VV advance in gasoline prices?" was asked by" the President '.of a large'daily newspaper. . : Continuing, the gentlemen said: "I can conceive how the Cost 6f .a manufactured article' might increase as much as 50 t 100 percent because of the increaseo cost df 'raw materials", labor, etc; but it has always seemed to'mevthat ' the'price' of a'product taken from the ground at a com-para-tie)wccrs1 ijot affected to aay;iwkaegre This constitutes a fair question, and we are gJad'of an opportunity" to answer it frankly Gasoline is refined from crude petroleum by a lengthy and expensive process,. and lT.lnT'tmesinsera manufactured article. Time, labor, ancVlleay investments Entf into the manufacture.1 of gasoline from the crude, arid each of ,these rjeces; , saxily affect theprice? The cost of crude is a dominant factor in fixing the pjice of gpoHne. The extraordinary demand for petroleum products, plus the abnormal increases in the cost of labor, machinery, and mone rrecessary for drilling and equipping oih wells, have combined to forcer upwards the price of crude oil f. o.. Whiting from $1.54 to $4.30 per -barrel in four years, nearly 180 percent. " For the same period Jhe selling price of gasoline has increased but 44 percent. Since the Armistice was signed, the production of automobiles, tractors, trucks, and other power using machinery, has created a demand for gasoline far in excess of normal. Gasoline reserves have been reduced to an alarming extent, and the bidding for crude oil on the part of refiners generally, has forced prices upward. TheStandard Oil Company (Indiana) havinjj practically no wells of its fiSaTiS oljligd J.0 gp'intothe opofi market and compete with other rejjnef s "for the crude oil it requires. Because s its acknowleged superior efficiency in manufacturing, -the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) despite these conditions has been able to exert a marked deterrent pressure upor) the upward sweep of the gasoline market Standard Oil Company (Indiana) 010 Sooth M&igan Ave., Chicago, 111
PICTURES DE LUXE
MURRETT "WHERE THE STARS TWINKLE FIRST" Today, Tuesday and Wednesday
T x
H
Mr. Chas. Pascpe at the Oxgan
Fashion's Latest Creations, Most Reasonably Priced.
IT ING'S
XV
LASSY XX rtld
$4.00, $5.00, $6.00 Formerly Progress Store 912 MAIN.
SELECT VAUDEVILLE
MURRAY BETTER COME EARLY"
HEAR OUR PIPE ORGAN CONCERT ORCHESTRA.
Three NeV Keith Acts and Feature Photoplay Today, Tuesday and Wednesday 7 PEOPLE MAMMY'S BIRTHDAY GIRLS An original Revue of Southern Days "Before the War". Replete with dances, songs, musical specialties, Imitations and introducing a "Typical Old-Time Southern Mammy". Characteristic stage settings. See the old Southern Colonial Home, beautiful Colonial and Modern Costumes. Six girls and one man in a Keith headline act. !
AMEDIO "Wizard of the Piano-Accordeon." The hest In vaudeville. JUNE CAPRICE in "IN WALKED MARY" Five-reel Pathe feature. " FOX NEWS WEEKLY
THORNTON SISTERS Two charming girls in "Bits of Harmony" NOTE- We suggest you "come early" as this bill will attract enormous business. Arrange a matinee attendance If possible.
GSl&IDOH
I ' t VI
Based upon the deepest feeling of mankind, Cyrus Townsend Brady has built a plot so timejy, so full of throb arid thrills, so human, and so convincing that it will stir the heart and make you think. It touches home life. Its appeal is to conscience and its shafts hit clirect into the center of the feelings. It is a big production done in a big way about a big theme. Youil Talk About "The Blood Barrier". You'll Like It I
ALSO A BIG ADDED FEATURE
HAROLD LLOYD
In his latest success. A Rjp Roaring Comedy
"Easterner Westerner
DO NOT MISS THIS BIG DOUBLE BILL Admission Evenings: Adults 35c; Children, 15c. Bargain Matinees, Adults 25c
