Richmond Palladium (Daily), 20 January 1904 — Page 6
SIS.
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1904
OverWork Weakens Your Kidneys Unhealthy EJJneys Eake Impure Blood, Ml,,, All the blood in your body passes through your kidneys once every three minutes.
1 ne Kidneys are your blood p urifiers, they filter out the waste oi Impurities in the blood If they are sick or oui of order, they fail to dt tneir work. Pains, aches and rheumatism come from excess of uric acid in the blood, due to ncelectec kidney trouble. Kidney trouble causes quick cr unsteady, heart beats, and makes one feel as thougl they had heart trouble, because the heart is" over-working in pumping thick, kidneypoisoned blood through veins and arteries. It used to be considered that only urir.crj troubles were to bo traced to the Vidneys but now modern science proves that nearly all constitutional diseases have their begin ning in kidney trouble. If you are sick you can make no mistakt by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer's Swarnp-Root, the greet kidney remedy it soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures cf :h: meet distressing casei and is s-Jld on its merits by all druggists in fiftycent and one-doliar sizes. You may have a sample bottle by mail f&.W- '!''; '0.4, 7 Ilome of Swamp-Hoot. free, also pamphlet telling you how to find out if you have kidney or bladaer trouble. Mt.'fSon this paper when writing Dr. Kilma 3inghamton, N. Y SPECIAL OFFER - - $100 Scholarship for $50. Includes complete courses in Telegraphy, Tia n Iespatchiiig. Eailway Accounting, Locomotive Engineering al Firing, Baggageman and Brakeman. Diplomas recognized by railroad companies throughout the United States. Graduates holding the highest poiorsm 1 he ra' lwy service Positions furnished. Resident or Mail courses. Enclose stamp for particulars. Address Dept. G. JOHNSON'S PRACTICAL RAILWAY & TELEGRAPH INSTITUTE. Indianapolis, Indiana. ' Harness for show and harness for ever dav use may mean i difference In qualitj In some makes here they are Identical lx strength and durabil Ity. More style, ci course, in fanoy driving harness; but al our harness is made from good stock anC every set malntalnf our reputation as tt workmanship- and finish. All sorts of horn equipments at very moderate prices. Tlie Wiggins Co. A FINE On Street Car Line In Boulevard Addition AT A BARGAIN W. H, Bradbury & Son Westcott mock. A WEEK "oS?1 Oil Burner. Heats stoves or furnaces ; burns crude oil;o ftPKKE. Write-VatlonalSIIgr. Co. tttiou JK ew 1 ork, S. V. sS ur The Well-known Simonds Brand.! A Good Saw for pla J. P. IIORNADAY. Working Night and Day. The busiest and mightiest little thing that ever was made is Dr. ICing's New Life Pills. These pills change weakness into strength, listlessiiess into energy, brain-fag into mental power. They're wonderful in building up the health. Only 25c per box. Sold by A. G. Luken & Co. Passengers for Florida and the South via Pennsylvania Short Lines from Richmond may select any route from Cincinnati in purchasing tourist tickets Pennsylvania Short Lines trains from Richmond connect at that gateway with through trains for Jacksonville, St. Augustine, New Orleans and other Southern points. For particulars consult C. W. Elmer, tickfit agent of Pennsylvania Lines.
1 iQ$8L
FOR THE CHILDREN
Fiin With Flsrurea. This will be found a capital trick with which to mystify a little company of people, and you may defy them to find out how it is done. If the number 73 be multiplied by each of the numbers In the following arithmetical progression. 3. C. 9, 12, 15, 18, 21. 24, 27, the products will be 219. 438, C57, 87G, 1,095, 1,314, 1,533, 1,752, 1,971. Here, you see, taking the last figure of each product, you have the nine digits in order 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. Now, to perform your trick prepare a little bag of some kind of cloth, and In it make two partitions. Into one of the partitions put six or eight little cards, each bearing the number 73. Into the other partitions put nine little cards, each bearing one of the numbers 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, IS, 21, 21, 27. The 'bag having been prepared in this way, hold it so that a person will take the card out of the partition containing the 73's. Then, dexterously turning the bag so that the other partition presents itself, ask another member of the company to take out a card. Of course he takes one of the nine numbers given above. Now ask the two persons to multiply their two numbers together and tell you the last figure in the product. That being done, you will give the other figures of the product. This you will know from the series of products given at the beginning of this article. Jfj for example, the two cards taken out of the bag bear the numbers 73 and 18, the product will be 1,314, and when they tell you that the last figure is 4 you know at once that the other figures are 1,314. Any boy can make this trick a sort of stock in trade by having a nice little bag made and the requisite number of cards cut and numbered. The mascot cf the battleship Massachusetts is si throe lagged dog named Rodger. The uog was brought to the ship at Culebra island, West Indies. When the ship was in New York harbor last w inter the dog was allowed to go ashore with several of the men and while on the dock was attacked by Bum, the mascot of the training ship Hartford. For awhile both dogs put up a game fight until Rodger slipped and caught his right hind leg between two planks. This was an opportunity for Bum to get the better of Rodger, and he rushed at him and, burying his teeth in the back of Rodger's neck, tried to shake him. As a result the mascot of the Massachusetts had his leg broken, and the boys separated them and carried their pet to the hospital, where it was found necessary to amputate it. On his return to the ship Rodger was unanimously elected an honorary member of the crew. Little Folks Over the Sea. One day I was sitting in a park, when a nursegirl and her two-year-old charge sat down beside me, says a correspondent of the Little Chronicle. The child made her little funny German bow and said "Guten tag" ("Good day") to me. Then when they started on their way again she said, "Adieu; gruss deine mamma" ("Goodby; greet your mamma"). The little girls are very industrious, and small American girls will find it hard to believe that the German maids of four or live years sit in the parks or walk up and down the sidewalks busily knitting on a long stocking. The German children "are early risers. Seven o'clock finds them in school. In pleasant weather most of them run to school without hats, and they all have their books strapped on their backs. Robbing the It urul Mail Box. A rural mail carrier reported that a mail box at New Castle, O., 'was being systematically robbed. Investigation revealed a jay bird's nest in the box. The mother bird was silting and resented the persistent interruption of letters dropping on her back. When one wcuid fall she would phuc it in her bill and carry it to an juljacent field and deposit it on the ground. Exchange. Afralil of tTi Thunder. It was raining very hard one morning. Lightning flashed, and the thunder roared. LLttie Delia was standing by the window and was indeed much frightened, for she was holding her dolls in her arms and was worrying and talking excitedly. Suddenly she saw one of her puppies out in the yard. "Oh, Teddy, come in!" she wailed. "You'll get thundered!" Saturday Xlffht. Placing the little hats all in a row. Ready for church on the morrow, you know; Washing wee faces and little black fists. Getting them ready and fit to be kissed; Putting them into clean garments and white That Is what mothers are doing tonight. Spying out in a little worn hose. Laying by shoes that are worn through the toes. Looking o'er garments so faded and thin. Who but a mother knows where to begin? Changing a button to make it look'right That is what mothers are doing tonight. Calling the little ones all round her chair. Hearing them lisp their evening prayer, Telling them stories of Jesus of old. The Shepherd who gathers the lambs to his fold; Watching them listen with childish delight That is what mothers are doing tonight. Creeping so softly to tak- a Inst peep, Silehee th t( k-n of childhood's sleep. Anxious to know if the dear ones are Wi'.ITP. Tucking the blanket round each little form, Kissing each little face, rosy and bright That is what mothers are doing tonight.
THE HALL OF FAME. The Marquis of Anglesey has the finest motor car in England. It cost $15,000. Sir Michael Foster has resigned the senior secretaryship of the Royal Society of Great Britain. Lord Curzon's recent visit to Persia recalls the fact that he first visited that land in 1889 as a newspaper correspondent. Senator Aldrich of Rhode Island Is said to be the most athletic figure in the upper house at Washington, although he is not a young man. United States Senator Quarles of Wisconsin has withdrawn from his law firm in Milwaukee. It was organized in 1SS0. His two sons and his brother are still in the partnership. Premier Sedden of New Zealand" is being criticised for unloading his relatives on the government. It is said that he and eight' of his relatives are drawdng an average of $25,000 each in salary. Rear Admiral Sir Charles Drury, now second lord of the British admiralty, 13 a Canadian. His wife is a daughter of the Whitehead of torpedo fame and an aunt of Princess Bismarck. Isadore Newman, a philanthropic citizen of New Orleans, La., marked the fiftieth anniversary of his arrival in this country from Germany, which occurred recently, by giving $50,000 for charity. Dr. Alexander Eastman, an Indian and a great-grandson of Chief Cloudman, who lives in Minneapolis, Minn., is a successful physician, author and lecturer. He is a graduate of Dartmouth college and at Boston university in medicine. The promotion of Sergeant Frank Richardson to the post of chief constable of Salisbury, England, has just been announced. His father is at present chief constable of Hereford, while his brother holds a similar appointment at Halifax. Senator William P. Frye of Maine has a new dignity, that of great-grandfather, an honor falling to him when a daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. William Frye White of Washington. Mr. Frye claims title as the only greatgrandfather in the senate. Speaker Cannon has broken among other precedents the one which required a courteous bow from the presiding ofiicer of the house on receipt of a message from the senate. According to a Washington writer, he stands bolt upright, backbone stiff as a ramrod, while the senate's messenger performs his errand. WORLD'S FAIR NOTES. The ice plants in the fair will produce 300 tons of ice daily. Old St. Louis, as it was 100 years ago, will be reproduced in new St. Louis, the exposition city of 1904. A ten ton nugget will be a feature of Idaho's mining exhibit. The nugget is 30 per cent pure silver and GO per cent lead. It is worth over $10,000. Norway has officially accepted the invitation to participate in the world's fair. This completes the Scandinavian trinity, Sweden and Denmark having alreadj' accepted. A feature of Washington's game exhibit will be a miniature mountain, on which will be placed stuffed representatives of almost every wild animal found in the state. The historical plans of the city of Bonn.jsvill be exhibited for the first time outside of Germany. They will attract general attention, as the city has had a most eventful history during its centuries of existence. , TRADE AND INDUSTRY. A steam plant has been shipped from Philadelphia to China to operate a woolen mill. It is considered a fair day's, work for one hand to cut and house 100 sticks of tobacco. The culture of capers is suggested as a possibility for some of the southern and southwestern states. While with the steam engine it is useless to expect an efficiency of more than one-eighth of the total energy contained in the fuel, the internal combustion ; engine has readied an efficiency of one-third. Aluminium is used on the three longest eketiic transmission lines in North America. One is on a line 154 miles long leading into San Francisco, another 144 mile long road between Colgate and Oakland, Cal., and the third is an eighty-five mile line from Shawinigan Falls to Montreal. MODES OF THE MOMENT. Pastel blue is a new and fashionable color. Brocade silks are back in favor. Indeed flowered patterns are obtaining even among the velvets. Mousquetaire gloves ,are coming in once more, especially the shorter lengths, which are worn with tailor suits. Chiffon velvet is the elegant fabric for dinner gowns. When the color is shaded into three tones it is most fashionable. White cloth is one of the prettiest fabrics for the reception govn. especially if it is relieved with embroidery or insertions of some contrasting tint. One of the prettiest skirts in velvet is slurred at the waist and finished with a row of fringe at the hem. A skirt of this sort allows of an elaborate bodice.
A CITIZEN'S STORY. Told by a Richmond Citizen for the Benefit of Richmond People. The greatest importance attached to the following is that itconcerns a Richmond citizen. It would lose three quarters of its interest if it involved some resident of Kalamazoo, Mich., or Woonsocket, R. I. Like all the testimony which has appeared here, and like all which will follow about the Old Quaker remedy, Doan's Kidney Pills it eomes from residents, fellow citizens and neighbors. No other remedy can show such a record of home cures. Read this case: Miss S. Hamilton, 22 north ninth street, says: "For two or three years I was troubled with my loins and a soreness directly over the right kidney. The secretions were unnatural and irregular. Headache and attacks of dizziness were of frequent occurrence. Having seen Doan's Kidney Pills highly recommended for these troubles I got a box at A. G.
Luken 's drug store and used them. They seemed especially adapted for my case and relieved me in a very short time." For sale by all druggists ; price 50 cents per box. TALKED OUT Not a Senator Had Anything More to Say on Posts Scandal. Washington, Jan. 20. The senate required less than a minute to dispose of the motion to refer to the committee on postoSIces the various resolutions looking to an investigation of the postoffice department. The question had been previously debated for hours at a time, but no senator manifested any disposition to discuss it further and it was adopted without a negative vote. After the passage of half a dozen bills, the senate returned to consideration of the Panama question. Mr. Quarles spoke for almost two hours in support of the course of the administration and was followed by Mr. Patterson, who criticis the president's course In Panama. The house, is considering the Hepburn pure food bill today. An amendment coming from the Democratic side was adopted inserting the word "wilfully" relative to the sale of prohibited adulterated goods by retailers which would make it incumbent on tho government to prove knowledge on the part of retailers that such goods was contrary to law. Chicago Without Amusements. Chicago, Jan. 20. The managers of theaters declare that it will be impossible for them to meet the demands of the new ordinance in sufficient time to do business during the remainder of this season, and several of them declare that they have no intention of trying to reopen their doors. The passage of the ordinance put two of the down-town theaters out of business, as their construction is such that they will be unable to comply with the law without tearing down the buildings in which they are located and erecting entirely new structures. All of the other houses will be able to meet the demands of the law, but it will be ati great expense for. several of them. More Trouble Expected. Johnstown, Pa., Jan. 20. Sheriff Coleman and a large force of deputies are at Boswell following the shooting affray between deputies and striking foreigners. It is understood that an effort will be made to arrest the participants in the riot, and more trouble is expected between the two score deputies and the mob of idle men. One way Colonist Rates to the iVest and Northwest via The C, C. L. "Washington, Oregon, Montana, c. For further information call on A. Blair, C. T. A. Home 'Phone 44. Night Was Her Terror. "I would cough nearly all night long," writes Mrs. Chas. Applegate, f Alexandria, Ind., "and could hard ly get any sleep. I had consumption ) so bad that if I walked a block I would cough frightfully and spit blood, but, when all other medicines failed, three $1.00 bottles of Dr. King's New Discovery wholly cured me and I gained 5S ponds." It's absolutely guaranteed to cure coughs, colds, Lagrippe, Bronchitis and all Throat and Lung Troubles. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial( bottle free at A. G. Luken 's drug store. Birds work for man from the first glimmer of light, Rocky Mountain Tea works for mankind both day and night, That's why it is famous the world o'er and o'er, It will not let you turn over and take another snore. A. G. Luken & Co. Don't Jet the little ones suffer from eczema, or other torturing skin diseases. No need for it. Doan's Ointment cures. Can't harm the most delicate skin. At any drug store, 50 cents.
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