Richmond Palladium (Daily), 19 April 1904 — Page 2

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niOnZIOHD DAILY PALLADIUM. TUESDAY, APRIL 19,1904. TWO.

Through Your Blood to Rheumatism The only way to get at Rheumatism is by the way it came Rheumatism and kindred diseases reSuit from a common cause. It took the medical profession nineteen centuries to discover that the cause of this dreaded and painful disease is an excess of Uric acid! Once Uric acid is in the system, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuralgia, Sciatica follow in its wake. You must Ret it out of the blood to get rid of these diseases. Athlophoros is the only scientific remedy that cures? all forms of disease resulting from an excess of Uric acid. It is the only specific that dissolves and removes the cause! The wonderful success it has had is due to the fact that it is the one medicine that cures

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LOLITA AR11 Goes to Europe to Have Lorenz Teach Her the Art of Wilkin . (New York World.) Little Lolita Armour is to cress the Atlantic Ocean to receive treatment from Prof. Adolf Lorenz whose cures of born cripples hare aroused the interest of the civilized world. This does not mean that "the little girl must undergo a second operation at the hands of the surgeon. She is going there merely to be under the care of Prof. Lorenz who will personally see that she learns how .to walk just as other girls do who were not born with double dislocation of the hips. Mr. and Mrs. J. Ogden Armour of Chicago, father and mother of Lolita, are at the Waldorf-Astoria. The little girl is with them. They will leave today for Europe. Mrs. Armour said to a World reporter last night : "We do not know that a second operation will be necessary. On the contrary, we have every reason to hope that it will not be necessary. We agreed a year ago when Prof. Lorenz operated unon Lolita, that we would take the little girl over to Eu

rope to see him within a year. He ! purposes left a sting. He cared noth

oooooooxoooooo t SENATOR FAIRBANKS' TRIBUTE TO HANMA. t 6 oooooooooooo Senator 1 alrbanks' tribute to the late Senator Hanna during the memorial exercises recently held In the Senate was the forceful eulogy of a friend whose relations with the dead statesman were cordial and intimate. He said in part: "Senator Hanna was a man of practical mind. He did not dwell in as atmosphere of purely speculative philosophy, but among the serious realities of life. He possessed in full degree the power of great initiative. He organized and set on foot vast enterprises which required large capital, and gave employment to thousands of workingmen. He was essentially a creator; never a destroyer. He opened the door of opportunity to others and thus became a benefactor. He was a man of innate modesty and never indulged in the merely spectacular. He coveted the respect and confidence of his fellow-men, not for selfish purposes, but that he might the better serve them. "He possessed a keenly sensitive nature. He was deeply touched by the criticism of his political opponents, which for a time was so sharp and unjust. That criticism which sought to undermine the confidence in him of his countrymen and to impeach his broad humanitarian sympathies and

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EEPUBLICAN TICKET.

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Congress.

James E. Watson. Joint Representative. Richard Eiliott. COUNTY TICKET. Senator. Roscoe E. Kirkman. Representative. Dr. M. W. Yencer. Tor Sheriff. Richard S. Smith. Prosecuting Attorney. Wilfred Jessup. County Treasurer. Benjamin B. Myrick, Jr. County Recorder Frank C. Mosbaugh. Surveyor. Robert A. Howard. Coroner. Dr. S. C. Markley. Commissioner Western District. Ellwood Clark. Commissioner Middle District. , John F. Dynes. TOWNSHIP TICKET. Township Trustee. Charles E. Potter. Township Assessor. John M. Winslow. CITY TICKET. Mayor. Dr. W. W. Zimmerman.

City Clerk. John F. Taggart. City Treasurer. Charles A. Tennis. TK

said that if we would be over there Hie following May that would be time for him to make a second examination of her case and direct what course we should pursue in bringing her up.

"Lolita has been getting along

splendidly. She has perfect mobility,

but doesn't know alwavs how to use

it. She is going now to Prof. Lorenz to be taught the art of walking." "Can't she walk, now?' ' asked the reporter. "Oh, yes," said Mrs. Armour, "Lolita has been able to walk since Prof. Lorenz performed his first operation about a year ago. She has even been taught dancing and has taken physical culture lessons daily. The only thing now is for her to gain complete mastery of her powers of mobility, and we thought, and Prof. Lorenz thought that she could gain this knowledge about the art of

walking best by being over there in Vienna, where he has so many children learning to walk after similar operations." "Has there been any disappointing developments in her case since the operation?"

"None whatever. Lolita is here with us and is getting along splendidly. Tt isn't that at all. We simply promised Prof. Lorenz to bring her over to see him within a year, and we are fulfilling the promise. All that he will have to do. we think, is to teach her the art of walking." "We had a telegram from him,"

she said, "only the other day, saying it would be all right for us to come over now and be there in May." Lolita Armour is just 8 years old. She was born in 1S0G with double dis

location, of the bins. Prof. Lorenz gave up a professorship in a great university for a time to come to America to treat her. The operation was performed at the home of the Armours in Chicago, on October 12, 1902. Not long after the operation Lolita Armour was able to take exercise, and when the plaster cast was removed she had the power to rest the weight of her body upon her legs, which had from birth been useless to her. She then began to walk as other children, do. It has been said that Mr. Armour paid Prof. Ijorenz $75,000 for the operation.

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ing for the criticism of his political

views. He held to them tenaciously

and conscientiously .with confidence in

the ultimate sober judgment of ths

people. A Man of Sincerity.

"He was a plain, blunt man. He was always perfectly natural. He did not

pretend to be what the Creator did

not intend him to be. He was no mere timeserver. He did not bend to every wind that blew. He was an honest

man honest in thought, in purpose, and in deed; honest with the world

and honest with himself. He pos

sessed in a remarkable degree the

geniug of common sense. He was

resourceful and had at instant com

mand all of his faculties.

"He was tenacious of his opinions,

though not dogmatic. He was ready

to yield to a better reason when it was

made manifest. He sought no com

promise with expediency. What was

right was right, and what was wrong was wrong. He occupied no middle

ground.

"He was the trusted friend of the late President McKinley throughout

his illustrious political career. He possessed his unbounded confidence, a

confidence which he repaid with un

failing loyalty and unmeasured devo

tion. ' j "His name was frequently mentioned, and with entire respect, for still further official honors than those he enjoyed here. The suggestion needed but the encouragement of his asent to make it a formidable reality, but he was content with the great distinction of a seat in this chamber and diseouraged all effort to make him a candidate for the most exalted place in the government. His Career an Inspiration. "His career admirably illustrates the great possibilities that lie before the American youth. He became a power in widely separated fields of endeavor. To have achieved distinction in either was honor enough for one man. His early life as the successful man of business gave no promise of the eminence he was destined

to achieve in the world of politics and statesmanship. He did not become a student of statecraft until after he had passed life's meridian. He proved to

be a quick student of those great prob

lems which concerned the state. "He was a man of indefatigable in

dustry. He believed in the virtue of labor. He wrought on with no thought

of self. His friends observed the serl

ous inroads he was making upon his

health and sought to dissuade him from overtaxing his strength, but he

disregarded their kindly admonitions and labored on until he fell at his post

of duty a virtual sacrifice to his coun

try and his countrymen. No soldier ever died upon the field of glory more

surely for others than did he. His Fellowship Cherished.

"Senator Hana and I were friends

before coming here, and my entire pub

lic service to the hour of his death was

in fellowship with him. One of the

choicest memories I shall take into private life is the memory of his confidence and unvarying friendship. "I visited him a number of times after he entered the sick chamber with an illness supposed to be but temporary. He was loath to give up his Intercourse with his friends. He loved them and he loved the world. He had not gathered his harvest He had no time to take account of death. "For many long and anxious days his countrymen awaited tidings of his illness. In the alternations of hope and fear we watched and reverently invoked the All-Merciful One to spare our friend to us and to his country. But his hour had come, and tenderly we laid him away by the lakeside

which he so much loved and where he

sleeps well.

"Brave spirit, an" affectionate fare

well! We take up the burdens you

left us and press on, and in good time, In God's providence, we shall leave

them to others. This historic chamber has its entrances and its exits, through which the stately procession comes and goes. We shah each, in his turn,

seek an exit.

"Good friend! We shall forever cherish as a priceles heritage the memory of your nobility of character and your services and sacrifices lor

the stato."

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