Richmond Palladium (Daily), 3 February 1904 — Page 2
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1904
TWO.
Erupiio. Dry, moist, scaly tetter, all forms of eczema or salt rheum, pimples and other cutaneous eruptions proceed from humors, either inherited, or acquired through defective digestion and assimilation. To treat these eruptions -with dn-ing medicihes is dangerous. The thing to do is to take Hood's Sarsaparilta and Pills Which thoroughly cleanse the blood, expelling all humors and building up the whole system. They cure Hood's Sarsaparilla permanently cured J. Q. Hines. Franks. 111., of eczema, from which tie had suffered for some time: and Miss Alvina Wolter. Box 212. Altr'-na. Wis., of pimples on her face and baek and chafed skin on ber body, by which he hai been ereatly troubled. There are more testimonials la favor of Hood's than can be published. Hood's S a rs a p ?.;-;';': promises to cure and keeps the promise.
V1HEH lU CHICAGO Stop at the Baths & Hotel Combined 8 floors. Fine new rooms. Meals a-Ia-Carta at all hours. , A J BATHS OF ALL KINDS. 9 Turkish. Russian. Shower. Plunge, etc Tha finest swimming pool in the world. Turkish Bath and Lodgine. $1.00. Most inexpensive first class hotel in Chicago. Right iu tht ,r,T nf ihn rtv. Booklet on annlication. Now Northern Baths & Hotel 14 Quincy St. CHI CAGO Near frtate WEATHER STRIP For Doors and Windows Keeps out the Cold Saves Fuel E sy to Put On Cost a Trifle HORN ADAY'S HARDWARE STORE Phone 19'.) 816 Main Street ' p ED J CEP RATES TO SOUTHERN POINTS 10 a account MARDI GRAS ROUND TRIP RATE Richmond to New Orlean3 .... f 24 25 Mobile ..... 22 85 Pensacola 22.85 Selling dale, Feb. 'Jth to loth. Return limit, March 5th. For further information call on C. A. Blair, C. T. A. Home Telephone -11 A WEEK to sell Oil Burner, our oi I ; o H K K K K. W rite .national SI 1. Co. atlon K, Aiew York, S. . Susan "Whatever causes facial eruptions, cause black heads and pimples. "Would advise you to stop eating sweets. Take Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. Makes the skin soft and beautiful. 35 cents. A. G. Luken & Co. OASTOrtlA. Bears the 9 Tto Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of EJy's Liauid Cream Balm is an old friend in a new form. It is prepared for the particular benefit of sufferers from nasal catarrh who are used to an atomizer in spraying the diseased membranes. All the healing and soothing properties of Cream Balm are retained in the new preparation. It does not dry up the secretions. Price, including spraying tube, 75 cents. At your druggist's or Ely Brothers, 5G Warren street. New York, will mail it. Dyspepsia bane of human existence. Burdock Blood Bitters cures it, promptly, permanently. Regulates and tone3 the stomach.
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STATE NEWS NOTES
Various Matters of Interest to Hoosiers Briefly Presented Here. INCREASED KNOWLEDGE Movement for fthe Kxtension of JjU braries of Special Value to Farm imr Communities. State Library Commission Arranging to Put Books on Farming in Circulation. Indianapolis, Feb. 3. That the farmers of Indiana may re supplied with the best literature on agricultural subjects, the state library commission is compiling a list of such books and is preparing to put them into the circulating libraries. The agricultural department of Purdue university has been asked to submit titles of books that would be especially advantageous to the farmer. It is expected that i within a few months books devoted to j agricultural subjects will be one of the ! regular departments of the traveling libraries. This step Is taken to meet the in1 creasing desire on the part of the Indiana farmer within the last few years j to make a scientific study of his busi- ! ness. The Indiana farmer is familiarI izing himself with the chemistry of farming, and the natural forces that govern the production of grain. The farmers have, too, become interested in the circulating libraries and much of the time of the farmers' institutes has been given to the discussion of library work. The farmers requested that books bearing on the growing of crops, besides other subjects connected with farm life, be put in the circulating libraries. The various phases of farm life are now part of the daily program in the district school in Indiana. INTERESTING PROPOSITION Mr. Blatchley Would Make Road Makers of Convicts. Indianapolis, Feb. 3. The contract labor system now in force in the state prisons was severely criticised by State Geologist Blatchley in an address before the farmers' state congress of Indiana, which is holding its annual session in the statehouse. "The Utility of Convict Labor in Making Road Material" was the subject of his address. "The contract labor system is a system which often leads to debauchery and corruption of public officers," said Mr. Blatchley. "It is a system that robs labor, destroys factories and turns over to private individuals an asset of labor which should be used for the benefit of the people. The lawbreaker owes a debt to the community and any profits accruing from his labor should go to the community." In order to abolish the evils in the contract system and to improve the roads of Indiana, he advocated the using of the vast, undeveloped deposits of shale and fire-clay which, by practical tests, have been found suitable for making the best paving brick. He would have the general assembly purchase an extensive bed of shale In western Indiana and erect a modern brick factory. He would equip the factory with convict labor and put several hundred additional convicts to breaking stone for foundations and cutting it for curbing. This brick and stone could then be furnished at the plant at less than one-sixth present prices to the counties devoid of other road material or, if they are unwilling to buy it, the material could be given to them. Decatur County Fox Drive. Greensburg, Ind., Feb. 3. The cold weather has caused foxes In Decatur county to slaughter many young lambs and chickens on farms, and to clear the county of the animals the farmers have organized four drives for next Saturday in as many parts of the county. The county is thick with posters announcing the boundary lines of the drives. No guns or dogs will take part In the events. The fur of the foxes is said to be above the average this year, and the pelts of captured animals will be sold to meet the expenses of the drives. Held on Embezzlement Charge. Brazil, Ind., Feb. 3. T. C. Lewis, Republican representative from Clay and Owen counties, was arrested charged with embezzling $670.43 of Miners' local union No. 444 of this City. Lewis was secretary and treasurer of the local. He was taken before Justice Couoh, where he waived preliminary hearing and was bound over to the circuit court under bond of $800. Lewis went to Jail in default of bond. The Deadly Football. Lafayette, Ind., Feb. 3. Duri.ig a football game between the Dayton aid Klondike elevens - on Thanksgiving day, which was fiercely contested, Ray Edwards, near Dayton, received injuries to the spine which have terminated fatally. Bullet Proof Present. - South Bend, Ind., Feb. 3. ThcZeg lin Bullet-proof Coat company has made a bullet-proof coat that it will send to President Roosevelt as a present.
INTERESTING RUMOR3
Fairbanks Vice Presidential Talk Causes Some Speculation. x Indianapolis, Feb. 3. The renewal of the talk of Senator Charles W. Fairbanks for the Republican nomination for vice president has also caused a renewal of the speculation as to who would succeed him in the senate in such a case. There is evidence that many of Senator Fairbanks' most prominent friends would support Congressman James A. Ilemenway, chairman of the committee on appropriations, who has come to the front very rapidly during the last three or four years. While no announcement is authorized, it is generally understood among the party leaders that Congressman Ilemenway will be an aspirant for the senate providing Senator Fairbanks should resign. Governor Durbin will also be a candidate, it is understood, and it would not be surprising if Charles L. Henry, editor of the party organ, Attorney General Miller and others should jump into the breach. However, there is a pretty strong feeling that the powers that now control the political situation in Indiana would present the name of Congressman Ilemenway. The decision of Judge Artman of Lebanon,, holding the legislative reapportionment act unconstitutional is still a fruitful subject of conversation among party leaders. The Democrats are very naturally elated, as under the old reapportionment they stand a much better show of carrying the legislature.The decision is especially disappointing to the friends of Senator Beveridge, but the party organ here takes a crack at the Republicans for not following the advice of the supreme court, in framing the bill. It says : "If the last legislature had been more careful to follow the principles and rules laid down by the supreme court in the decision of 1896, the present litigation might have been avoided. As it is Republicans cannot complain if the present apportionment act is subjected to the same ordeal and tests which they applied to former ones." The bill was undoubtedly the most flagrant gerrymander in the history of the state. The - announcement that Senator Barcus of Terre Haute has firmly determined not to become a candidate this year for the Republican nomination for congress in the Fifth district is of more than passing interest. He has been one of the central figures in state politics since he entered it in such a spectacular fashion nearly four years ago. Before he cast his first vote as a resident of the district he became a candidate for congress, and he nearly won. t Then he tried it again last year, to be defeated by a larger majority. This year there have been rumors that he would again seek the nomination, but he now says he will let it alone. He has one term to serve as a holdover member of the state senate. Congressman. Holliday of the Fifth will be opposed by Otis Gulley of Danville, and possibly by J. E. Sedwich of Martinsville, and Howard Maxwell of Rockville. It looks as if the congressional conventions will be held early in the Republican districts. The Sixth will meet about the first week of March, and Congressman Watson will be renominated. The Fifth will also be held about that time. The date has not been considered here, but it will be shortly after the county committee is reorganized. In the Eighth primaries will be held "this month, and it looks as if Congressman Cromer will win out. No date has been fixed for the Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh and Thirteenth, but it is the understanding that they are to be in the early spring, as it is the desire of the party leaders to have the boards cleared before the campaign opens. Fred Sims of Frankfort, the new secretary of the Republican state committee, is coming here this week to take charge of the committee headquarters. There Is ' much work to bo done there in the way of routine preparation for the opening of the campaign. The state, congressional and county conventions are also coming on and they require attention from the central committee headquarters. The committee has been without a secretary since W. H. Whittaker resigned, so all of the work has fallen on Chairman Goodrich. A Brutal Prize Fight. Detroit, Mich., Feb. 3. Joe Gars, the lightweight champion, last night demonstrated his superiority over Mike Ward of Sarnia, Ont., the lightweight champion of Canada, in so decided a manner that the police stopped the bout at the expiration of two and a half minutes of the tenth round. Ward was just able to stagger about the ring and another of the punches Gans had been raining on his jaw would have put him out. Ward was so badly beaten that it took his seconds over an hour to thoroughly revive him after he was led to his corner. The Mining Conference. Indianapolis, Feb. 3. The controversy of the Indiana, Ohio, Illinois am western Pennsylvania operators an miners has been advanced materially in the subscale committee sessions, but still a feeling grows that no settlement will be reached at this conference, and that there will be an adjournment in a few days for at least thirty days. Henry County's Record. New Castle, Ind., Feb. 3. Divorces exceeded marriages In Henry county during 1903 by 14 per cent.
From Texas Vermont -Pennsylvania. More Praise More Victories For the Famous Tonic
'I WANT TO TELL THE WHOLE WO ELD." Writes Mrs. H. A. Welcher, Kingston, Texas, Cured of Flux and Ulcers of the Bowels by Paine' s Celery Compound. Paine 's Celery Compound restores strength, renews vitality, regulates the bowels, and makes people well and strong. It is a standard and unfailing remedy in such delicate maladies as afflicted Mrs. II. A. Welcher of Kingston, Texas. "I want to tell the whole world uliat Paine 's Celery Compound has done for rne," writes Mrs. Welcher. "For twenty-three years I have suffered with chronic 11 ux or ulcers of the bowels. I have had eight or nine of the best physicians in the state at different times to Avait on me. but never had any relief. "I was treated by several of Knoxville's best doctors But after seeing so many testimonials, and so many that I knew7, I was induced by my son to try a bottle of Paine 's Celery Compound. "Before I had used the first bottle I could feel quite a difference. I was getting stronger. I enjoyed my food more. "After taking four bottles I was entirely cured. I only hope that the medicine will be placed in the reach of all suffering humanity." A. W. GREGG
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COR. SIXTH AND Coughs and colds down to the very borderland of consumption, yield to the soothing1 healing influences of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. End of Bitter Fight. "Two physicians had a long and stubborn fight with an abscess on my right lung" writes J. F. Hughes of DuPont, Ga. "and gave me up. Everybody thought my time had come. As a last resort I tried Dr. King's New Discovery for consumption. The benefit I received was striking and I was on my feet in a few days. Now I've entirely regained my health." It conquers all Coughs, Colds and Throat and Lung troubles. Guaranteed by A. G. Luken & Co., druggists. Price 50c, and $1.00. Trial bottles free. O Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bought
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4,I WISH I COULD TELL EVERY WOMAN IN THE LAND," Writes Mrs. Nellie R. Baker, Spring- . field, Vt., "That Woman's Ills Can . . Be Quickly Relieved and Cured Forever by Paine 's Celery Compound." "I wish I could tell every woman in the land how much Paine 's Celery Compound will help them," writes Mrs. Nellie R. Baker, of Springfield, Vt., on October 10th, 1903. "I can never thank the friends enough who told me to try Paine 's Celery Compound. I had almost given up in despair, I was so nervous. I had no appetite, was constipated, and could not sleep. "I got one bottle, and when I had taken half of it my bowels were regular, my appetite came back and I commenced to sleep well. Now, when f overwork and begin to get nervous, and cannot digest my food properly, I just take a few doses of Paine 's Celery Compound and am all right again. "It is the most wonderful restorer in the world. Before I learned what Paine 's Celery Compound would do I had tried all kinds of medicines and nothing had helped me." Many a woman whom excessive anxiety had made a ready victim to hysteria and despondency many a man almost in the grip of nervous prostration has been kept from nervous breakdown by the intelligent use of Paine 's Celery Compound. The nervous troubles, to which overworked women are so prone, are overcome quickly, and surely prevented, by this gentle and scientific remedy.
K9 JOHN
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CORNER SIXTH AND MAIN
Now Offering
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MAIN, RICHMOND, Puts an End to It. A grievous wail oftimes come as a result of unbearable pain from over taxed organs. Dizziness, Backache, Liver complaint and Constipation. But thanks to Dr. King's New Life Pills they put an end to it all. They the gentle but thorough. Try them. Only 25c. Guaranteed by A. G. Luken & Co., druggists. Grandpa "I feel like a youngster like a youth of 20, young, strong and healthy, I lay it all to Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea." Good for the aged and infirm. 35 cents, tea or tablets. A. G. Luken & Co. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of
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SIX sfTZ
"I GAINED THIRTEEN POUNDS. I AM WELL AGAIN." Writes W. H. Ross, Pittsburg, Pa., Cured of Malaria. .Never Felt Better in My Life." This letter from a man who was cured twice first of malaria, and later, of Nervous Exhaustion will be read with interest by all those who are afiiicted in similar ways. It is from Mr. William II. Ross, 427 Smith field Street, Pittsburg, Pa., and i3 dated September 21st, 1903; "Last spring I was sick and debilitated from overwork. I was nervous and irritable, and could not sleep well My appetite was poor, and I was incapacitated for business. "I had taken Paine 's Celery Compound before (and it had cured me of malaria), so I decided to try it again. .After taking three bottles of the wonderful medicine I was once more in perfect health. I gained thirteen pounds in weight and never felt better in my life."' Malaria is a disease which weakens the entire system, and renders it particularly liable to the attacks of other diseases. All those who live in a malarial country should protect themselves, not only from malaria, but from the ills which may follow it, by taking Paine s Celery Compound, which gives the system strength to throw off, and keep off, the attacks of disease. "Do not waste time drugging your symptoms Cure the REAL CAUSE the NERVES." Prof. E. E. Phelps, M. D., LL. D., of Dartmouth Universe Famous Discoverer 1 of Paine 's Celery Compound. F. ACKERMAN g$3S method clothing m ORE IND. One way Colonist Rates to the iVest and Northwest via The C, C. fe L. Washington, Oregon, Montana, fee. For further information call on A. Blair, C. T. A. Home 'Phone 44. lotel Rates St. Louis World's Fair. For copy of World's Fair official amphlet', naming Hotel accommodaions and rates during Universal Exosition of 1904, address E. A. Ford, General Passenger Agent Pennsylva-lia-Vandalia Lines, Pittsburg, Pa. Only one remedy in the world that will at once stop itchiness of the skin in any part of the body; Doan's Ointment. At any drug store, 50 cents. Beam the Kind Vou Have Always Bought (signature of
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