Richmond Palladium (Daily), 17 May 1904 — Page 6

RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, TUESDAY, MAY ff , 1904.

SIX.

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GAINED The story of a great deal of the unhappiness of women is a story of lost health. "Women wonder how it is that Jiltle by little the form loses plumpness, the cheeks grow hol low and sallow, and they feel tired and worn-out all the time. In a large proportion of cases when won-en are weak, run-down and falling off in flesh and looks, the root of the trouble can be traced to womanly diseases which undermine the general health. The proof of this is that women w ho have been cured of painful womanly direnfes by the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription have recovered their general health, gained in flesh and in appearance. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription cures the womanly diseases whioh snp the general health. It establishes regularity, dries weakening drains, heals inflammation and ulceration and cures female weakness. I suffered for three years with ovarian trouble." writes Mrs. Anna Quiun (Treasurer Woman's Athletic Clubi. of 602 Sycamore St.. Milwaukee, Wis. "The treatment I took did not do me a particle of good, until a pood neighbor who had been using Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription advised me to give it a trial. The next dav took my first dose, and it was my first step toward recovery. In nine weeks I was a different woman ; riiv flesh which had been flabbv became firm, complexion clear and my eyes bright. It wes pimply an indication of the great change within from pain and suffering to health and happiness." " Favorite Prescription " makes weak women strong, sick women well. Accept no substitute for the medicine which works wonders for weak women. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets invijrate stomach, liver and bowels. MONEY LOANED Trom 5 to 6 per cent Thompson's Loan and Real Estate agency, Main and fsventh strt The greatest money miking inventions hive been suggested by minds familiar with the needs of the age. . THE AMERICAN INVENTOR will keep you in touch with subjects of current interest in the line oi new inventions and experiment It will aid you to develop ideas oi practical value. Issued on the 1st and 15th of every month. Twenty-eight pages each issue. Sold at aO news stands 10c per copy or sent by mail S J .50 per year. THE AMERICAN INVENTOR. Sample copy sent free. Washingtoa D. C CATABB THIS REMEDY IS SURE TO GIVE SATISFACTION ELYS Cream Balm GivesRelief atOnce It cleanses, eootlies and heals the diseased m iribiana. It rues Catarrh an drives away a cold in the HAY FEVER Head quickly. It is absorbed. Heals and Protects the Memtirnue It(stors the Sent-es of Taste and Smell. Large size 50c at druggists or mail. Trial size by mail Kc. ELY BROTHERS. 5tf Warren Street, New York. IWHEH Sti CHICAGO Stop at the Baths & Hotel Combined 8 floors. fine new rooms. Meals a-la-Carta at all hours. BATHS OF ALL KINDS. Turkish, Russian. Shower. Plunge, etc Th finest swimming pool in the world. Turkish Baihand Lodtfintf. $1.00. Most inexpensive Lrst class hotel ia Chicago. Riuht iu tht, hrart of the city. Booklet on application. New Northern Baths & Hotel 14 Quincy St.-CflCCO-Near Mate Harness for show and harness tor every day use may mean dlderence la qpallty in some makes here they are Identical In strength and durability. More styie. ol course In faucy driving harness; but all our harness la uitide frmn grod stooit and evry tet maintain! our reputation aa to finish. All sorts of horse workmanship and equipments at very moderate prices. Tlie Wiggins Co. A WEEK tooSn Oil Burner. Heats stoves or f ursaops ; burns orude oil;o tH KKKE. WriieNntlonal 11 1. Co. tior JR., Slew York, X. V. Have your carpels taken up, cleaned and laid by tlie Monarch Laundry. To accommodate those who are par tial to the use of atomizers in apply ing liquids into the nasal passages focatarrhal troubles, the proprietor prepare Ely's Liquid Cream Balm. Trice including the spraying tube is 75 cents. Druggists or by mail. The liquid embodies the medicinal prop erties of the solid preparation. Cctam Balm is quickly absorbed Yy the mem brane and docs not dry up vhe secre tions but changes them t a natural and healthy character, lily Brothers. 56 Warren street, N. Y. "Ideal" is the original and genu ine article.

$30

DONALD

DO

NALD'SON, J

Copyright, 1C03, by Charles W. Hooke (Continued.) CHAPTER XIX. A I.LSSON IN HEREDITY. HEX we came "up to my grounds, we found Dorothy by the gate with Amy Kelvin. Donald shuddered at the thought of facing his mother, but he braced Idniseif for the ordeal. "Mother, dear." said he. "I'm not fit to look you in the eyes. I'm a fake and a fraud, but I'll never do it again. Even if I had not already resolved, this awful thinar today would have cured me." "You mean that man's death?" said Dorothy, who had heard of it from Amy. "Don't take it too much to heart." "It will go all over the world," said Donald, with a great sob, "and you will all be ashamed of me." At this, very much to my surprise, pretty Miss Kelvin seized Donald's hand and kissed it. "I couldn't help it, Mrs. Donaldson," she said, blushing fiery red and looking very much scared. "He is so unhappy." "My son is a very lucky boy," said Dorothy, with her arm around the girl. "He has no right to be unhappy." Amy kissed her impulsively. Then she turned away. "If you're not ashamed to be seen with me," s::id Donald, "I'd like to walk over to The Elms with j-ou. But perhaps that's forbidden by your parents." "My parents d-.: not seem to be in perfect harmony oti the subject," said Amy. "I think I'll mind my mother from here to our gate and my father from the gate to the house." "I think that's fate," said Dorothy softly as the two young people walked away. "He will bring her to us some Wc jound Dorothy by the gate with Amy Kelvin. dtiy. Donald, and we shall love her and he proud of her. But what did he mean by calling himself such hard names? Was hasn't any of of it been genuine?" Donaldson groaned from his heart. "Dorothy," he cried, "there is just one secret that I have never been able to confess to you in all these years. I believe that it has made me old the burden of it and that it has whitened my hair. Dorothy, if our son is a fake and a fraud he is therein his father's son. I am a fake and a fraud. Mr. Harrington, I won your notice long ago and your friendship, and I have lived in your house all these years upon the basis of a lie. I am no psychic; I never was. It was all the merest trickery. "Let me get this off my mind at last," he continued. "You remember the old story of the message from Japan. It was pure fraud. Do you recall the name of Joe Vinal? He was the man who took his confession all the way to Japan that he might right the wrong which had been done to Henry. Be tween mv brother and Mrs. Vinal there had arisen a love which never led to transgression. He told me upon his honor that from the day when this was first recognized by them both they never saw each other. She was wholly estranged from her husband, though they lived under the same roof. "When Henry went away, he wrote to Mrs. Vinal. She was always informed of Henry's whereabouts, and her husband knew this he and I and no one else. I was well aware that my brother was in Japan. He had written long letters of description to Mrs. Vinal, and I had read them and had seen photographs which he sent her. It was from them that I described the room and the view from the window. "I knew of her efforts to make her husband right the wrong to which he had been a party. I knew of Vlnal's departure and where he was going. The vessel in which he sailed from San Francisco-was a tramp steamer, but she was a very fast boat, and she was going direct. I knew when she was due, and as the day approached I became very nervous. , "Then came that plan of Henry's

jj l

Being a True Record and Explanation of the Seven Mysteries Now Associated With tils Name In tbe Public Mind, and of in Eighth. Which b the Key of the Seven

n By HOWARD FIELDING friends to search for him. I could not let them waste their money and their time. I could not tell them why. Thence resulted all my conduct. I had some little foolish reputation for mysterious powers, and I played upon it. That day in the restaurant while the search for Henry was being discussed I saw in the paper a report of the vessel that had carried Vinal. I guessed that he must be almost at that very hour in my brother's house, and of course I knew wrhat he would do there. "That was a harmless and pardonable fraud, Mr. Harrington." he continued, "compared to the one which I practiced upon you. I had the excuse of shielding the name of a good woman whose conduct might be misunderstood. But with you it was sheer self interest and reckless impulse. I was desperate with my circumstances. You would take me as a psychic, and you wouldn't take me any other way. Let me rush over this. When I pretended to 'feel Dr. Whiting behind me. I heard his voice in the hall, and when I turned around after playing my trick and didn't see him I thought that I was lost. But fate saved me. "As for my knowledge of what was in your mind. Mr. Harrington, the experiment in heredity, I was informed by Whitirg." "But I rover told him!" I cried. Donaldson smiled sadly. "How simple those things are," he said. "Certainly you never told him, but you loaned him your diary that he might study the records of your tests, and in turning it over he came upon jour notes about the possibility of mating two psychics. 'Look out for a psychic girl,' he wrote in the letter in which he warned me of your visit. 'I think they've got one and will try to make a match.' Dear little Dorothy! To think that I never suspected her of being the wonder worker! But many a time since then I have felt her power guiding me, for she still has it, though she will not say so. Indeed, I cannot believe that our son lacks some inheritance of this mysterious force from his mother" "Oh, deacon, how delicious!" ex claimed Dorothy, who had stood like a statue, with clasped hands, during all this recital. "Have you really believed in me? But why not? I have always believed in you. and my on. y doubt of Don was based upo:i the knowledge that I myself was the thinnest of vain delusions. Donald, nearest, I never dared to tell you. "Dear old Uncle John, uncle in general to all of us and Ltyt of benefactors, can you ever forgive me? I can't tell you all; I can't speak ill of my aunt, and indeed she was driven to it; but when I first began to help her with those mysteries I thought her a most wonderful psychic av.d that the only deception was in making the revelations through me. Why. she had correspondents all over the country. I did not know it till after her death. There was a perfect network of fraud. These people wrole to eaeh other. They gathered the complete family hisiory of every investigator and and crank. You'd be amazed at the things that my aunt knew things that were all done in an orderly r?cord among her papers. "I did not know this till after her death, and of eourso I had no suspicion that she was taking money for her exhibitions, that she lived upon them It was among her letters that I found your name and Mr. Ilackett's Mild the fact that you were trying to find a Mr. Donald Donaldson, whose name you had not yet learned. That letter came after my aunt's death. "And I was desperate. Mr. Harrington. I did not know which way to turn. When you mentioned a teacher's work to me.. I was insane with fear that you would not choose me, and so and so I played that awful trick" The tears were streaming down the dear face that I have loved so tenderly for so many years. She is the child of my soul. I took her into my arms and kissed her upon the brow. "The fads seem to be," said Donaldson, looking very queer, "that your experiment in heredity has succeeded beyond the wildest dreams. You have brought together two persons having a peculiar and wretched gift of deception, though one of them is the most honest, open hearted woman In the world and the other a man who has done 110 great harm. Each of them, in a crisis which seemed all important, yielded to a certain temptation the very same in each instance. To them was born a son who was brought to face a similar situation, with a result that must be called inevitable. But at heart," he added, "the boy is pure gold, as his mother is, and I am proud of him." He looked around defiantly, as if there had been some one to deny the justice of his claim. "He's the finest boy that ever lived," said I. And then, with an old man's persistence in a long cherished opinion: "And, moreover, there's a tremendous lot in this matter that none of you has explained. I believe, upon my soul, that you are psychics, all of you!" THE END. If you eat Ideal or Mother's bread you will be perfectly satisfied.

CHOICE MISCELLANY Some Oriental Remedies. R. L. Jones of Ontario was at the Willard hotel in Washington recently, and to a reporter he told-of some of his experiences while travelings a recent trip In India. "I was sick a few days after I arrived In India, and I immediately applied for medical assistance. It chanced that no civilized, physician was to be had in the neighborhood, so I called for a native doctor. "An American friend who was traveling. with me. but who was familiar with the customs of the country, said, 'Very well. I'll take you to a doctor.' "He then took me a few hundred yards from the hut where we were at the time, and then when I saw the 'native doctor' administering some of his medicines I at once lost all signs of illness and felt as fine as a two-year-old. "One of their favorite ways of treating in India is to raise blister:-; all over the body. This is accomplished by the application of a redhot iron. The blister is then dressed with cayenne pepper. " 'Gunpowder pills' also are a favorite medicine in that part of the world. Twelvje of them are given for a dose. A minute later a coal applied to a slow match! leading down the throat is inserted!. A movement among the particles hen takes place, which either eradicates the disease or the patient, most commonly the latter." Mr. Jones stands sponsor for all this and vouches for its yerity. I Rheumatic Fains Believed. The prompt relief from the several which is afforded by Chamberlain's Pain Balm, is alone worth many times its cost. Mr. Willard C. Vail, of

I'ougnkeepsie, jn. i., writes: "i am roubled with rheumatism and neuralgia of the nerves and Chamberlain's Pain Balm gives relief quicker than anl liniment I have ever used." For ale by A. G. Luken & Co., and W. H. Sudhoff, corner fifth and Main. Reduced Fares to Carthage, Mo., via Pennsylvania Lines. Low fares will be in effect to Carthage and Joplin, Mo., via Pennsylvania Lines, May 17th to 23d, inclusive, account Annual Conference German Baptist Brethren. Ten days' stopover at St. Louis World's Fair allowed. Get further information from local Ticket Agents of the Pennsylvania Lines. Serious Stomach Trouble Cured. I was troubled with a distress in my stomach, sour stomach and vomiting spells, and can truthfully say that Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets cured me. Mrs. T. V. Williams, Laingsburg, Mich. These tablets are guaranteed to cure every case of stomach trouble of this character. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co., and W. H. Sudhoff, fifth and Main streets. COACH EXCURSION. To St. Louis World's Fair During May via Pennsylvania Lines. Tuesdays and Thursdays, May 17th 19th, 24th, 2Gth and 31st, Coach Excursions to World's Fair St. Louis will be run via Pennsylvania Lines. On these dates excursion tickets to St. Louis will be sold at $7.00 round trip from Richmond, Ind., good only in coaches of train eaving at 5:05 a. m., 10:15 a. m. 1:25 p. m., 10:03 p. m. Returing, tickets will be good only in coaches of regular train leav ing" St. Louis Union Station any time within seven days, including date of purchase of ticket. Return coupons of tickets sold Tuesdays will be good until the following Monday, inclusive, and those sold Thursdays will be good returning until the following Wednesday, inclusive. C. W. Elmer, Ticket Agent, Richmond, lnd. FARES TO ST. LOUIS. World's Tair Excursion via Pennsylvania Lines. World's Fair excursion tickets to St. Louis are now on sale via Pennsylvania Lines. Fares from Richmond are as follows: Tickets good for the season, returning any time to December 15th, will be sold every day at $14 00 for the round trip. Tickets crood returning within six ty days, not later than December 15, will be sold evey day at $12.00 for the round trip. Tickets good returning within fifteen days will be sold every day at $10.50 for the round trip. Coach excursion tickets, with return limit of seven days, will be sold twice a week, every Tuesday and Thursday, beginning May 17th, until June 30th, at $7.00 for the round trip approximately one cent a mile. Coach excursion tickets are restricted to day coaches, whether on regular or special trains. For 'further k rticulars sonsult C. W. Elmer, tickev igent, Richmond, Ind.

CONSTIPATION

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Whooping Cough, the spring of 1901 my chilIn dren had whooping cough," says Mrs. D. W. Capps, of Capps, Ala. "I used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy with the most satisfactory results. I think this is the best remedy I have ever seen for whooping cough." This remedy keeps the cough loose, lessens the severity and frequency of the coughing spells and counteracts any tendency toward pneumonia. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co., and W. H. Sudhoff, corner fifth and Main. Special excursion tickets will be sold May 21st, to 25th (good return ing May 26th) to Filbrims, Stop No. 10 on Dayton and Northern) via Dayton and Western and Dayton and Northern Traction Lines on account of the Old Order Dunkard National Meeting. Fare to Filbrims from Richmond $1.25 round trip. For further infor mation call on agents. 2o Reduced Pares to Buffalo via Pennsylvania Lines. May 10th, 11th and 12th, excursion tickets to Buffalo, N. Y., account In ternational Convention Young Men's Christian Association, will be sold via Pennsylvania Lines. For particulars regarding time of trains, etc., see Local Ticket Agent of those lines.

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