Richmond Palladium (Daily), 21 November 1904 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
IUOIIX-X02TD DAILY PALLADIUM. MONDAY MOENTNO, NOVEMBER. 21,. 1904. STORIES WISE AND OTHERWISE MAGAZINES FOR DECEMBER
Story) Helen Kenny.
Wbat The Earth Produces. The earth has nourished us through unknown ages of human existence. Is it not true that the earth supplies us with everything that we really require for existence ? Have you ever thought that it is probable that the earth supplies us with the means to keep. our bodily vigor, our health, if we cnly knew it? The animals know by inetinct what is good for them and will search vntil they find in some plant what they eed for correcting indigestion or constipa- , tion. etc. Is it, therefore, not possible that "there are roots and herbs supplied by nature rhich will cure the diseases that afflict 'luman kind ? That is why Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., has such faith in his "Medical Discovery." Years ago, when he was in general and active practice, he found that a combination of certain herbs and soots made into an alterative extract, without the use of alcohol, would always put the stomach into a healthv condition, nourish the tissues, feed the blood and nerves end :put healthy tone into the whole 'system. Dr. Tierce's Golden Medical Discovery Jestores the lost flesh by curing diseases of J the stomach and other organs of digestion "w and nutrition and enabling the perfect digestion and assimilation of food from which flesh and strength are made. "I was nil run down, very nervous, and sufttred terribly from stomach trouble, which the doctors pronounced indigestion, " writes Mrs. "Wm. Morey, of Marshall, Mich. "I doctored for a year without permanent relief. Was advised ny a friend to try Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and after the use of nine bottles was cured. I can heartily recommend the 'Golden Medical Discovery' to any one suffering from Ktomarh trouble. My husband was rnlso greatly benefited by its use." To gain knowledge of your own body in ftickness and health send for the People's Common Sense Medical Adviser. A book of 1008 pages. Send 21 cents in stamps for paper -covered, or, 31 stamps for clothitound copv. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
Nasal CATARRH
In all Its stages there
should be cleanliness. Ely's Cream Balm te&naes, soothes and heals the diseased membrane, 'it cares catarrh and drives away a cold iu the head quickly.
Cream Balm is placed Into the nostrils, spread wm the membrane and is absorbed, teller U im mediate aci a care follows. It Is not drying doei 3 tot produce sneering. Large Size, 60 eents at Drug jrU or by mail ; Trial Size, 10 cents by mail. ELY BROTHERS. 6 Warren Street. New York
Evory Woman
im inieresieu Lua uuma Know about the wonderfnl
MARVEL Whirling Spray
a nw s1iil Syrtair. injection and Unction. Het Haf-
.M oil Convenient. It tteaaMa lantutl) .
m Tr 4ruibt for I
fl he cannot supply the MAHVKIi. amiit im
c-tlit-r, butseud maiuu (or
illiistratra book iMirU. Itirives fan particular and ltr-Jions in-
Tfclnable to I al'. !H A 11' t.L. VO,,
R5 m nttX lo riciri . M ' '"If l'rnt rnctn. KHI EVANSCNEVICALCO.
MN AWD WOMEN, Big for unnatural diHchurKes, inflammations, 'rritiitioiis or ulceration of mucous membranes PainleM, and not antrin trcut or poixouous. Sold ly Drugglata, o. sent n plain wrapper by exoreHB. prepaid, for : 00. or 3 bottl' 2.75. Circula" iut o reyueb'
CHICHESTER'S
PENHYBQYAL PILLS
II yr v OHrinnJ mid Onl Unauliie.
VVL"t SfAKIL kiwiynreltahl I.ll. uk Irurn
rWKMtt. Txh other. Rrf-
WMM rnbttluUauB aad 1 mtla
ttuan. Boy of jour Dm it. or rn 4. iimp tr I'artlulara. Teattaanlal.
V . JL1 a4',Kellrrrrl,arflei.MmUc(M-. hyre
' tara Mall, i i -tituooiti. oiii all DruirUi. ('htvheater 'aeileal '.
lUHttnr Ma4aaa eiaaara. t'MM.4
l Table Corn Meal
Custom Grinding: a specialty
Range's Pancake
Flour
J.
RUNGE & CO. Taone 60 16 S. 7th St.
DON T MISS
J. Scully, the tailor, has discovered the original man who was the original inventor of gall and nerve. The other day that is the way Jim starts his story a man came into Ills establishment and asked to have a button hole stitched up. He wa? accommodated. The patron asked to have another fixed in the same manner. No sooner said than done. "How Much?" asked the One of Nerve. "Oh nothin' "responded Jim "Then would you mind fixin' all the rest of my button holes on this coat? asked the stranger. Fascinated at the man's "crust" Jim completed the job. When it was finished the Nervy One put on, his eoat and as he moved toward the door he suddenly stopped as though he just had a new idea flash across his brain.
"Say, old man," said the man, "would you just as leave sponge off the spots on my coat?" but interested spectators in the shop were counting time out cn Jim. w Thursday afternoon at the court hust The hour was late and the oOices were about to be closed until Friday morning's sun put in an appearance. Several young lady clerks room from the recorder's oflicc and crd room talking "pink tea" things. The rocm is just between the recorder's and the auditor's offices. A reporter came into the room fro mthe recorder's office and as he rounded the first large bookcase he came in contact with a feminine stampede. The pencil push or taking for granted that there was a gun play being indulged in in the auditor's office, joined the stampede which ended in the sheriff's office. There the reporter's cultivated curiosity got the better of him and he stole back to see what was doing. The ladies formed a rear guard. In the recorder's office sat King "Williams, while before him stood a man whose condition is best described as being "two sheets in the wind." The stampedeing detachment listened from a point of vantage. "Shay pard," said he with the package, "Cansh ye give a man ten shents to get some booze t 'sober up on?" As with one accord the young ladies gasped, "I always was afraid of a drunk man," and the pencil pusher wended his way in a dignifed manner, saying something about "he did
not see anything to be frightened
at."
lie has been there oft' before.
HORSE BLANKETS AT JONES
HARDWARE COMPANY.
Taft Leaves at Last.
Pensacola, Fla.. Nov. 21. Secretary of War Taft, whose trip to Pan
ama has been postponed from day to day f r the past week, finally succeeded in getting away today on the
cruiser Columbia. His official party
consists of Mrs. Taft, Minister Obal-
dia, of the Republic of Panama; Hear Admiral Walker. Judge Magoon, solicitor for the Panama Canal Commission; Capt. Coleman, the secretary and aide-de-camp; F. D. Campbell and Nelson Chomwell and K. N. Farnum, of New York City.
Extravagance of Our Senators. The salary of a United States Sen ator, like that a member of the House of Representatives, is five
9
"The Office of the . Father" Lillie Devereux Blake. "The Office of the Mother" Charlotte Perkins Oilman. "The Demand for New Ideas" Waldo P. Warren. "The 'Bil(l)ious' Microbe" (a
thousand dollars, and he is allowed, in addition, mileage at the rate of ten cents per mile each way between ; his home and the Capitol for each '
session of Congress, aprivate secre- Poem) Joel Benton, tarv at fifteen hundred dollars (if 1 "Entertaining a House-party"
he is not chairman of a
in which case he has the appoint- i meut of a higher salaried clerk) and t a 1 . is 1 t
oe liundred ana twenty-nve dollars
for
nut the pern
not , set down in the law are numerous and attractive and account in no small measure for the tenacity with which asmall calibre Senator holds on when once he has been elected.
Kingsland.
for
the Home"
stationery. That seems modest ; l0t m) Ernest Neal Lyi the perquisites and emoluments; "Charles Wagner ami
$r0,000 4.".000
'CO
The Senate is a small body but it takes a big amount of money to run it, as following extracts from the last annual appropriation bill will .-;liOw : For ccmpensation of Sen
ators For mileage of Senators... For expenses of the office of Vice President (there is none, by the way, but Mr. Frye occupies this room
Chaplain 1,000 Office of Secretary of the Senate 71,.r)00
Document rocm Clerks and messengers to committees
Office of sergeant-at-arrn.s and door-keeper 17.5SS Post-office 17,588 Folding room 27,520 Engineers, elevator service, Senators' Secretaries 43,000 Stenographers of investigations and inquiries .... 20,000 Reporting debates 25,000 Miscellaneous, 'not including the expense of the Capitol poliee force, one-one-half of the total (75,000) being paid by each House 159,600
Mrs. Burton
Garrett P. Serviss. "A Song of Christmastide" (a
ons.
the Simple
Life ' ' George Wilkinson, ciation, his review in itself making an intensely interesting resume of Standard Oil history, as well as a pointed presentation of the whole trust problem. Mr. Alger describes in detail, building his .argument on Miss Tarbell's marvelous collection
of facts, just
makes the tru..t
Standard Oil Cornrail road discriminati
ons, and stales his conviction that the same influences which made it are operative today, and that the prcblem they involve is a present menace to the country. He vvriles of this phase of the subject : "Prince Metternich once said to ( ieorge Ticknor : ' You Americans
10120 luut m"st suner lrom an evil neiore ou can apply the remedy; you have 1fi7 'WO 110 preventitive legislation. Miss
"how the railroad
He traces the
growth of the pany through
THE TURKEY DIN
NER AT WILLIAMS
BURG 'THANKSGIV
ING DAY The ladies of the Williamsburg Cemetery Association serve their annual turkey dinner in the new Masonic Temple from 11:30 a. m. to 2:30 p. m. , Train leaves Riohmond C. C. & L. station at 7:10 a m. and 10:40 a. m. 'Returning, arrives Richmond at 4:05 p. m. and 8:15 p. m. 35 cts ROUND TRIP Everybody invited. Go and take the family.
Women as Well as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney and Bladder Trouble. - Kidney trouble preys ujkju the mind, discourages and lesscnsainbition; beauty.
vigor and cneeriulness soon disappear when the kidneys are out of order or dis
eased. Kidney trouble has become so prevalent that it is not uucom-
i3 mon for a child to be
1nrii nfniotel with
eaK. KKinevs. ir inc
child urinates too often, if the urine scalds the flesh, or if, when the child reaches an
Grand total $1,227,873 The total of $1,227,S73 tells in a general way the story of howexpensive it is to record the doings of ninety law-makers, and to- keep them comfortable and happy for a Period of twelve months, but it is the details that are most interesting. The Trust and the Railroads. The first published review of Ida M. Tarbell's "History of the Standard Oil Company," which is just published by MeClure, Phillips & Co., appears in Mcdure's Magazine for December, written by George W.
Alger, a , thorough student of the trust question, who speaks with authority upon it. He discusses Miss Tarbell's remarkable work with thorough understanding and appreIn 1S7S n Senator of the United States provided himself out of the public treasury, in addition to his salary, with his mileage, his onehundred and twenty-five dollars for stationery, and one clerk, if he happened to be the chairman of a committee. That was practically all. In 1904 a United States Senator would
silill at one clerk and declare it impossible to attend to his work without two orthree. Such a thing as paying for a clerk cut of his pocket, as his predecessors, up to a comparatively few years ago, were accustomed to do, would be regarded by the Senator of today as acrime. December Pearson's.
Tarbell, as she tells us the story of the birth, growth, and. present power of the oil monopoly, is really giving the history of such an evil one from which we are still suffering, and for which we are still suffering, and for which we are yetgroping, for a remedy. It Is impassible for us to read this story and miss its meaning. It is not merely a study of, perhaps, the blackest page in the his tory of American commerce; it is not simply a study of what men of immense business capacity can do when actuated by an unscrunulous and almost incredible selfishness. The enormous evil which finds graphic illustrations in her book is the uower which the transportation companies have been given over the accumulation and distribution of wealth in this country, and how that power has been abused."
of Toledo, Lu-
State of Ohio, City
cas county, ss: Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the city of Toledo, county nnd state aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of one hundred dollars for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of nail's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY,
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this Gth day of December, A. D., 188G. Seal. A. W. GLEASON, Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO, Toledo. O.
Read the neck band
jh uncolorcd
ff l-tutmiiLiiiiLiiij LUtllllllJUiiUt1"
Has the natural red of the ripe tomato
Exact size of Columbia bottle
Columbia Conserve C Indianapolis, Ind.
Sold by all druggists, 75c. Hall's family Pills are the
best.
v Builds up the system; puts pure, rich blood in the veins; makes men
and women strong and healthy. Burdock Blood Bitters.At any drug store
UNREDEEMED E'gin or Waltham 21 jeweled watches for sale at bargains not to be had any' er. else in the city. A Vanguard Waltham 21 jeweled watcb, guaranteed 20 years, almost as good as new, selling at $25. Trunks, traveling bags, suit cases and telescopes for sale at very low prices. We loan money on watches, diamonds, revolvers and all articles of value at rates lower than the lowest in the city. Business strictly confidential. Open evenings. AMERICAN LOAN CO. 526 Main Street
LID
on
laFRilinn'S
0 COMPOUND.
tf cpMdy MtmUtort 38 rent Drncrrtata o
age when it should re aDie to control uie passage, it is yet afflicted with bed-wet-tint TlenenduDonit. the cause of the diffi
culty is kidnev trouble, and the first step should be towards the treatment of these important organs. This u npleasant trouble is due to a diseased condition of the kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as most ieople suppose. Women as well as men are made miserable with kidnev and bladder trouble, and 1xth need the same great remedy. The mild and the immediate effect of .wamoRoot is soon realized. It is sold
by druggists, in fiftycent and one-dollar size bottles. You may have a sample bottle
by mail free, also a Horn of Swmmp-Boot. pamphlet telling all about Swamp-"Root, including many of the thousands of testimonial letters" received from sufferers cured. Iu -writing Dr. Kilmer &. Co., Einghamton, N.Y., be sure and mention this paper, Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root,
Ti tTJWlloi-'c i-it,tvT? nnt rind tli nrl.
dress. -Jiinehamton. N. Y.. oti every i Benjamin Wells
Features in December "Success." "The Ever-living Fairy-lore of Christmas-tide'' Kichard Lee Gallienne. lit til t o 11 r;..i n. .......
Ileinrich .Conned. "The Wrath of the Diamond Syn
dicate" (a Story) H. S. Cooper.
tunity" Alfred Henry Lewis.
"Washington Diplomats of the
Press "-C. Arthur Williams.
"Don't Let the Tears Count"
Orison Sweet Marden.
"Rich Without Money" The Life Story of George Frisbie near Henry Cabot Lodge.
"Why Pensions Increase as War Veterans Decrease" 0. C. Vico. "The Old Tin Skimmer. 'Polly O' " (a Poem) Holman F. Day. "The Daring of Didelphia" (a sto
ry) Martha McCnllough-Williams. '
44 An Impossible Choice" (a story) Harriet Prescott Spofford. "Can Europe Ignore the Monroe Doctrine?" Hubert Howe Bancroft "The Plum Tree" (a Serial Story) David Graham Phillips. "The Village Choir" Painted by
ElegantAssortment T -
Latest Styles I
Bustmkots
smsd
ir&
Winter Goods For Livery. Prices that will Suit You.
bottle. t "The Tale of
an Ugly Dog" (a
